Department of Environmental Health & Engineering and Johns Hopkins Center for a Livable Future, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 N. Wolfe St., W7010, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 N. Wolfe St., Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
Waste Manag. 2019 Mar 1;86:123-132. doi: 10.1016/j.wasman.2019.01.023. Epub 2019 Feb 12.
Food date labels such as "best before" and "sell by" are largely unregulated in the United States (U.S.), although new voluntary standards are coming into effect. A U.S. consumer survey was performed in April 2016 to inform policy and education activities related to date labels.
The survey was administered online to a nationally representative sample of 1029 adults as part of a biweekly omnibus survey. Survey questions assessed the frequency of discarding food based on date labels by food type, interpretation of label language variations, and knowledge of whether date labels are currently regulated by the federal government.
84% of consumers discard food near the package date at least occasionally. Among date labels assessed, "best if used by" was most frequently perceived as communicating quality, and both "expires on" and "use by" as communicating safety. Over 1/3 of participants incorrectly thought that date labeling was federally regulated, and 26% more were unsure. Respondents ages 18-34 and those with misunderstanding about date labels reported discarding food based on label dates with significantly more frequency than others.
Misunderstanding the meaning of food date labels is strongly associated with reports of more frequent food discards. This survey provides new and policy-relevant insights about how Americans use and perceive date labels, and about language used in labeling that may be most effective at communicating desired messages to consumers. As date labeling becomes standardized, this research underlines the need for a strong accompanying communications campaign, and highlights a particular need to reach those ages 18-34.
尽管美国(U.S.)即将实施新的自愿性标准,但食品日期标签(如“最佳食用日期”和“销售截止日期”)在该国基本上不受监管。2016 年 4 月,美国开展了一项消费者调查,为与日期标签相关的政策和教育活动提供信息。
该调查作为两周一次的综合调查的一部分,通过网络向全国代表性的 1029 名成年人进行。调查问题评估了消费者根据食品类型丢弃接近包装日期食品的频率、对标签语言变化的解释以及是否知道日期标签目前是否受联邦政府监管。
84%的消费者至少偶尔会丢弃接近包装日期的食品。在所评估的日期标签中,“最佳食用日期”最常被认为是传达质量信息,“过期日期”和“使用期限”则被认为是传达安全信息。超过 1/3 的参与者错误地认为日期标签受到联邦监管,26%的人不确定。年龄在 18-34 岁之间的受访者和对日期标签有误解的受访者报告称,根据标签日期丢弃食品的频率明显更高。
对食品日期标签含义的误解与更频繁丢弃食品的报告密切相关。这项调查提供了有关美国人如何使用和理解日期标签的新信息和政策相关信息,以及标签上使用的可能最有效地向消费者传达所需信息的语言。随着日期标签变得标准化,这项研究强调了需要开展强有力的伴随性宣传活动的必要性,并特别突出了需要针对 18-34 岁年龄段的人群。