Posts Tagged: nutrition facts
Food truth that we can eat
What we know about eating, not eating and overeating has been investigated by research universities and university-trained scientists since the 1920s. The Journal of Nutrition began publishing in 1928. Now 2.5 million inquiries each month probe a massive body of knowledge about the nature of our evolving physical and cultural relationship with food, with at least 30 more food and nutrition journals collecting and dispersing this science globally.
The result: Americans spend more time debating what to eat than at any other time in history. The firmly held beliefs of most adults about what should be eaten or avoided have origins in the history of this science. In spite of the intent of this research, and because it is frequently challenged, people are understandably skeptical or easily recruited to the next food fad.
As a food science graduate and later as a campus writer, I have worked smack in the center of a leading food research university for more than a decade. This vantage point allowed me to follow the path of these rivulets of research as they flow through scientific journals and later become diluted by commercial interests. They readily dribble to the media without interpretation or the full context of their intended purpose.
Meanwhile, efforts in the national “food court” to hold advertising accountable to the truth are gaining momentum. In spite being misused, universities remain the best source of food truth. This assumes that faculty remains free to challenge the truth and that research funds are available to validate it. Unfortunately, funding for food research is shrinking along with the federal budget, and the federal agencies responsible are seeing an increase in applications for what remains. This week, the National Research Council will release their report , Research Universities and the Future of America: Ten Breakthrough Actions Vital to Our Nation's Prosperity and Security. The report will attempt to list the top 10 actions that Congress, the federal government, states and research universities could take to assure that American research universities help the U.S. “compete, prosper, and achieve national goals for health, energy, the environment, and security in the global community.” Those of us who are watching can only hope that the food truth needed to challenge nutritional hype will be on that list.
Two more weeks to weigh in on new nutrition label
UC Berkeley is giving people who are unsatisfied with the information on the ubiquitous "nutrition facts" food label a chance to suggest changes. Calling the current nutrition label "confusing and underutilized," Berkeley and collaborator News21 are asking the public how they envision a label that will help consumers make healthier, more informed choices about the food they eat.
There are two more weeks to submit ideas. Following the deadline, a panel of nutrition heavyweights will judge the submissions. The panel includes:
- Michael Pollen, author of Food Rules
- Robert H. Lustig, MD, UCSF professor of clinical pediatrics
- Michael Jacobson, director of the Center for Science in the Public Interest
- Andrew Vande Moere of Information Aesthetics
- Laura Brunow Miner of Pictory
Designs should be uploaded as jpg images, 450 pixels wide, on the Rethink the Food Label submission page no later than July 1. Ideas will be judged on functionality and design. Winners and the runners-up will later be asked for high resolution versions.
On the Internet page GoodFood.com, Michael Pollen explained what he saw lacking in the current food label.
"The focus on nutrients is probably inevitable but it distracts from the issue, which is whether you're getting real food or not," Pollen said. "Fiber, for example, is a slippery category. There are different types, and so manufacturers can game the system by adding irrelevant inert materials to food. Soluble and insoluble are different and the fiber in grain or fruit, for example, is important possibly because of what accompanies it, so how do you capture that?"
What would a useful nutrition label look like?