4.6 Article

Modelling the impact of different front-of-package nutrition labels on mortality from non-communicable chronic disease

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12966-019-0817-2

Keywords

Front-of-pack nutrition label; Food labelling; Non-communicable diseases; Consumer behaviour

Funding

  1. French Ministry of Health and Social Affairs
  2. Sante Publique France
  3. Institut National de la Sante et de la Recherche Medicale
  4. Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique
  5. Conservatoire National des Arts et Metiers
  6. University of Paris 13

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BackgroundFront-of-Package nutrition labels (FoPLs) are intended to help reduce the incidence of nutrition-related non-communicable diseases through an improvement in diet quality. FoPLs have been shown to improve the nutritional quality of purchases and have been associated with improved diet quality, which is in turn associated with reduced risk of non-communicable diseases. However, the potential impact of FoPLs on reducing mortality from chronic diseases has never been estimated.MethodsData from a laboratory experimental economics test were used to investigate the effects of five different FoPLs (Nutri-Score, Health Star Rating system, Multiple Traffic lights, Reference intakes and SENS(Systeme d'Etiquetage Nutritionnel Simplifie)) on the nutritional quality of household purchases. The relative differences in nutrient content and composition of food purchases were then applied to dietary intakes using data from an observational study, thus yielding estimates for reference' and labelled' diets. A macro-simulation study using the PRIME model was then conducted to estimate the impact of the modification in dietary intake as a result of FoPL use on mortality from diet-related non-communicable diseases.ResultsThe use of FoPLs led to a substantial reduction in mortality from chronic diseases. Approximately 3.4% of all deaths from diet-related non-communicable diseases was estimated to be avoidable when the Nutri-Score FoPL was used. The remaining FoPLs likewise resulted in mortality reduction, although to a lesser extent: Health Star Rating system (2.8%), Reference Intakes (1.9%), Multiple Traffic Lights (1.6%), and SENS (1.1%).ConclusionsFoPLs have the potential to help decrease mortality from diet-related non-communicable diseases, and the Nutri-Score appears to be the most efficient among the five formats tested.

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