Posted on 03/08/2010 2:43:11 PM PST by decimon
New survey finds out what Americans are really paying attention to when choosing foods
Oakbrook Terrace, Ill., March 8, 2010 Americans recognize things need to change in the grocery aisle, and they support Uncle Sam's efforts to overhaul what is included in their food and on the packages. The majority also believe they are individually responsible for making the right food choices to avoid obesity, but will readily accept the government's help to be successful, according to a new survey by FoodMinds.
"In light of all the recent attention around food labeling and nutrition guidance programs, we wanted to get a sense of what the consumer actually thought," said Grant Prentice, FoodMinds' director of Strategic Insights. "We heard clearly they believe things need to change and that it makes sense for the government to lead that charge."
Americans Want Uncle Sam
Involved in Food Labels
* Eighty-six percent of consumers are interested in the government implementing objective front-of-pack labeling that calls out calories and beneficial nutrients such as vitamin D or fiber * Seventy-seven percent of shoppers are interested in front-of-package labels designed to warn them of products with high calories, low nutrients o And, 64 percent said if their favorite food had a warning label on it, they would either eat less or stop buying the product entirely
To Help Educate, Mitigate and Motivate
* Seventy-four percent favor government-sponsored nutrition education programs to help them better identify the "good" versus the "bad" foods * Fifty-eight percent support the government banning advertising of "unhealthy" foods to children and young adults * Half are in favor of the government allowing employers to reward healthier employees while levying higher costs or fines to punish those who engage in unhealthy behaviors
But Not His Taxes
* Rejected by 65 percent of shoppers are proposed taxes on soft drinks and foods high in sugar and calories, but low in nutritional value
Just the (Nutrition) Facts, Ma'am
Consumers love food-related information and want more of it, in particular basic, factual data.
* The Nutrition Facts panel ranks first with 93 percent of shoppers saying it's a very or somewhat useful tool, followed by front-of-pack information (low fat, high in fiber, etc.) at 88 percent * Not quite as popular are marketing-oriented claims such as "helps lose weight," "helps build strong bones," with 71 percent of shoppers finding them useful * Three quarters of shoppers like seeing where their food comes from ("organic," "natural" and "sustainable farming practices")
Not It! Significant Minority Believes Others Responsible for Individuals' Eating Habits
* When asked who holds the primary responsibility to make sure the public makes right food choices to avoid obesity, 38 percent chose: 14 percent said food companies, 12 percent said the government, nine percent said the health care system and three percent pointed to the educational systems
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About the Food Temperance Survey
Created by the FoodMinds Strategic Insights department, the Food Temperance survey was conducted through Greenfield Online's Omnibus service on January 18, 2010. The sample of 1045 adults is balanced on age, gender and region of the U.S. Sub-samples of 869 primary grocery shoppers and 182 Opinion Leader Shoppers were screened from the overall adult sample. The MOE is +/- 3% for primary grocery shoppers and +/- 7% for the opinion leader shoppers
About FoodMinds
FoodMinds is a food and nutrition company that harnesses science, public affairs and communications. FoodMinds applies knowledge and critical thinking to help its clients tell a better story that makes a difference. Visit www.foodminds.com to learn more.
Editor's Note: For complete survey results and chart visuals, please contact Laura Muma.
Conditional ping.
What? No thanks Uncle Sam! Stay out of my Bedroom, out of my House, off my gun rack, and kitchen pantry....Also my pickup truck!!!!!
BS!
No one seriously thinks that Uncle Sam should tell us what to eat.
>> Three quarters of shoppers like seeing where their food comes from (”organic,” “natural” and “sustainable farming practices”)
Me thinks the survey sample is skewed.
Who reads these labels? All people see is “NO FAT” on the candy bar.
What if you make all the “right” food choices and are still obese?
Rationing?
Uncle Sam isn’t satisfied with trying to get us to swallow lies,but now he wants to get more involved with our food. Look out for the feds putting the “in” in “inedible”.
Eat a pile of those and see what happens to your weight
Tax deductions for buying vegetables? That could be a help...
Organic food is such a scam. You want to make money these days, simply slap an ‘organic’ label, and then bobs your’ uncle.
“shoppers like seeing where their food comes from”.....ha...I want to know if it comes from CHINA, Mexico, India, etc......the rest is capitalism at work (i.e. organic, nat’l, sustainable)
Once again, Uncle Sam didn’t ask me. Here’s a thought, if you don’t want junk food don’t buy highly processed foods.
Not going to dispute that, but whatever I grow in my backyard or net from the waters, I consider organic.
I’d be interested in seeing all ingredients listed. For instance, on my Pepsi Throwback, it says water, sugar, caramel color, phosphoric acid, caffeine, natural flavor. I’d like to know exactly what the “natural flavor” is. I’d also like to know what type of sugar - cane, beet, etc. I’m not interested in bigger labels on the front.
If Oakhurst says “America’s 1st Farmers Pledge: No Artificial Growth Hormone Used”, I don’t need “FDA states: No significant difference in milk from cows treated with artificial growth hormone.”
If people let government decide what foods they eat and
what medicines they take, their bodies will soon be in
as sorry a state as are the souls of those who live
under tyranny.
Thomas Jefferson (1743 - 1826)
Most of that is already on the label. I read the labels, I have to. I hope they don’t change them since they are readable now. Somehow I expect that these people want something they will never see...a whole bag of chips with 3 calories a serving which would be the whole bag? *eyeroll*
Thanks decimon
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