Abstract

Accurate and easy-to-understand nutrition labeling is a worthy public health goal that should be considered an important strategy among many to address obesity and poor diet. Updating the Nutrition Facts Panel on packaged foods, developing a uniform front-of-package labeling system and providing consumers with nutrition information on restaurant menus offer important opportunities to educate people about food's nutritional content, increase awareness of reasonable portion sizes and motivate consumers to make healthier choices. The aims of this paper were to identify and discuss: (1) current concerns with nutrition label communication strategies; (2) opportunities to improve the communication of nutrition information via food labels, with a specific focus on serving size information; and (3) important future areas of research on nutrition labeling as a tool to improve diet. We suggest that research on nutrition labeling should focus on ways to improve food labels' ability to capture consumer attention, reduce label complexity and convey numeric nutrition information in simpler and more meaningful ways, such as through interpretive food labels, the addition of simple text, reduced use of percentages and easy-to-understand presentation of serving size information.

Highlights

  • In the past four decades, obesity in both adults and children has increased dramatically.[1,2] The rapid rise is thought to be due largely to changes in the food and physical activity environments, given the relative stability of the population’s gene pool over this time

  • Government agencies have worked to design easy-to-understand nutrition labeling systems, there is always room for improvement based on scientific advances

  • Much of the nutrition information presented to the public has taken the form of numeric data, some of which requires mathematical manipulation to use effectively

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Summary

PROCEEDINGS ARTICLE

Accurate and easy-to-understand nutrition labeling is a worthy public health goal that should be considered an important strategy among many to address obesity and poor diet. Updating the Nutrition Facts Panel on packaged foods, developing a uniform frontof-package labeling system and providing consumers with nutrition information on restaurant menus offer important opportunities to educate people about food’s nutritional content, increase awareness of reasonable portion sizes and motivate consumers to make healthier choices. The aims of this paper were to identify and discuss: (1) current concerns with nutrition label communication strategies; (2) opportunities to improve the communication of nutrition information via food labels, with a specific focus on serving size information; and (3) important future areas of research on nutrition labeling as a tool to improve diet. We suggest that research on nutrition labeling should focus on ways to improve food labels’ ability to capture consumer attention, reduce label complexity and convey numeric nutrition information in simpler and more meaningful ways, such as through interpretive food labels, the addition of simple text, reduced use of percentages and easy-to-understand presentation of serving size information

INTRODUCTION
CA Roberto and N Khandpur
Consumer use of the NFP
Addressing concerns about the NFP
Improving the design of nutrition labels CA Roberto and N Khandpur
Serving size information on FOP labels
Nutrition labeling of restaurant meals
Summary of recommendations to improve nutrition labels
CONFLICT OF INTEREST

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