School of Public Health, Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences, United Nations Road, Upanga West, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.
Department of Physiology, Muhimbili University of Health and Allied Sciences, United Nations Road, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.
BMC Public Health. 2024 Apr 16;24(1):1062. doi: 10.1186/s12889-024-18488-9.
Urbanization influences food culture, particularly in low- and middle-income countries where there is an increasing consumption of processed and pre-packaged foods. This shift is contributing to a rise in non-communicable diseases. Food labelling standards are crucial for regulating manufacturing practices and helping consumers make healthy food choices. We aimed to assess the compliance of local and imported pre-packaged snacks with Tanzanian and international labelling standards in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.
A cross-sectional study was conducted on 180 snack products. A checklist based on Tanzanian and Codex labelling standards was used to evaluate adherence. We also examined factors influencing adherence, such as product origin, price, category, purchase location, and package size.
The majority of the snacks demonstrated partial adherence to Tanzania (n = 97; 54%) and International (Codex) (n = 120; 67%) labelling standards. Imported products showed significantly better adherence to both Tanzanian (n = 46; 53%) and international (n = 42; 48%) standards. Notably, more than half (n = 110; 66.7%) of the products used English for labelling, and infrequently (n = 74; 41.4%) used the recommended World Health Organization Front-of-Pack Nutrition Labelling. Product category, origin, and package size were significantly associated with higher levels of international standard adherence (p < 0.05).
The inadequate adherence to mandatory labelling standards and the scarce use of Swahili and FoPL highlight the need to strengthen labelling practices and potential challenges faced by consumers in understanding nutritional information. Thus, strengthening and emphasizing good labelling practices are urgently needed as we seek to address diet-related noncommunicable diseases.
城市化影响着食物文化,尤其是在中低收入国家,这些国家加工和预包装食品的消费不断增加。这种转变导致了非传染性疾病的上升。食品标签标准对于规范制造实践和帮助消费者做出健康的食物选择至关重要。我们旨在评估坦桑尼亚达累斯萨拉姆市当地和进口预包装小吃符合坦桑尼亚和国际标签标准的情况。
我们对 180 种小吃产品进行了横断面研究。使用基于坦桑尼亚和食典标签标准的检查表来评估遵守情况。我们还研究了影响遵守情况的因素,例如产品来源、价格、类别、购买地点和包装尺寸。
大多数小吃产品对坦桑尼亚(n=97;54%)和国际(食典)(n=120;67%)标签标准的遵守程度都不完全。进口产品对坦桑尼亚(n=46;53%)和国际(n=42;48%)标准的遵守程度明显更好。值得注意的是,超过一半(n=110;66.7%)的产品使用英语进行标签标注,很少使用(n=74;41.4%)推荐的世界卫生组织预包装食品营养标签。产品类别、来源和包装尺寸与更高水平的国际标准遵守情况显著相关(p<0.05)。
对强制性标签标准的遵守程度不足,以及很少使用斯瓦希里语和 FoPL,突出表明需要加强标签实践,消费者在理解营养信息方面可能面临挑战。因此,在我们寻求解决与饮食有关的非传染性疾病时,迫切需要加强和强调良好的标签实践。