Good News Kiddies, You May Not Have to Eat Your Oatmeal!

Quaker Oats Company Agrees to Change Misleading Labels to Avoid a Lawsuit

By Maria Giorgio, published Apr 22, 2007
Published Content: 61  Total Views: 29,912  Favorited By: 31 CPs
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Mothers everywhere urge children to eat oatmeal because it is good for them. In recent years, the cereal took aim at adults by boasting of health benefits. Quaker Oats, introduced in 1877, has always topped the list of oatmeal favorites. Recently the company was threatened with a lawsuit, a rare event for the historical cereal giant. The Center for Science in the Public Interest objects to the product's label claiming it is misleading and exaggerates the product's ability to lower cholesterol. To avoid a lawsuit, Quaker Foods, a division of Pepsico, has agreed to change the package.

The cereal's history is rich, including being the first to introduce trial-size packaging. It also was the first cereal to include a premium for buyers by placing a piece of china in every box and recipes on the package. The company's customer-friendly past means nothing to the Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI), a consumer health watchdog.

CSPI threatened to sue last fall over package claims that the cereal "is a unique whole grain food that actively finds cholesterol and removes it from the body." The label includes a graph that CSPI says is a misrepresentation of the oatmeal's ability to remove cholesterol from the body. The organization does not dispute that oatmeal is good for you, but it wants Quaker Oats Company to stop misleading the consumer.

Oatmeal has been noted to lower bad cholesterol (LDL) levels while maintaining the good cholesterol, a claim supported by the FDA. It is high in soluble fiber, which is why the claim holds merit. It is recommended that adults have 5 to 10 grams of soluble fiber each day. While nobody knows exactly how it works, the belief is that the stickiness of oatmeal holds onto cholesterol and prevents the body from absorbing it. Instead, it is discarded in waste.

Good News Kiddies, You May Not Have to Eat Your Oatmeal!

Oatmeal has always been a healthy choice for breakfast.

Credit: Microsoft

Copyright: Microsoft

Takeaways
  • Eighty percent of U.S. households have oatmeal in their cupboard.
  • Oatmeal cookies are the number one non-cereal usage for oats, followed by meatloaf.
  • January is oatmeal month.
Comments
Showing Comments 1 - 7 of 7
 
 
Great reporting.

Posted on 07/03/2007 at 1:07:00 PM

 
I never did like oatmeal. Yuck.

Posted on 05/02/2007 at 8:05:00 PM

 
wow 80% in households-that's an interesting factoid-thanks

Posted on 04/23/2007 at 3:04:00 PM

 
On the one hand, I can see how the advertising "may" have been a lil over the top-but on the other I don't-I mean the company backed up the claims with medical data-great slant on the article btw

Posted on 04/23/2007 at 3:04:00 PM

 
Really interesting, but I'm going to keep eating oatmeal too.

Posted on 04/23/2007 at 2:04:00 PM

 
Maybe other companies will take this as a warning not to mislead consumers. Oatmeal is still a good choice, though!

Posted on 04/23/2007 at 8:04:00 AM

 
Still going to eat my oatmeal. Great information.

Posted on 04/22/2007 at 9:04:00 PM

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