Potential effects of nutrient profiles on nutrient intakes in the Netherlands, Greece, Spain, USA, Israel, China and South-Africa.

Nutrient profiling is defined as the science of categorising foods based on their nutrient composition. The Choices Programme is a nutrient profile system with criteria that determine whether foods are eligible to carry a "healthier option" stamp. The Daily Menu Method which has been devel...

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Main Authors: Annet J C Roodenburg, Anke Schlatmann, Mariska Dötsch-Klerk, Robert Daamen, Jie Dong, Marta Guarro, Margarita Stergiou, Nazeeia Sayed, Eunice Ronoh, Léon Jansen, Jacob C Seidell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-02-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3044133?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-cd0de6a792f243479940afbf9f80e1e42020-11-25T01:46:28ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-02-0162e1472110.1371/journal.pone.0014721Potential effects of nutrient profiles on nutrient intakes in the Netherlands, Greece, Spain, USA, Israel, China and South-Africa.Annet J C RoodenburgAnke SchlatmannMariska Dötsch-KlerkRobert DaamenJie DongMarta GuarroMargarita StergiouNazeeia SayedEunice RonohLéon JansenJacob C SeidellNutrient profiling is defined as the science of categorising foods based on their nutrient composition. The Choices Programme is a nutrient profile system with criteria that determine whether foods are eligible to carry a "healthier option" stamp. The Daily Menu Method which has been developed to evaluate these criteria is described here. This method simulates the change in calculated nutrient intakes which would be the result of consumers changing their diets in favour of food products that comply with the criteria.Average intakes of energy, trans fatty acids (TFA), saturated fatty acids (SAFA), sodium, added sugar and fibre were derived from dietary intake studies and food consumption surveys of 7 countries: The Netherlands, Greece, Spain, the USA, Israel, China and South Africa. For each of the key nutrients, these average intakes were translated into three Typical Daily Menus per country. Average intakes based on these three menus were compared with average intakes from three Choices Daily Menus. To compose the Choices Menus, foods from the Typical Menus that did not comply with the Choices criteria were replaced with foods that did comply and are available on the market.Comparison of intakes from the Choices Menus with the survey data showed that calculated intakes of energy, SAFA, TFA, sodium and added sugar were reduced. Fibre intakes were increased. The size of the effect differed per country.The Daily Menu Method is a useful means to predict the potential effects of nutrient profiles such as the Choices criteria, on daily nutrient intakes. The method can be applied internationally and confirms that the criteria of the Choices Programme are in line with the aim of the programme: to improve nutrient intakes in the direction of the recommendations.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3044133?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Annet J C Roodenburg
Anke Schlatmann
Mariska Dötsch-Klerk
Robert Daamen
Jie Dong
Marta Guarro
Margarita Stergiou
Nazeeia Sayed
Eunice Ronoh
Léon Jansen
Jacob C Seidell
spellingShingle Annet J C Roodenburg
Anke Schlatmann
Mariska Dötsch-Klerk
Robert Daamen
Jie Dong
Marta Guarro
Margarita Stergiou
Nazeeia Sayed
Eunice Ronoh
Léon Jansen
Jacob C Seidell
Potential effects of nutrient profiles on nutrient intakes in the Netherlands, Greece, Spain, USA, Israel, China and South-Africa.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Annet J C Roodenburg
Anke Schlatmann
Mariska Dötsch-Klerk
Robert Daamen
Jie Dong
Marta Guarro
Margarita Stergiou
Nazeeia Sayed
Eunice Ronoh
Léon Jansen
Jacob C Seidell
author_sort Annet J C Roodenburg
title Potential effects of nutrient profiles on nutrient intakes in the Netherlands, Greece, Spain, USA, Israel, China and South-Africa.
title_short Potential effects of nutrient profiles on nutrient intakes in the Netherlands, Greece, Spain, USA, Israel, China and South-Africa.
title_full Potential effects of nutrient profiles on nutrient intakes in the Netherlands, Greece, Spain, USA, Israel, China and South-Africa.
title_fullStr Potential effects of nutrient profiles on nutrient intakes in the Netherlands, Greece, Spain, USA, Israel, China and South-Africa.
title_full_unstemmed Potential effects of nutrient profiles on nutrient intakes in the Netherlands, Greece, Spain, USA, Israel, China and South-Africa.
title_sort potential effects of nutrient profiles on nutrient intakes in the netherlands, greece, spain, usa, israel, china and south-africa.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2011-02-01
description Nutrient profiling is defined as the science of categorising foods based on their nutrient composition. The Choices Programme is a nutrient profile system with criteria that determine whether foods are eligible to carry a "healthier option" stamp. The Daily Menu Method which has been developed to evaluate these criteria is described here. This method simulates the change in calculated nutrient intakes which would be the result of consumers changing their diets in favour of food products that comply with the criteria.Average intakes of energy, trans fatty acids (TFA), saturated fatty acids (SAFA), sodium, added sugar and fibre were derived from dietary intake studies and food consumption surveys of 7 countries: The Netherlands, Greece, Spain, the USA, Israel, China and South Africa. For each of the key nutrients, these average intakes were translated into three Typical Daily Menus per country. Average intakes based on these three menus were compared with average intakes from three Choices Daily Menus. To compose the Choices Menus, foods from the Typical Menus that did not comply with the Choices criteria were replaced with foods that did comply and are available on the market.Comparison of intakes from the Choices Menus with the survey data showed that calculated intakes of energy, SAFA, TFA, sodium and added sugar were reduced. Fibre intakes were increased. The size of the effect differed per country.The Daily Menu Method is a useful means to predict the potential effects of nutrient profiles such as the Choices criteria, on daily nutrient intakes. The method can be applied internationally and confirms that the criteria of the Choices Programme are in line with the aim of the programme: to improve nutrient intakes in the direction of the recommendations.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3044133?pdf=render
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