Taillie Lindsey Smith, Ng Shu Wen, Xue Ya, Busey Emily, Harding Matthew
J Acad Nutr Diet. 2017 Sep;117(9):1366-1374.e6. doi: 10.1016/j.jand.2017.01.011. Epub 2017 Mar 15.
Nutrient claims are a commonly used marketing tactic, but the association between claims and nutritional quality of products is unknown. The objective of this study was to examine trends in the proportion of packaged food and beverage purchases with a nutrient claim, whether claims are associated with improved nutritional profile, and whether the proportion of purchases with claims differs by race/ethnicity or socioeconomic status.
This cross-sectional study examined nutrient claims on more than 80 million food and beverage purchases from a transaction-level database of 40,000 US households from 2008 to 2012. χ Tests were used to examine whether the proportion of purchases with a low/no-content claim changed over time or differed by race/ethnicity or household socioeconomic status. Pooled transactions were examined using t-tests to compare products' nutritional profiles overall and by food and beverage group.
Thirteen percent of food and 35% of beverage purchases had a low-content claim. Prevalence of claims among purchases did not change over time. Low-fat claims were most prevalent for both foods and beverages (10% and 19%, respectively), followed by low-calorie (3% and 9%), low-sugar (2% and 8%), and low-sodium (2% for both) claims. Compared to purchases with no claim, purchases with any low-content claim had lower mean energy, total sugar, total fat, and sodium densities. However, the association between particular claim types and specific nutrient densities varied substantially, and purchases featuring a given low-content claim did not necessarily offer better overall nutritional profiles or better profiles for the claimed nutrient, relative to products without claims. In addition, there was substantial heterogeneity in associations between claims and nutrient densities within food and beverage groups.
Variations in nutrient density by claim type and food and beverage group suggests that claims may have differential utility for certain foods or nutrients and, in some cases, may mislead about the overall nutritional quality of the food.
营养声称是一种常用的营销策略,但声称与产品营养质量之间的关联尚不清楚。本研究的目的是调查带有营养声称的包装食品和饮料购买比例的趋势,声称是否与改善的营养状况相关,以及带有声称的购买比例是否因种族/族裔或社会经济地位而异。
这项横断面研究从2008年至2012年40000户美国家庭的交易层面数据库中检查了超过8000万笔食品和饮料购买的营养声称。χ检验用于检查带有低含量/无含量声称的购买比例是否随时间变化,或因种族/族裔或家庭社会经济地位而异。使用t检验对汇总交易进行检查,以比较产品的总体营养状况以及按食品和饮料类别划分的营养状况。
13%的食品购买和35%的饮料购买带有低含量声称。购买中声称的流行率随时间没有变化。低脂声称在食品和饮料中最为普遍(分别为10%和19%),其次是低热量(3%和9%)、低糖(2%和8%)和低钠(两者均为2%)声称。与无声称的购买相比,带有任何低含量声称的购买具有更低的平均能量、总糖、总脂肪和钠密度。然而,特定声称类型与特定营养密度之间的关联差异很大,相对于无声称的产品,具有给定低含量声称的购买不一定具有更好的总体营养状况或所声称营养素的更好状况。此外,食品和饮料类别中声称与营养密度之间的关联存在很大异质性。
按声称类型以及食品和饮料类别划分的营养密度差异表明,声称对某些食品或营养素可能具有不同的效用,并且在某些情况下,可能会对食品的总体营养质量产生误导。