Abstract

The French Observatory of Food Quality (Oqali) aims to collect all nutrition data provided on processed food labels, at the level of brand products, in order to monitor reformulation and nutrition labeling changes over time. This work aimed to make a cross‐sectional comparison of the nutrition content of processed foods on the French market, according to their type of brand (national brands, retailer brands, entry‐level retailer brands, hard discount, and specialized retailer brands), and to study the potential impact of the differences observed on simulated nutrient intakes. A total of 16,453 branded processed foodstuffs were considered, collected between 2008 and 2011 and divided into 24 food sectors. Labeled nutrition values were compared between types of brands by family of products. Nutrition values were matched with consumption data from the French Individual and National Study on Food Consumption (INCA 2) (Afssa, 2006–2007) to determine whether the nutrition differences underlined were magnified or diminished when crossing them with consumption data. Only isolated differences in nutrient contents between types of brands could be highlighted. In the case of a theoretical and exclusive consumption of processed foodstuffs from one specific type of brand, protein intakes from first‐price products (entry‐level retailer brands and hard discount) appeared to be significantly lower than the ones from national or retailer brand products. The absence of systematic differences in the nutrition contents of processed foods from various types of brands is an encouraging result when considering social inequalities and nutrition. As protein intakes in France are currently above recommended levels (Afssa, 2007), consumption of first‐price foodstuffs does not imply any risk of deficiency for French consumers.

Highlights

  • The review published in 2010 by the French National Food Council (CNA) concluded that, considering the nutrition values labeled, no significant difference in the nutrition quality could be highlighted between entry-­level products on the one hand and retailer or national brand ones on the other hand

  • The results presented in this article aim to strengthen these observations by covering almost all of the processed foods available on the French market

  • This work shows that, when considering the nutrition values labeled on processed foods on the French market, only isolated and nonsystematic differences could be determined between types of brands

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Summary

Introduction

Due to rising differences in overweight and obesity prevalence between social groups (Afssa, 2007; Darmon & Drewnowski, 2008; Lee, Ralston, & Truby, 2011; Maillot, Darmon, Vieux, & Drewnowski, 2007; Roos et al, 2001), especially among children (Anses, 2012; Beydoun, Powell, Chen, & Wang, 2011; Pilgrim et al, 2012), nutritionists and stakeholders have been increasingly in need of accurate data on the link between the nutrition quality of processed foods (Weaver et al, 2014) and their price/type of brand (for instance retailer or national brands).Several recent articles and reports have endeavored to compare the nutrition quality of products from different types of brands and various food sectors. The review published in 2010 by the French National Food Council (CNA) concluded that, considering the nutrition values labeled, no significant difference in the nutrition quality could be highlighted between entry-­level products (corresponding to hard discount and entry-­level retailer brand products) on the one hand and retailer or national brand ones on the other hand. These observations were based both on Oqali reports published until (Breakfast cereals 2008 (OQALI, 2008a), Cakes and biscuits 2008 (OQALI, 2008b) and Fresh dairy products, and similar 2008–2009 (OQALI, 2009) and on a bibliographic search. The results presented in this article aim to strengthen these observations by covering almost all of the processed foods available on the French market

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