Canadian food and beverage companies get mixed grades on nutrition goals: report

Canadian food and beverage companies get mixed grades on nutrition goals: U of T report
Dr. Lana Vanderlee. Credit: Katherine Fogler

Canada's largest food and beverage manufacturers could aim higher to improve nutrition, reduce obesity and prevent chronic disease, according to a new report by University of Toronto researchers.

The study is the first to evaluate Canada's biggest and beverage companies based on their policies and commitments to sell healthier products.

The report shows that while many companies are making meaningful commitments to improve the Canadian food environment—through targets to reduce sodium, sugar and saturated fat in products and by restricting advertising of less healthy products to children, for example—there is much variability among companies.

"We see considerable leadership from some companies that have embedded population nutrition and obesity in their policy approaches and strategies," says Lana Vanderlee, a postdoctoral fellow who co-led the study with Mary L'Abbé, a professor of nutritional sciences at U of T. "But it's not the case across all companies, and no single company demonstrated strong commitments in all the areas we examined."

The researchers assessed 22 companies, half of which provided data or clarification on their policies. Study criteria did not include the healthfulness of specific products and focused largely on corporate leadership, and areas of potential improvement. Nestlé was the highest rated with a score of 60 out of 100 possible points; Sun-Rype and Agropur tied for the lowest score at four points.

sugary beverage
Credit: CC0 Public Domain

Overall, companies scored highest for their corporate strategies, by acknowledging obesity and nutrition commitments and efforts in their strategies, missions and visions. Almost no companies had policies related to making healthier products more readily available and at a better price point, and many fared poorly on front-of-package labelling.

The study also looked at corporate transparency. "We found that most companies report the philanthropic causes and foundations to which they contribute, but far fewer publicly share their positions related to government policies, or their political donations and ," says Vanderlee, who is now based at the University of Waterloo. "Given the history of industry involvement in the process, and ongoing private-public partnerships in research, transparency in these areas is essential."

Overall, says Vanderlee, the report highlights the important role the food and beverage industry can play in controlling obesity and reducing diet-related —and the need for future research to monitor industry efforts, especially when it comes to acting on .

And given that not all companies are committed to healthier practices, Vanderlee says, clearly have a role. "The Canadian government has introduced the Healthy Eating Strategy to address some of these key aspects of our food environment. Time will tell how companies react to these changes, but industry needs to be part of the solution if we want to see tangible improvements in Canadian diets."

Citation: Canadian food and beverage companies get mixed grades on nutrition goals: report (2019, March 20) retrieved 24 April 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2019-03-canadian-food-beverage-companies-grades.html
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