Title of article
Consumer perceptions of nutrition and health claims
Author/Authors
Hans C.M. van Trijp، نويسنده , , Ivo A. van der Lans، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
20
From page
305
To page
324
Abstract
The number of food products containing extra or reduced levels of specific ingredients (e.g. extra calcium) that bring particular health benefits (e.g. stronger bones) is still increasing. Nutrition- and health-related (NH) claims promoting these ingredient levels and their health benefit differ in terms of the (legal) strength with which the claim is brought forward and the specific wording of the claim, both of which may differ between countries.
Using a large-scale cross-national internet-based survey in Italy (n=1566), Germany (n=1620), UK (n=1560) and US (n=1621), the purpose of the study described here is to investigate consumer perceptions of NH food product claims, across different countries. NH claims are systematically varied as a function of six health benefits (cardiovascular disease, stress, infections, fatigue, overweight and concentration) and five claim types (content, structure-function, product, disease-risk reduction and marketing claim). The general results indicate that consumer perceptions differ substantially by country and benefit being claimed but much less by the claim type. Implications of these findings are being discussed.
Keywords
Food labelling , Perception , Behaviour , Health food , Functional foods , Nutrition and health claims , Health promotion , Legislation
Journal title
Appetite
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Appetite
Record number
955076
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