Related Searches: Tea Vitamin Nutrients Ingredients paper cup packing

Food & Health Ingredients
Health & Nutrition
Processing & Packaging
Starch & Starch Derivatives
You are here: Home >news >Call for change in food labelling guidelines to help fight obesity

Call for change in food labelling guidelines to help fight obesity

2019-08-15 newfoodmagazine

Tag: food labelling obesity Change

Share       

Researchers are calling for government guidelines on food labelling to be amended after finding many misinterpret the information.

Researchers from the University of Essex found a huge discrepancy between the way information on food labels is interpreted and its intended meaning.

This is the result of a new study to investigate people’s understanding of verbal descriptors such as ‘high fibre’ and ‘low fat’, which are meant to help consumers make healthy eating choices. It found that typically people overestimate verbal descriptors like ‘high fibre’ and this could lead them to think they have had enough vitamins, minerals or fibre, when in fact their diet doesn’t meet dietary targets. 

“The ability to judge the healthiness of food empowers people to fight obesity and diet-related disease,” said Dawn Liu, who led the study. “But our findings suggest there is a lot of confusion over food labels. Using terms such as ‘low’, ‘medium’ and ‘high’ may be simpler for consumers to understand, but these terms can also mislead them. 

“This matters because overconsumption of negative nutrients and under-consumption of positive ones impacts health and we know most people in the UK don’t eat enough fibre.” 

The study also identified the confusion caused when manufacturers use both verbal and numerical information on the same label – a breakfast cereal that is ‘high in fibre’, while providing  30 percent of your Guideline Daily Amount (GDA) of sugar, might seem to have a lot more fibre than sugar, when in fact both nutrients contribute equally to their respective GDAs. 

It was also discovered through the study that consumers find it difficult to choose between two products if the nutritional information is presented verbally on one and numerically on the other – is a ‘low-fat’ cereal better for you than one which provides 12 percent of GDA for fat? 

 “It would be beneficial if the government’s guidelines for manufacturers were amended to be more in line with consumers expectations,” added Liu. 

This paper will be published in the December issue of Food Quality and Preference and is available now online. 

By Rachael Harper (New Food Magazine)

-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Editors Note:

If you have any suggestion to the content, 

please email: Julia.Zhang@ubmsinoexpo.com

E-newsletter

Subscribe to our e-newsletter for the latest food ingredients news and trends.

Tags

SJGLE B2B Website : 中文版 | ChineseCustomer Service: 86-400 610 1188-3 ( Mon-Fri 9: 00-18: 00 BJT)

About Us|Contact Us|Privacy Policy|Intellectual Property Statement

Copyright 2006-2023 Shanghai Sinoexpo Informa Markets International Exhibition Co Ltd (All Rights Reserved). ICP 05034851-121  沪公网安备31010402001403号

Inquiry Basket

Inquiry Basket

Buyer service

Buyer service

Supplier service

Supplier service

Top

Top