The general consensus is that
food labels that advertise lower sodium are a good way to help people make more
healthful choices. But after that, what we think those labels mean gets a bit
fuzzy, according to a new study.
Nutrition researchers were
wondering just how we interpret the various sodium-related claims slapped on
food packages: claims like "low in sodium" but also how a food
product will reducing the risk of disease like hypertension, or "help lower
blood pressure."
"Governments have gone out
of their way to set different criteria for the different types of claims,"
says Mary
L'Abbe, a professor of nutrition at the University of Toronto
and a co-author of the study. "But the consumer wouldn't necessarily see
that."
Indeed, the Food and Drug
Administration goes after companies that don't have data to back up claims on
disease and lowering blood pressure, but not on claims about sodium. Canada 's food labeling policies are similar to
those in the U.S.
When L'Abbe and her colleagues
questions asked 506 Canadians about a fake tomato soup can with various label
claims, they found that any claim about sodium, preventing disease or lowering
blood pressure made the product more appealing.
About one-third of the people
polled had high blood pressure. They tended to be more positive about sodium
labeling overall.
Most of them also weren't snowed
by the "Tastes great!" claim. But people were also a bit fuzzy on why
reduced sodium was good.
When asked about a variety of
health issues, including losing weight, constipation, and diabetes,
participants in the survey said that lower-sodium products would prevent all of
them. Alas, reducing sodium helps only to reduce blood pressure.
"What we saw there was a
halo effect [with the low-sodium claim]," says Christina Wong, a graduate
student and lead author of the study,
which was published in the American
Journal of Clinical Nutrition. "They see a whole range of
health benefits that are totally unrelated to the nutrient."
Second bit of good news: People
are positive about reduced sodium foods overall. Manufacturers have been lowering
sodium levels in foods but fear to advertise that because customers might
shun them, NPR's Dan Charles reports.
But L'Abbe says: "Some
manufacturers say consumers have negative impressions toward reduced-sodium
foods, but our research doesn't show that."
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