4.7 Article

On-the-Pack Voluntary Well-Being Messaging for Milks Targeting Chinese Older Adults: A Content Analysis

Journal

FOODS
Volume 11, Issue 15, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/foods11152212

Keywords

dairy; China; well-being message; consumer insights; food safety national standards

Funding

  1. New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) through the New Zealand Milks Mean More (NZ3M) Endeavour programme [MAUX1803]
  2. New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation & Employment (MBIE) [MAUX1803] Funding Source: New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation & Employment (MBIE)

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China is facing severe population aging and milk products targeting older adults are popular. This study investigated the voluntary well-being messaging on the packaging of milk products for Chinese older adults. The results showed that different brands and milk sources highlighted different well-being aspects, and there were compliance issues with nutrition labeling regulations.
China is experiencing severe population aging. Given that milks targeting older adults are one of the most popular foods designed for Chinese older adults (COA), this study investigated on-the-pack (OTP) voluntary well-being messaging (VWM, ways of communicating a product's broad well-being benefits through information on food content or statements linked to favourable components, functions, or well-being outcomes) for milk targeting COA. Over 200 products identified from two sources (JD.com and Mintel's global new products database), were analysed for type, content, and VWM frequency for different brand origins and milk sources of various animal species, nutrition claim regulation compliance and alignment with nutrition facts. The results suggested: (1) different brand origins (domestic vs. international) and milk source (cow vs. goat) highlighted different well-being aspects of products, (2) three products failed to comply with government regulations made for nutrition labelling of pre-packed foods (GB 28050-2011), but (3) excepting fat, all 'contains' claims and most 'high' claims did not reflect significantly greater levels of nutrients, compared to products with no claims. The findings create a comprehensive picture of OTP VWM for milks targeting older adults in China, providing useful information for consumer, domestic, and international dairy industries, and policymakers.

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