| Literature DB >> 26229200 |
Stefanie Vandevijvere1, Clare Dominick1, Anandita Devi1, Boyd Swinburn1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To assess government actions to improve the healthiness of food environments in New Zealand, based on the healthy food environment policy index.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26229200 PMCID: PMC4510812 DOI: 10.2471/BLT.14.145540
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bull World Health Organ ISSN: 0042-9686 Impact factor: 9.408
Fig. 1Implementation of policies on food environments and infrastructure support systems by the Government of New Zealand, compared with international best practice
Proposed policy actions on food environments for the Government of New Zealand, prioritized by experts
| Proposed policy actions | Score (% of total points allocated)a | Rank |
|---|---|---|
| 372 (8.6) | 1 | |
| To improve food labelling (nutrient disclosure), the government: | 260 (6.0) | 10 |
| – requires trans fats to be added in the nutrition information panel where they exceed a particular level; and | ||
| – examines the potential for including ‘added sugars’ in the nutrition information panel. | ||
| To improve food labelling (preventing misleading claims), the government investigates the application of the nutrient profiling scoring criterion | 278 (6.4) | 8 |
| 329 (7.6) | 5 | |
| To improve food labelling (energy disclosure), the government requires all quick service chain restaurants to display kJ labelling (per serving as sold) on their menu boards. | 242 (5.6) | 12 |
| 364 (8.4) | 2 | |
| 341 (7.8) | 3 | |
| 320 (7.4) | 6 | |
| To ensure that taxpayer-funded food for children is healthy, the government requires all programs involving subsidised or supplied food for children (e.g. school breakfast programs) to meet the food and nutrition guidelines as outlined in the food and beverage classification system. | 270 (6.2) | 9 |
| 330 (7.6) | 4 | |
| To show national leadership, the government develops and implements healthy food service policies throughout the public health sector (e.g. MoH, hospitals, DHBs, public health units). | 284 (6.5) | 7 |
| To stimulate the uptake of healthy food service policies and actions, the government provides support and training systems for children’s settings, government sector and private sector workplaces (particularly small to medium businesses). | 236 (5.4) | 14 |
| To support local communities achieve healthy food environments for children, the government reviews the adequacy of the current local government legislation with a view to strengthening local governments’ authority to create healthy food environments for children (e.g. ensuring ‘green food zones’ around schools to minimize unhealthy food outlets and advertising. | 254 (5.9) | 11 |
| To protect the health of New Zealanders, the government includes formal and explicit population nutrition and health risk assessments as part of their national interest analysis on trade and investment agreements. | 228 (5.3) | 15 |
| To avoid exposure to being sued by transnational corporations, the government ensures that specific and explicit provisions are included in trade and investment agreements allowing the Government of New Zealand to preserve its regulatory capacity to protect and promote public health. | 237 (5.5) | 13 |
DHB: District Health Board; kJ: kilo Joule; MoH: Ministry of Health.
a The total points available per proposed policy action were 4345. Two out of 58 experts allocated less than 75 points. Scores cannot be compared to the scores of the infrastructure support actions which were allocated a higher number of points by the experts. Priority actions are listed in bold.
Proposed infrastructure support actions for the Government of New Zealand prioritized by experts
| Proposed infrastructure support actions | Score (% of total points allocated)a | Rank |
|---|---|---|
| 390 (7.2) | 1 | |
| 317 (5.9) | 4 | |
| To ensure the consistency of policies and messages on healthy diets, the government actively implements its food-based dietary guidelines including translating and promoting them to the public and to professional groups, industry groups and relevant settings. | 282 (5.2) | 10 |
| 324 (6.0) | 3 | |
| To articulate the high priority to reduce health inequalities, the government embeds explicit objectives to reduce health inequalities throughout the comprehensive plan. | 302 (5.6) | 5 |
| To minimize direct conflicts between commercial interests and the interests of public health nutrition, the government strengthens its conflict of interest procedures to ensure that food industry representatives with direct conflicts are not included in setting food-related policy objectives and principles (this does not apply to their participation in policy implementation). | 298 (5.5) | 6 |
| To track progress towards healthier food environments and to inform action, the government strengthens its monitoring of food environments by regular: | 292 (5.4) | 7 |
| – monitoring of marketing unhealthy foods to children through broadcast and non-broadcast media; and | ||
| – monitoring the nutritional quality of foods provided and sold in schools and early childhood education and care services. | ||
| To track progress towards healthier diets and to inform action, the government ensures that there are comprehensive regular (e.g. five yearly) food consumption surveys for adults and children, so that food and nutrient intakes and nutritional status can be assessed against nutritional and food-based guidelines and targets. | 278 (5.1) | 12 |
| To track progress and to inform action at a local level, the government institutes a system to deliver regular fine-grained estimates of overweight and obesity prevalence (especially for children and adolescents) at community levels for use by local communities. | 228 (4.2) | 18 |
| To track progress on NCDs and their risk factors, the government continues to invest in cardiovascular disease and diabetes risk assessments and investigates the inclusion of height and weight measurements and the use of the data for population monitoring. | 280 (5.2) | 11 |
| To ensure effectiveness and the efficient use of resources, the government includes robust programme evaluation in any major investment in improving population nutrition with approximately 10% of programme costs allocated for evaluation including outcome measures. | 288 (5.3) | 8 |
| To track progress and inform action on the underlying drivers of poor health and health inequalities, the government funds regular monitoring reports on the underlying societal and economic determinants of health and the related progress on the reduction of health inequalities. | 288 (5.3) | 9 |
| 339 (6.3) | 2 | |
| To align research strategies with improving the healthiness of diets, the government ensures that the Science Challenges on Healthier Lives, Ageing Well, and A Better Startb have a strong focus on research to improve nutrition. | 232 (4.3) | 17 |
| To facilitate whole-of-government approaches to improving population nutrition and obesity, the government establishes cross-government mechanisms (national to local and between ministries) to coordinate food-related prevention policies (e.g. through the introduction of a new public sector challenge). | 264 (4.9) | 14 |
| To maximize the input and value from civil society, the government ensures there are formal platforms including a nutrition advisory committee and other mechanisms for civil society organizations to be involved proactively in food policy and programme development, implementation and evaluation. | 264 (4.9) | 15 |
| To maximize the impact of community-based programmes for obesity prevention, the government implements the Healthy Families New Zealand programme to at least the level of comprehensiveness, coverage and depth as the Healthy Together Victoria programme in Australia. | 273 (5.0) | 13 |
| To ensure that food policies are compatible with the objectives of improving population nutrition and reducing obesity and diet-related NCDs, the Ministry for Primary Industries and the Ministry of Business, Innovation, and Employment assess the wider health impact of food policies (not only from a safety point of view) on long-term population health. | 246 (4.6) | 16 |
| To ensure that government policies in general are compatible with the objectives of improving health, the government establishes a health impact assessment capacity, including funding for such capacity at the national and local level. | 227 (4.2) | 19 |
MoH: Ministry of Health; NCD: noncommunicable diseases; NZ$: New Zealand dollars; WHO: World Health Organization.
a The total points available per proposed policy action were 5412. One out of 58 experts did not prioritize the infrastructure support actions and one out of 58 experts allocated 92 instead of 95 points. Scores cannot be compared to the scores of the policy actions which were allocated a lower number of points by the experts.
b The National Science Challenges aim to align and focus New Zealand's research on large and complex issues by drawing scientists together from different institutions and across disciplines to achieve a common goal through collaboration.
Priority actions are listed in bold.