The government has gone to great lengths to downplay the connection between sugar and tooth decay. The result has been more profits for the sugar industry and more cavities for kids.   

In the 1950s any six-year-old could tell you candy and soda cause cavities.  Yet for decades the government has gone to great lengths to downplay the connection between sugar and tooth decay. The result has been more profits for the sugar industry and more cavities for kids.   

A study published in the journal PLoS Medicine examined internal cane and beet sugar industry documents from 1959 to 1971.[i]  Researchers from the University of California San Francisco (UCSF) show that the sugar industry successfully manipulated the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to conduct research on dental caries designed to protect the industry’s financial interests.

In 1966 President Johnson declared war on cavities.  The objective was for the U.S. National Institute of Dental Research (NIDR), a branch of the NIH, to start an accelerated 10-year research program that would result in the virtual eradication of dental caries.  It was called the National Caries Program (NCP).  

Common sense would lead you to believe that the first step in preventing tooth decay would be to reduce the amount of sugary foods kids eat.  According to the researchers, as early as 1950 even the sugar industry trade organization representing 30 international members accepted the fact that sugar caused tooth decay.  But reducing sugar intake was not in the best financial interests of the industry.

Instead, the sugar documents show that the industry influenced the NIH to move away from any talk of reducing sugar intake and instead focus on a “cure” for tooth decay that didn’t involve children eating less sugar.

The strategy is the same one that lets the food industry avoid taking responsibility for the obesity epidemic.  The industry points the finger at lack of physical activity rather than the quality and quantity of food eaten by America’s children.  And the food industry has co-opted the government to get their agenda written into dietary and exercise guidelines and weight reduction recommendations.    

In 1969 the NIH basically threw in the towel on sugar reduction.  It concluded that reducing sugar consumption was theoretically possible but not practical as a public health measure.  Instead in 1971 they adopted 78% of the sugar industry’s research recommendations. Research that could have been harmful to sugar industry interests was omitted.