Downsizing food portion can solve obesity crisis: experts
The study appears in The BMJ
Washington: You may want to downsize your food portions and tableware as a new study suggests that doing so is critical to tackle obesity.
Reducing the size of large food portions, packaging and tableware could help to tackle obesity, argue experts.
Theresa Marteau from the University of Cambridge and colleagues recently published a Cochrane review that found the most conclusive evidence to date that people consume more food or drinks from larger size portions or packages, and when using larger items of tableware.
They showed that eliminating larger portions completely could reduce daily energy intake consumed by 12 percent to 16percent among UK adults, and by 22 percent to 29 per cent among US adults.
Following on from this, they discuss the policy changes that will likely be required to reduce the size, availability and appeal of large food and drink portions that could help to reduce over consumption, and prevent obesity.
They suggest the following:
- Reducing food and drink serving sizes that contain high amounts of calories such as the standard single serving of confectionery, chips and cakes
- Reducing availability of larger portion and package sizes, for example, by removing the largest serving size of drinks
- Placing larger portion sizes in stores and cafes less accessibly, for example, by limiting portion size at checkouts, aisle ends, and special displays
- Restricting pricing practices that enable larger portion and package sizes to cost less in relative terms than smaller sizes, and restricting price promotions on larger portion and package sizes
- Highlighting single portion sizes in packaging
- Restricting portion and package sizes in advertisements
- Making smaller tableware, including plates, cups, glasses, and cutlery, the default for self service and served foods and drinks
- Designing tableware to encourage smaller mouthfuls, such as, shallow plates, straight sided glasses, cutlery
- Pricing tableware in relation to size
They say the implementation of portion size interventions will be easier in public sector organisations, such as schools, hospitals, military bases, and prisons, than in industry.
Such changes will "pose major challenges," they add, and suggest a combination of regulatory and non-regulatory measures as the food industry may find it difficult to act without regulation given "first mover disadvantage."
In addition, they say that reducing portion sizes may mean going back to sizes of portion and tableware similar to those in the 1950s, and changes may even involve reductions of over 50 percent for some energy dense products.
Lastly, they say although policy makers and the food industry have primary responsibility for action, public acceptability is likely to be an important facilitator.
For example, they highlight the case of many tobacco control measures that reflected the mobilisation of public support.
The study appears in The BMJ.