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Putting calories on menus in Ireland: what consumers want

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 October 2012

F. E. Douglas
Affiliation:
Public Health Nutrition, Food Safety Authority of Ireland, Dublin 1, Republic of Ireland
A. E. Bennett
Affiliation:
Public Health Nutrition, Food Safety Authority of Ireland, Dublin 1, Republic of Ireland
L. Courtney
Affiliation:
Public Health Nutrition, Food Safety Authority of Ireland, Dublin 1, Republic of Ireland
E. Keaveney
Affiliation:
Public Health Nutrition, Food Safety Authority of Ireland, Dublin 1, Republic of Ireland
E. Crowley
Affiliation:
Public Health Nutrition, Food Safety Authority of Ireland, Dublin 1, Republic of Ireland
M. A. T. Flynn
Affiliation:
Public Health Nutrition, Food Safety Authority of Ireland, Dublin 1, Republic of Ireland
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Abstract

Type
Abstract
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2012

Calorie menu labelling in restaurant chains may help combat obesity even where only modest changes occur in consumer behaviour( Reference Simon, Jarosz and Kuo 1 ). Consumers who report using calorie information (15%) tend to make lower calorie food choices( Reference Dumanovsky, Huang and Nonas 2 ). The purpose of this study was to determine, through national consultation, consumers' views on calorie menu labelling in Ireland.

Information on the obesity epidemic in Ireland, calorie menu labelling in other countries and what consumers could expect should this be implemented in Ireland was provided on the Food Safety Authority of Ireland website. Submissions from the public via a short on-line Consumer Survey, accessible for four weeks, were invited by press release. Quantitative and qualitative information collected included submitters' background, their views on calorie menu labelling – whether this should be implemented and in which food outlets – and whether this should be mandatory for large food businesses (defined by number of outlets). Submitters were asked if they would trust the calorie information. Data was analysed using χ2 to test for differences according to submitters' background.

* p<0.001.

As shown in the table above, 95% want calorie menu labelling in all or some food outlets. Those wanting calorie labelling in some outlets want this in fast food outlets (95%), followed by coffee shops & delis (63%), cinemas (58%), vending machines (57%), pubs (26%) and restaurants (18%). The main reasons given for wanting vs. not wanting calorie menu labelling was ‘empowerment to make informed food choice decisions’ vs. ‘calorie labelling is unnecessary and ineffective’ (46% vs. 3% of the total group respectively). Significantly more submissions from food businesses, compared to submissions from any other background, did not want calorie menu labelling in any food outlet (p<0.001). Significantly more submissions from consumers, healthcare professionals and others, compared with those from food businesses, wanted mandatory calorie menu labelling (92%, 88%, 84% vs. 58% respectively; p<0.001) and would trust calorie information (62%, 51%, 59% vs. 36% respectively; p<0.001).

This study shows there is overwhelming support from consumers for calorie menu labelling in Ireland. The number of submissions to this consultation was unprecedented. Previously, the best response to a national consultation, which concerned the addition of folic acid to bread and was supported by commercial advertising, received 513 submissions.

References

1. Simon, P, Jarosz, CJ, Kuo, T et al. (2008) Am J Public Health 99, 16801686.Google Scholar
2. Dumanovsky, T, Huang, CY, Nonas, CA et al. (2011) Br Med J 343, 44644475.Google Scholar
3. Food Safety Authority of Ireland (2006) available at: www.fsai.ie/WorkArea/DownloadAsset.aspx?id=770 Google Scholar
Figure 0

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