English | 繁體 | 简体 Packsourcing | New User?Join Now! | log in | Help | Add favorite | Set homepage
FoodSourcings
Your Location:Home »  Food News »  Food Application »  Functional Foods » 

Functional Foods

Functional Foods
2010-02-08

Food Ethics Council

 

 

Functional foods are fresh or processed foods that are claimed to have a health-promoting and/or disease-preventing property beyond basic nutritional function). They are big business in the food industry. But these claims are sometimes misleading, either:

 

  • Lacking in evidence; or

 

  • Economical with the truth, highlighting a potential health benefit (e.g. added vitamins) to mask unhealthy factors (e.g. high sugar).

 

That’s why new rules are currently being implemented in the European Union. Intended to tighten up consumer protection, they require up-front evidence to support health claims, linking them to nutrient profiles so unhealthy products can’t carry health claims. The Nutrition and Health Claims Regulation (1924/2006/EC) will affect what health claims can be made and what nutritional benchmarks a product needs to meet in order to carry one.

 

Reaction has been mixed. The food industry and consumers are broadly supportive. However, business is concerned about lack of transparency, the high proportion of claims rejected, and the level of evidence required for a claim to be accepted.

 

Consumer bodies are concerned that the nutrient profiling central to the regulation – the benchmarks supposed to ensure that unhealthy products can’t carry health claims – is being eroded. Some foods that are tagged red or amber under the UK Food Standards Agency traffic light system would carry health claims according to the current draft profiles. This calls into question whether the EU benchmarks are high enough. It could cause confusion by exposing consumers to contradictory health messages on food packaging. This could undermine trust in health claims and healthy eating advice.

 

Priorities

The EU should:

  • Guarantee transparency and a clear forward programme for the regulatory process

 

  • Tighten up the regulation, to ensure that benchmarks for nutrient profiling are kept strong, so that foods with a marginal place in a healthy diet are not permitted to carry health claims.

Claims: 
The copyrights of articles in the website belong to authors. Please inform us if there is any violation of intellectual property and we will delete the articles immediately.
Relevent Information more »
About Us | Trade Manual | User's Guide | Payment | Career Opportunities | Exchange Web Links | Advertisement | Contact