| Literature DB >> 31991939 |
Ayoub Al-Jawaldeh1, Mike Rayner2, Chantal Julia3, Ibrahim Elmadfa4, Asmus Hammerich1, Karen McColl5.
Abstract
The provision of simplified nutrition information, in a prominent place on the front of food packages, is recommended as an important element of comprehensive strategies to tackle the burden of death and disease caused by unhealthy diets. There is growing evidence that front-of-pack nutrition labels are preferred by consumers, are more likely to be looked at or noticed than nutrition labelling on the back or side of packages and can help consumers to better identify healthier and less healthy products. This review summarizes current implementation of front-of-pack nutrition labelling policies in the countries of the WHO Eastern Mediterranean Region. Implementation of front-of-pack nutrition labelling in the Eastern Mediterranean Region remains limited, but three types of scheme were identified as having been implemented or at an advanced stage of development by governments in six countries. Through a review of reviews of existing research and evidence from country implementation, the authors suggest some pointers for implementation for other countries in the Region deciding to implement front-of-pack nutrition labelling policies.Entities:
Keywords: Eastern Mediterranean Region; FOP; front-of-pack; healthy diet; nutrition; nutrition labelling
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31991939 PMCID: PMC7071186 DOI: 10.3390/nu12020330
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Key characteristics for categorizing front-of-pack labelling schemes.
| Characteristics | Options | Illustrative Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Interpretive or informative provision of information | Interpretive schemes provide information to help consumers understand how healthy/unhealthy a food product is. This is often conveyed through use of colour coding, graphic symbols, or interpretive words (such as ‘high in’ or ‘low in’). | |
| Informative schemes (sometimes known as reductive) provide factual information, with no specific judgement or guidance about the nutritional quality of a food product. | ||
| Hybrid schemes provide a mix of factual information and interpretive elements. | ||
| Summary or nutrient based | Summary schemes show an overall indicator of the healthiness of a product, based on a combination of several nutritional criteria. | |
| Nutrient-specific schemes provide information on a set of nutrients. | ||
| Tone of judgement (for interpretive schemes) | Labels that only identify products of a higher nutritional quality (i.e., positive judgement only). These are often referred to as ‘endorsement logos’ and are sometimes considered to be health claims rather than nutrition labels [ | |
| Labels that provide a graded indicator of nutritional quality or indicate levels of both nutrients/ingredients that are considered healthier and those for which consumption should be limited (positive and negative). | See Nutri-Score and the Health Star Rating | |
| Labels that only identify foods which have high levels of less healthy nutrients/ingredients for which consumption should be limited (negative only). | ||
| Mandatory or voluntary implementation | Mandatory schemes require companies to include the specified labels on food packs. Some schemes apply to all foods, others to specific categories. | Mandatory schemes are in place in, for example, in Chile, Ecuador, Finland, Mexico, Sri Lanka, Thailand, and Uruguay. |
| Under voluntary schemes companies can choose whether or not to use the labels. In some cases, government specifies the type of label to be used, although their use is optional. Other voluntary schemes may be driven by industry or other stakeholders, and manufacturers can choose whether or not to use them. | Governments have endorsed voluntary schemes in, for example, Australia, Croatia, Finland, France, Iceland, New Zealand, Norway, Singapore, South Korea, Sweden, and United Kingdom. | |
| Range of nutrients and ingredients included | Schemes vary from those that focus on a nutrient/ingredient alone (e.g., energy or salt) to those which cover a wide range of nutrients/ingredients. Most commonly included components are sodium/salt, energy, total sugars, saturated fat, total fat, trans fatty acids, and added sugars. |
Nutri-Score, for example, is based on calories, sugars, saturated fat and sodium, as well as presence of fruits, vegetables, pulses, nuts, fibre, and protein UK traffic light labels cover energy, saturated fat, sugars, and salt |
| Reference amount for nutrients | Nutrient calculations and/or declarations can be based on: |
The Reference Intakes label above, used in the European Union, is based on per serving. Nutri-Score, the Health Star Rating, and Chile’s warning labels, for example, are based on 100 g/100 mL. Some systems, e.g., UK traffic lights, use a combination of ‘per serving’ and ‘per 100 g/100 mL’ information. |
Different types of front-of-pack nutrition labelling schemes in use or under development in the WHO Eastern Mediterranean Region.
