Al-Ani Haya H, Devi Anandita, Eyles Helen, Swinburn Boyd, Vandevijvere Stefanie
1School of Population Health,The University of Auckland,Private Bag 92019, Auckland Mail Centre, Auckland 1142,New Zealand.
Br J Nutr. 2016 Sep;116(6):1087-94. doi: 10.1017/S0007114516002981. Epub 2016 Aug 9.
Nutrition and health claims are displayed to influence consumers' food choices. This study assessed the extent and nature of nutrition and health claims on the front-of-pack of 'healthy' and 'less-healthy' packaged foods in New Zealand. Foods from eight categories, for which consumption may affect the risk of obesity and diet-related chronic diseases, were selected from the 2014 Nutritrack database. The internationally standardised International Network for Food and Obesity/Non-Communicable Diseases Research, Monitoring and Action Support (INFORMAS) taxonomy was used to classify claims on packages. The Nutrient Profiling Scoring Criterion (NPSC) was used to classify products as 'healthy' or 'less healthy'. In total, 7526 products were included, with 47 % (n 3557) classified as 'healthy'. More than one-third of products displayed at least one nutrition claim and 15 % featured at least one health claim on the front-of-pack. Claims were found on one-third of 'less-healthy' products; 26 % of those products displayed nutrition claims and 7 % featured health claims. About 45 % of 'healthy' products displayed nutrition claims and 23 % featured health claims. Out of 7058 individual claims, the majority (69 %) were found on 'healthy' products. Cereals displayed the greatest proportion of nutrition and health claims (1503 claims on 564 products), of which one-third were displayed on 'less-healthy' cereals. Such claims could be misleading consumers' perceptions of nutritional quality of foods. It needs to be explored how current regulations on nutrition and health claims in New Zealand could be further strengthened (e.g. using the NPSC for nutrition claims, including general health claims as per the INFORMAS taxonomy) to ensure consumers are protected and not misled.
营养与健康声明的展示旨在影响消费者的食物选择。本研究评估了新西兰“健康”和“较不健康”包装食品包装正面营养与健康声明的程度及性质。从2014年营养追踪数据库中选取了八类食用后可能影响肥胖风险及与饮食相关慢性病风险的食品。采用国际标准化的食品与肥胖/非传染性疾病研究、监测及行动支持国际网络(INFORMAS)分类法对包装上的声明进行分类。使用营养成分剖析评分标准(NPSC)将产品分为“健康”或“较不健康”。总共纳入了7526种产品,其中47%(n = 3557)被归类为“健康”产品。超过三分之一的产品在包装正面展示了至少一项营养声明,15%的产品展示了至少一项健康声明。在三分之一的“较不健康”产品上发现了声明;其中26%的产品展示了营养声明,7%的产品展示了健康声明。约45%的“健康”产品展示了营养声明,23%的产品展示了健康声明。在7058项单独声明中,大多数(69%)出现在“健康”产品上。谷物类产品展示的营养与健康声明比例最高(564种产品上有1503项声明),其中三分之一出现在“较不健康”的谷物产品上。此类声明可能会误导消费者对食品营养质量的认知。需要探讨如何进一步加强新西兰现行的营养与健康声明法规(例如,将NPSC用于营养声明,按照INFORMAS分类法纳入一般健康声明),以确保消费者受到保护且不被误导。