4.4 Article

High sugar content of European commercial baby foods and proposed updates to existing recommendations

Journal

MATERNAL AND CHILD NUTRITION
Volume 17, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mcn.13020

Keywords

commercial foods; complementary feeding; dietary guidelines; food packaging; infant food; nutrition policy; sugars

Funding

  1. World Health Organization
  2. University of Leeds

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The study aimed to assess the sugar content and formulation of commercial baby foods in Europe, finding that most products contained high sugar content and widespread use of added sugars. Suggestions for reducing sugar content in baby foods and updating regulations to promote product reformulation were proposed.
The aim was to determine whether commercial baby foods marketed within Europe (up to 36 months of age) have inappropriate formulation and high sugar content and to provide suggestions to update European regulations and recommendations as part of a nutrient profile model developed for this age group. The latter was produced following recommended World Health Organization (WHO) steps, including undertaking a rapid literature review. Packaging information from countries across the WHO European region was used to determine mean energy from total sugar by food category. The percentage of products containing added sugar and the percentage of savoury meal-type products containing pureed fruit were also calculated. A total of 2,634 baby foods from 10 countries were summarised: 768 sold in the United Kingdom, over 200 each from Denmark (319), Spain (241), Italy (430) and Malta (243) and between 99-200 from Hungary, Norway, Portugal, Estonia and Slovenia. On average, approximately a third of energy in baby foods in these European countries came from total sugar, and for most food categories, energy from sugar was higher than 10%. Use of added sugars was widespread across product categories, with concentrated fruit juice most commonly used. Savoury meal-type purees did not contain added sugars except in United Kingdom and Malta; however, fruit as an ingredient was found in 7% of savoury meals, most frequently seen in UK products. Clear proposals for reducing the high sugar content seen in commercial baby foods were produced. These suggestions, relating to both content and labelling, should be used to update regulations and promote product reformulation.

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