Profils nutritionnels : un critère d’éligibilité sans compromis *

Mid 2006, the French Nutrition Institute (IFN) established a task force to work on the emerging concept of “nutrient profiles”, introduced in the european regulation under negotiation at that time. A first symposium allowed to explore further development of the concept, beyond science (FUFOSE and PA...

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Main Author: Laplace Jean-Paul
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2008-01-01
Series:Oléagineux, Corps gras, Lipides
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/ocl.2008.0165
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spelling doaj-4143323e53dc47bb9d588d2e9f6b71272021-04-02T08:28:58ZengEDP SciencesOléagineux, Corps gras, Lipides1258-82101950-697X2008-01-011515610.1051/ocl.2008.0165ocl2008151p5Profils nutritionnels : un critère d’éligibilité sans compromis *Laplace Jean-PaulMid 2006, the French Nutrition Institute (IFN) established a task force to work on the emerging concept of “nutrient profiles”, introduced in the european regulation under negotiation at that time. A first symposium allowed to explore further development of the concept, beyond science (FUFOSE and PASSCLAIM programs) and moral standards. Meanwhile, nutrient profiles have been included in the adopted Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council of the EU on nutrition and health claims made on foods, though their technical basis still remains to be established. First searching for criteria that would satisfy the definition of the food categories, the IFN task force sought to collect objective data on the specific features of the various food categories, with regard to intrinsic nutritional characteristics, the benefit and role in the diet, the potential for optimisation and the possible consequences on nutritional allowances, and regulatory considerations. The task force also compared the outcomes of several nutrient profiling systems on the eligibility to claims of several hundreds of “real” food products, which confirmed that the choice of one system might make a lot of difference, according to the type of products. Last November, IFN organized a second symposium on nutrient profiles to take stock of the breakthroughs and expectations of the various actors involved in Europe. The original studies in progress at IFN have been presented on this occasion. Given as an introduction of this second symposium by the President of IFN, the paper below recalls the main objectives of this new Regulation. It also insists on the conditions of credibility of nutrient profiles that need to be easily understood by consumers, and should not be suspected to serve other intentions. Additional reserves are expressed, due to the difficulty of nutrient profiling, to the danger of a possible manipulation of the consumer behaviour, and to the risk of an excessive medicalization of human nutrition.http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/ocl.2008.0165nutrient profilesregulation on nutrition and health claims made on foodsFrench Nutrition Institute (IFN)
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Laplace Jean-Paul
spellingShingle Laplace Jean-Paul
Profils nutritionnels : un critère d’éligibilité sans compromis *
Oléagineux, Corps gras, Lipides
nutrient profiles
regulation on nutrition and health claims made on foods
French Nutrition Institute (IFN)
author_facet Laplace Jean-Paul
author_sort Laplace Jean-Paul
title Profils nutritionnels : un critère d’éligibilité sans compromis *
title_short Profils nutritionnels : un critère d’éligibilité sans compromis *
title_full Profils nutritionnels : un critère d’éligibilité sans compromis *
title_fullStr Profils nutritionnels : un critère d’éligibilité sans compromis *
title_full_unstemmed Profils nutritionnels : un critère d’éligibilité sans compromis *
title_sort profils nutritionnels : un critère d’éligibilité sans compromis *
publisher EDP Sciences
series Oléagineux, Corps gras, Lipides
issn 1258-8210
1950-697X
publishDate 2008-01-01
description Mid 2006, the French Nutrition Institute (IFN) established a task force to work on the emerging concept of “nutrient profiles”, introduced in the european regulation under negotiation at that time. A first symposium allowed to explore further development of the concept, beyond science (FUFOSE and PASSCLAIM programs) and moral standards. Meanwhile, nutrient profiles have been included in the adopted Regulation of the European Parliament and of the Council of the EU on nutrition and health claims made on foods, though their technical basis still remains to be established. First searching for criteria that would satisfy the definition of the food categories, the IFN task force sought to collect objective data on the specific features of the various food categories, with regard to intrinsic nutritional characteristics, the benefit and role in the diet, the potential for optimisation and the possible consequences on nutritional allowances, and regulatory considerations. The task force also compared the outcomes of several nutrient profiling systems on the eligibility to claims of several hundreds of “real” food products, which confirmed that the choice of one system might make a lot of difference, according to the type of products. Last November, IFN organized a second symposium on nutrient profiles to take stock of the breakthroughs and expectations of the various actors involved in Europe. The original studies in progress at IFN have been presented on this occasion. Given as an introduction of this second symposium by the President of IFN, the paper below recalls the main objectives of this new Regulation. It also insists on the conditions of credibility of nutrient profiles that need to be easily understood by consumers, and should not be suspected to serve other intentions. Additional reserves are expressed, due to the difficulty of nutrient profiling, to the danger of a possible manipulation of the consumer behaviour, and to the risk of an excessive medicalization of human nutrition.
topic nutrient profiles
regulation on nutrition and health claims made on foods
French Nutrition Institute (IFN)
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/ocl.2008.0165
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