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Is health the key driver in children’s food?

Food manufacturers targeting children are under pressure to provide products that meet certain health standards – making health a major innovation driver. But does actual consumption reflect this?

The obesity epidemic has placed the spotlight firmly on how healthy the food we provide our children with actually is.

Across Europe, multi-stakeholder initiatives focus on providing educational support to help children develop healthier lifestyles.

The EU healthy eating campaign, ‘Eat it, Drink it, Move it!’, includes a roadshow that visits school children between the ages of eight and 12. The message: Eat well “because it’s fun to be fit”. There are numerous similar national campaigns, such as France’s Programme National Nutrition Santé (PNNS) or the UK’s Healthy Schools initiative.

According to figures from the European Association for the Study of Obesity, these efforts are failing to stem the rising tide of European schoolchildren classified as obese or overweight. The EASO estimates that 16-22% of Europe’s schoolchildren are overweight, 4-6% of whom are obese. This means around 11.8-16.3m four-to 18-year-olds are overweight.

And these figures are accelerating. “Rapid increases in the prevalence of overweight schoolchildren are being seen in all EU countries for which data are available,” the researchers note.

During the 1970s, the childhood obesity rate rose by around 0.2%, the 1980s saw the rate of increase stand at 0.2%-0.6% and the early 1990s saw increases of between 0.3%-0.8%. By the late 1990s and early 2000s the annual rate of increase had crept to as much as 2% – and this coming off a higher base. The research centre estimates that over 20m European children will be overweight within a decade.

Current consumption fails to embrace health

Awareness of ‘healthy eating’ among young people has risen – but it would seem that the reality of their consumption patterns do not always reflect this.

Young people in France are eating less fruit and vegetables than previous generations. Forty-five percent of French children aged 17 and under consumed fewer than two portions per day in 2016, compared to 32% in 2010, research from think tank Crédoc revealed.

Similar consumption issues are evident in Germany. A survey conducted on behalf of frozen food manufacturer Iglo by Kantar Emind found that while 89% of German mothers feel “adequately informed” about what constitutes a balanced diet for children, they are not always able to put this information into action. A majority of children – 69% – snack on sugary sweets more than once a day and just 23% eat the recommended five portions of fruit and veg a day.

According to a survey from UK retailer Sainsbury’s, released this year, 95% of UK 11- to 14-year-olds understand that it is important to “maintain a balanced diet” and eat five fruits and vegetables a day. “The good news is that most of the children surveyed understood the importance of healthy eating,” Sainsbury’s said.

The bad news is it’s again apparent that children’s diets do not always reflect this understanding: 71% of the same children included in the survey said that they do not limit the amount of sweets or chocolate they eat; 54% will “occasionally or never” limit their intake of fried food; and 27% will have a fizzy drink with their evening meal.

Part of the problem, the survey results suggested, is that healthy food is seen as “boring” with 31% of children stating that this prevents them from eating more healthily.

Source: Food Navigator

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