| Nature of Information Provided | Summary Indicator/Nutrient Specific | Tone | Examples | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Interpretive | Summary indicator | Positive | Tunisia: | Logos which are positive summary indicators indicate healthier foods within categories. These are often referred to as endorsement or health logos (and these are often defined as ‘health claims’ rather than front-of-pack labelling). Tunisia is introducing a health logo label in the form of a tick. A health logo scheme, called Weqaya, has been implemented on a voluntary basis in Abu Dhabi since 2015. |
| Positive and negative | Under development in Morocco: | Summary indicators which cover both positive and negative elements give an overall rating of how healthy a food is. Morocco is conducting research studies to explore implementation of one summary indicator, Nutri-Score, under the Moroccan national 2017–2021 action plan for reducing consumption of salt, sugar and fat, and the national programme of nutrition. | ||
| Nutrient specific | Positive | In general, these are health claims, rather than nutrition labels. | ||
| Positive and negative | Islamic Republic of Iran: | These schemes apply traffic light colour coding (red, amber, green) to several nutrients to indicate the relative healthiness of those nutrient levels. Iran introduced voluntary traffic light labels in 2014, and these have been mandatory since 2016. The Saudi Food and Drug Authority introduced traffic light labelling in 2018, initially on a voluntary basis. Implementation of traffic lights from 2020 has also been announced in the United Arab Emirates, initially on a voluntary basis, but becoming mandatory by 2022. | ||
| Negative | Nutrient specific negative labels are “warning labels”, as implemented in, for example, Chile. | No implementation of warning labels identified in the Eastern Mediterranean Region. | ||
| Informative | Nutrient specific | These include labels which show the percentage of guideline daily amounts of particular nutrients provided by the food. They do not include any colour-coding or wording to help consumers interpret the information. | No implementation of government-led schemes which only provide such information has been identified in the Eastern Mediterranean Region | |
Strengths and weaknesses of three different types of front-of-pack labels currently being adopted in the Eastern Mediterranean.
| Type of Front-of-Pack Label | Strengths | Weaknesses |
|---|---|---|
| Traffic light labelling |
Simplified information that is easy to understand Interpretive to aid healthy choices Includes an indication of healthy foods and less healthy foods Colour-coding aids understanding, inclusion of ‘reds’ is particularly useful Design based on an already understood concept (traffic lights) Enables comparisons between food categories, within categories and within a specific food type Allows people to pay attention to particular nutrients of concern/interest Examples of country implementation and well-established Potential to drive reformulation of both healthier and less healthy products |
Not as simple as overall summary system scores (e.g., Nutri-Score) Consumers may have difficulty identifying the healthiest option when there is trade-off between nutrients Focuses only on the “negative” nutrients/components Inclusion in some systems of the noninterpretive element (e.g., percentage of reference intakes) could be confusing Unless implementation is mandatory, it is more likely to be used on healthier products |
| Nutri-Score |
Simplified information that is easy to understand Interpretive to aid healthy choices Includes an indication of healthy foods and less healthy foods Provides a single overall score for a food; does not require any understanding of nutrients Design based on an already understood concept in Europe (appliance energy ratings) The nutrient profile takes into account both “negative” and “positive” components of a food Enables comparisons between food categories, within categories and within a specific food type Strong evidence base from extensive research and testing during development Research suggests it is understood by all population groups, including those who normally do not read labels or who have poor diets Potential to drive reformulation of both healthier and less healthy products |
Does not allow people to pay attention to particular nutrients of concern/interest A relatively new labelling system which has relatively limited country implementation experience Unless implementation is mandatory, it is more likely to be used on healthier products |
| Health or endorsement logos |
Simplified information that is easy to understand Interpretive to aid healthy choices Provides a simple logo and does not require any understanding of nutrients Designs are often based on readily understood visual concepts (e.g., tick, heart) Enables comparisons within categories and within a specific food type May meet less resistance than a labelling system which includes “negative” as well as “positive” evaluation of foods Potential to drive reformulation of healthier products |
Does not include an indication of less healthy foods Does not cover most foods on the market, including those high in fat, sugar or salt Does not always enable comparisons between foods categories Does not allow people to pay attention to particular nutrients Consumers may overestimate the healthiness of products carrying the logo Less likely to drive reformulation of less healthy products |