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      Use and understanding of nutrition information on food labels in six European countries

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          Abstract

          Aim

          The goal of the study was to investigate the use of nutrition information on food labels and understanding of guideline daily amount (GDA) front-of-pack nutrition labels in six European countries.

          Subjects and methods

          In-store observations and in-store interviews were conducted in major retailers in the UK ( n = 2019), Sweden ( n = 1858), France ( n = 2337), Germany ( n = 1963), Poland ( n = 1800) and Hungary ( n = 1804), supplemented by questionnaires filled out at home and returned (overall response rate 50.3%). Use of labels was measured by combining in-store observations and in-store interviews on concrete purchases in six product categories. Understanding of GDA front-of-pack nutrition labels was measured by a variety of tasks dealing with conceptual understanding, substantial understanding and health inferences. Demographics, nutrition knowledge and interest in healthy eating were measured as potential determinants.

          Results

          Across six product categories, 16.8% of shoppers were found to have looked for nutrition information on the label, with the nutrition grid (table or list), GDA labels and the ingredients list as the main sources consulted and calories, fat and sugar the information most often looked for. Understanding of GDA labels was high in the UK, Sweden and Germany, and more limited in the other countries. Regression analysis showed that, in addition to country-specific differences, use and understanding are also affected by differences in interest in healthy eating and in nutrition knowledge and by social grade.

          Conclusion

          Understanding of nutrition information seems to be more widespread than use, suggesting that lack of use is a question of not only understanding, but also motivation. Considerable national differences exist in both understanding and use, some of which may be attributed to different histories of the role of nutrition in the public debate.

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          Most cited references3

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          Development of a general nutrition knowledge questionnaire for adults.

          This paper describes the development of a reliable and valid questionnaire to provide a comprehensive measure of the nutritional knowledge of UK adults. The instrument will help to identify areas of weakness in people's understanding of healthy eating and will also provide useful data for examining the relationship between nutrition knowledge and dietary behaviour which, up until now, has been far from clear. Items were generated paying particular attention to content validity. The initial version of the questionnaire was piloted and assessed on psychometric criteria. Items which did not reach acceptable validity were excluded, and the final 50 item version was administered to two groups differing in nutritional expertise on two occasions to assess the construct validity and test-retest reliability. The questionnaire was developed in 1994 in the UK. Three hundred and ninety-one members of the general public, recruited via their places of work, completed the questionnaire at the piloting stage. The final version was administered to 168 dietetics and computer science students following a university lecture. The internal consistency of each section was high (Cronbach's alpha = 0.70-0.97) and the test-retest reliability was also well above the minimum requirement of 0.7. Nutrition experts scored significantly better than computer experts [F(1167) = 200.5, P<0.001], suggesting good construct validity. The findings demonstrate that the instrument meets psychometric criteria for reliability and construct validity. It should provide a useful scale with which to reassess the relationship between knowledge and dietary behaviour.
            • Record: found
            • Abstract: found
            • Article: not found

            Quantification of consumer attitudes to health and hedonic characteristics of foods.

            Health and Taste Attitudes Questionnaires were developed to assess consumers' orientations toward the health and hedonic characteristics of foods. Items were generated in a qualitative study. The original 37 items on health and 44 on taste were rated from "strongly disagree" to "strongly agree" by a representative sample of 1005 Finnish adults (18-81 years). The number of items was reduced using factor and item analysis, resulting in 20 health- and 18 taste-related statements. Three health-related and three taste-related factors were extracted. The health-related factors were labelled as "General health interest", "Light product interest", and "Natural product interest". The taste-related factors were named "Craving for sweet foods", "Using food as a reward", and "Pleasure". Cronbach's alphas of the multi-item scales, based on the statements loading highly on each factor, ranged from 0.67 to 0.89. Age and gender affected the responses. Females were more interested in the health and taste aspects of foods than were males. Younger respondents were less concerned with health but more interested in taste than were older respondents. A preliminary test of predictive validity was conducted by analysing subjects' responses to foods with weak and strong connotations of health and taste, and currently the questionnaires are being validated with further behavioural tests. Copyright 1999 Academic Press.
              • Record: found
              • Abstract: not found
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              How do consumers use nutrition label information?

                Author and article information

                Contributors
                +45-89-486439 , +45-86-153988 , klg@asb.dk
                Journal
                Z Gesundh Wiss
                Zeitschrift Fur Gesundheitswissenschaften
                Springer-Verlag (Berlin/Heidelberg )
                0943-1853
                1613-2238
                6 January 2010
                6 January 2010
                June 2010
                : 18
                : 3
                : 261-277
                Affiliations
                [1 ]MAPP Centre for Research on Customer Relations in the Food Centre, Aarhus University, Haslegaardsvej 10, 8210 Aarhus V, Denmark
                [2 ]EUFIC—European Food Information Council, Rue Guimard 19, 1040 Brussels, Belgium
                Article
                307
                10.1007/s10389-009-0307-0
                2967247
                21124644
                0fb60c17-b545-4180-988c-9f068c69e291
                © The Author(s) 2009
                History
                : 6 August 2009
                : 24 November 2009
                Categories
                Original Article
                Custom metadata
                © Springer-Verlag 2010

                Medicine
                nutrition information,consumer research on food labels,signposting
                Medicine
                nutrition information, consumer research on food labels, signposting

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