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Nutrition Labeling in the Food-Away-From-Home Sector: An Economic Assessment
- 英文名称:
- Nutrition Labeling in the Food-Away-From-Home Sector: An Economic Assessment
- 作者:
- Jay Variyam
- 工作单位:
- USDA's Economic Research Service
- 关键词:
- Diet quality; food labeling; government regulation; health; mandatory disclosure; nutrition information; Nutrition Labeling and Education Act; obesity; reformulation;
- 年份:
- 2005
- 出版地:
- Washington, DC, USA
- 总页数:
- 28 pp
- 语种:
- English
- 摘要:
- Americans spent about 46 percent of their total food budget on food away from home in 2002, up from 27 percent in 1962. Such foods tend to be less nutritious and higher in calories than foods prepared at home, and some studies have linked eating away from home to overweight and obesity in adults and children. Current nutrition labeling law exempts much of the food-away-from-home sector from mandatory labeling regulations. Because consumers are less likely to be aware of the ingredients and nutrient content of away-from-home food than of foods prepared at home, public health advocates have called for mandatory nutrition labeling for major sources of food away from home, such as fast-food and chain restaurants. This report provides an economic assessment of a food-away-from-home nutrition labeling policy, including justifications for policy intervention and potential costs and benefits of the policy.
相关资源
- USDA's Healthy Eating Index and Nutrition Information
- USDA ERS - An Examination of Veterans’ Diet Quality
- Maternal Nutrition Knowledge and Children's Diet Quality and Nutrient Intakes
- How Americans Rate Their Diet Quality: An Increasingly Realistic Perspective
- Can Food Stamps Do More to Improve Food Choices? An Economic Perspective—Nutrition Information: Can It Improve the Diets of Low-Income Households?
- Consumers' Use of Nutrition Information When Eating Out
- The Impact of Food Away From Home on Adult Diet Quality
- How Food Away From Home Affects Children's Diet Quality
- Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) Participation Leads to Modest Changes in Diet Quality
- Factors Affecting the Macronutrient Intake of U.S. Adults