- [[Transnational corporations]]/[[TNCs]]/[[MNCs]]/[[transnational actors (TNAs)]] are major drivers of global epidemics of NCDs
- The authors assessed [[self-regulation]], public-private partnerships, and public regulation models of interaction with these industries and concluded that [[unhealthy commodity industries]] should have no role in the formation of national and international NCD policy
- Despite reliance on [[self-regulation]] and PPP, there is no evidence of their effectiveness and safety.
- [[Public regulation and market intervention are the only evidence-based mechanisms to prevent harm caused by the unhealthy commodity industries]]
- These industries ([[unhealthy commodity industries]]) affect public health legislation and avoid regulation with both [[hard power]], as Dahl argued as coercion, ie, institutional and financial relations, and soft power, ie, influence of culture, ideas, and cognitions of people, advocates, and scientists.