Logo image
The influence of current food and nutrition trends on dietitians’ perceptions of the healthiness of packaged food
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

The influence of current food and nutrition trends on dietitians’ perceptions of the healthiness of packaged food

Rachael L Thurecht, Fiona E Pelly and Sheri Cooper
Public Health Nutrition, Vol.23(12), pp.2124-2131
2020
PMID: 32338245
pdf
ThurechtPellyCooper_2020_The influence of current food and_Journal_article_Accepted version343.62 kBDownloadView
AcceptedThe influence of current food and nutrition trends on dietitians’ perceptions of the healthiness of packaged foodCC BY-NC-ND V4.0 Open Access
url
The influence of current food and nutrition trends on dietitians’ perceptions of the healthiness of packaged foodView
Published (Version of record)

Related links

Metrics

164 File views/ downloads
146 Record Views

UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#3 Good Health and Well-Being

Source: InCites

Abstract

Packaged food Perception Dietition Food labelling Public Health and Health Services Public Health (excl. Specific Population Health

Objective: To investigate the influence of current food and nutrition trends on dietitians’ perceptions of the healthiness of packaged foods.

Design: This observational study used a cross-sectional survey. Participants rated (strongly disagree to strongly agree) the extent to which a range of factors, independent of the energy, nutrient and ingredient content, influenced their perceptions of the healthiness of packaged foods. Two open-ended questions allowed for participants to list additional items they considered important.

Setting: Online survey.

Participants: Australian dietitians (n 117).

Results: The greatest consensus was a positive influence of the fit within the core food groups and presence of seasonal ingredients, and a negative influence of an increasing number of additives. Mixed opinions were obtained for GM ingredients, locally sourced ingredients, labelling of animal welfare and organic certification. Nutritional indicators received a split where almost half of participants disagreed/strongly disagreed that they positively influenced their perception of healthiness. Content analysis of open-ended responses (n 53, 45 %) revealed four broad categories as important in considering healthiness: ‘a whole food approach’, ‘marketing and labelling’, ‘product information’ and ‘context of diet’. A small number of responses (count of 6, 5 %) reported that packaging, advertising and features such as celebrity endorsement were a negative influence.

Conclusions: Dietitians have a broad concept of the healthiness of packaged foods, which incorporates elements of food safety, wholeness of the ingredients and marketing. Providing unified messages to the consumer can help to build the public perception of dietitians as experts in nutrition advice and counselling.

Details

Logo image