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Letters to the Editor

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 August 2009

Mark Lawrence*
Affiliation:
Food Policy UnitWHO Collaborating Centre for Obesity PreventionDeakin University, 221 Burwood Highway, MelbourneVictoria 3125, Australia
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Abstract

Type
Letter to the Editor
Copyright
Copyright © The Author 2009

Food guides

A compromise solution

Madam

Carlos Monteiro’s commentary(Reference Monteiro1) linking food guidance with food processing has special relevance for current public health nutrition challenges. As he explains, the degree of processing correlates with the amount of fat, salt and sugar added to foods, and the subsequent likelihood of dietary imbalances.

Also, processing can be a proxy for the relative environmental footprint of a food. As the degree of food processing increases, often so too does the requirement for energy inputs – directly in the processing itself and indirectly in packaging. Yet current food guides often are restricted simply to translating abstract nutrient recommendations into food serving (amount and variety) guidance.

Carlos Monteiro comments that his approach, which frames food guidance around the degree of processing, ‘implies systematic revision of current official and authoritative dietary guidelines and graphic guides to food, nutrition and health.’ Indeed. A suggestion for food guidance revision to capture degree of food processing, which also retains a conventional nutrient basis, follows. The key requirement is that the visual representation needs to be a shape that will enable the graphic to depict two distinct dimensions. The first dimension would, as now, portray the nutrient basis to food guidance – foods grouped in accordance to similar nutrient profiles, with recommendations for serving size, number and variety from each food group. The second dimension would provide an indication of the degree of food processing.

Thus, the plate shapes of the UK food guide(2) and the Australian Guide to Healthy Eating(3) could be adapted by overlaying an inner second circle (see figure below). Within the inner circle would be positioned minimally processed ‘group 1’ foods, for example fresh fruit. In the outer circle would be located the more highly processed ‘group 2’ foods that might still contribute the characteristic nutrients of a particular food group, for example canned fruit in syrup. External to the plate would be the ‘ultra-processed’ ‘group 3’ foods, indicating they make no contribution to a nutritious diet, for example fruit cordials containing minimal fruit.

Integrating a food processing dimension into a nutrient-based food guide

This suggested guide has a number of advantages. It integrates nutrient and food processing considerations. It encourages people to discriminate on nutrition and environmental criteria by preferring food choices from the inner circle. Also, it could be used to set targets for changing dietary behaviour, by promoting an incremental shift in specific food choices within any food group from the outer circle to the inner circle of the plate.

References

1.Monteiro, CA (2009) Nutrition and health. The issue is not food, nor nutrients, so much as processing (Invited commentary). Public Health Nutr 12, 729731.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
2.Food Standards Agency (2009) The eatwell plate. http://www.food.gov.uk/healthiereating/eatwellplate/ (accessed May 2009).Google Scholar
3.Australia Government, Department of Health and Ageing (2008) Australian Guide to Healthy Eating. http://www.health.gov.au/internet/main/publishing.nsf/Content/health-pubhlth-strateg-food-guide-index.htm (accessed May 2009).Google Scholar