Exercise better habits: Labeling foods with activity needed to burn calories linked to healthier choices
UK study finds that PACE labeling could reduce caloric intake by 200 kcal per day
11 Dec 2019 --- Physical activity calorie equivalent (PACE) food labeling may promote healthier food choices, according to research from Loughborough University, UK. The researchers analyzed 15 studies to compare the impact of PACE labels on calorie intake. They found that PACE labels reduced the number of calories consumed by the public by roughly kcal per meal, compared with other types of food labeling or no labeling. The findings may inform policy on the benefits of the PACE labeling, which could help curb total calorie intake.
The study findings are concurrent with a global effort to reduce obesity rates. In the UK alone, nearly a third (29 percent) of adults carried a dangerous amount of weight in 2017, up from 26 percent the year before, according to statistics from the National Health Service (NHS). The health body recommends around 2,500 kcal for men and 2,000 kcal for women per day but many people currently consume more than this amount.
Netherlands which plans to implement it by mid-2021. Nestlé also plans to roll out Nutri-Score on its products available in Austria, Belgium, France, Germany and Switzerland, starting in the first half of 2020. Cereal Partners Worldwide, the international breakfast venture between Nestlé and General Mills, will also implement Nutri-Score on its product packaging in the same countries.
To help tackle obesity and promote healthier eating habits, food label systems such as the Keyhole, Multiple Traffic Light and Nutri-Score have been introduced in several countries. The latest to join the Nutri-Score bandwagon is theIs PACE better than other food labels?
The new research notes that there is limited evidence that nutritional labeling on food and beverages changes eating behavior. PACE food labeling aims to provide the public with information about the amount of physical activity required to expend the number of kcal in food and beverages (i.e., the calories in this pizza requires 45 minutes of running to burn), to encourage healthier food choices, and as a result, reduce disease.
Published in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, the report notes that when listing how much exercise is needed to burn off food and drink, calorie intake decreased by roughly 65 kcal per meal.
According to PACE food labeling, eating 229 calories in a small bar of milk chocolate would require about 42 minutes of walking or 22 minutes of running to burn off. A soft drink contains 138 kcal and would carry a label equating to 26 minutes of walking or a 13-minute run.
A store-bought chicken and bacon sandwich with 445 kcal would have a label indicating one hour 22 minutes of walking and 42 minutes for running. A bag of chips equates to 31 minutes of walking or 16 minutes of running, while a blueberry muffin rates at 48 minutes of walking and 25 minutes of running.
Assuming a person eats three meals and two snacks over 24 hours, the scientists predict PACE labeling could knock 200 kcal off a person’s daily intake as they are deterred by seeing the high caloric value.
The Royal Society for Public Health in the UK has called for PACE labeling to be implemented as Front-of-Pack (FoP) food labeling, but until now scientific evidence to support this was lacking. The new systematic review provides an up-to-date synthesis of the evidence regarding the effects of PACE food labeling. Moreover, it estimates its potential impact on the selection, purchase and consumption of food and drinks, to inform future implementation of PACE food labeling, the researchers conclude.
By Kristiana Lalou
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