FDA Considers Additional Food Labels
FDA Considers
Additional Food Labels
WASHINGTON, D.C. (AP) â Federal health officials on Monday considered whether adding symbols with nutrition information to food labels, like a traffic light system used in Britain, might help shoppers make healthier food choices.
The Food and Drug Administration opened a two-day meeting to collect comments from food companies, trade groups, watchdog organizations, medical experts, and its overseas counterparts on the topic. Any action is likely years away.
Some food manufacturers and retailers already have begun labeling foods with symbols to indicate how nutritious they are. PepsiCo uses the âSmart Spotâ symbol on diet Pepsi, baked Layâs chips and other products. Hannaford Bros, a New England supermarket chain, uses a zero to three-star system to rate more than 25,000 food items it sells. And in Britain, the government has persuaded some food companies to use a âtraffic lightâ symbol. That ranking system relies on green, yellow, and red lights to characterize whether a food is low, medium, or high in fat, salt, and sugar.
âA whole range of consumers like it and can use it. And the important thing is that we know that it is actually changing what is happening in the marketplace,â said Claire Boville of Britainâs Food Standards Agency, citing increased sales of foods flagged with the green and yellow symbols.
Worldwide, there is little consistency among the competing symbol regimes in use, according to the FDA, as it works to glean more information about them.
âWe really donât have adequate information about the various programs to understand how their criteria work and how they are used and understood by consumers ... and how they may effect market choice,â said Michael Landa, deputy director of the FDAâs food office.
While Mr Landa said the agency is in information-gathering mode, one lawmaker said he would move forward with legislation compelling the FDA to establish a single set of nutrition symbols.
âThe proliferation of different nutrition symbols on food packaging, well-intended as it may be, is likely to further confuse, rather than assist, American consumers who are trying to make good nutrition choices for themselves and their families. FDA should take meaningful steps to establish some consistency to these many different systems of nutrition symbols,â Senator Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, chairman of the Senate agriculture committee, said in a statement,
A petition filed in November by the Center for Science in the Public Interest also asked the FDA to create a national front-label symbol system. Such a system should complement but not replace the sometimes dizzying information packed into the nutritional facts labels most foods now bear, said Michael Jacobson, the advocacy groupâs executive director.
âYou could send a child to the store with 20 bucks and say, âJohnny, you can buy whatever you want as long as it has a green dot â and you can get one red-dot food,ââ Mr Jacobson said.
Absent congressional action, Mr Jacobson said it could take a decade for the FDA to set up such a system.
National Dairy Council nutrition expert Ann Marie Krautheim said setting up a consistent system would be helpful, if grounded in science and tested with consumers to ensure it worked. Ms Krautheim said the councilâs own research showed taste still trumped all for consumers when choosing what to eat, with convenience, cost, and nutrition all vying for second place.