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Sugar-sweetened Beverages Tax in Mexico: Implementation, Expected Impact and Current Challenges

Wednesday, April 29, 2015

12:00 PM-1:00 PM

The SPH Office for Research welcomes Tonatiuh Barrientos-Gutiérrez, MD, MS, PhD, from the National Institute of Public Health, Mexico where he serves as director of Reproductive Health Research Area and director of Analytical Laboratory for Tobacco Compounds in the Center for Population Health Research. 
 

Mexico is a world leader in obesity and diabetes. Focalized and population-wide programs have been implemented to reduce excess weight but their impact has been limited, leading to the discussion of new and potentially more effective public health interventions. Structural interventions, such as financial disincentives, aim to sustainably change the environment in which persons live, facilitating healthier decisions. In January 2014 the Mexican Government implemented a 1-peso-per-liter tax to industrialized sugar sweetened beverages, in an attempt to disincentivize consumption and reduce their important caloric contribution to the Mexican diet.  

 
In this seminar we will review the process that led to the implementation of the tax, its expected impact and the challenges it still faces.
 

RSVP requested by 4/28/15 to Amy Confair, MPH

at 267.359.6039 or arc333@drexel.edu

Contact Information

Amy Confair, MPH
267.359.6039
arc333@drexel.edu

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Location

School of Public Health
Nesbitt Hall
33rd and Market Street
Room 719, 7th Floor Conference Room

Audience

  • Everyone