FDA’s Nutrition Initiatives
The FDA is prioritizing its nutrition initiatives to ensure people in the United States have greater access to healthier foods and nutrition information we can all use to make healthier choices more easily. Increasing the availability of healthier foods could improve eating patterns and, as a result, improve everyone’s health and wellness.
Eating patterns in the U.S. do not align with federal dietary recommendations. Most people in the U.S. do not eat enough fruits, vegetables, dairy, whole grains and healthy oils, and consume too much saturated fat, sodium and added sugars. Healthy eating is influenced by a variety of factors including access to healthy, safe, and affordable foods as well as consumers’ knowledge, preferences, and culture. At the FDA, we want to have an impact on eating patterns by encouraging industry to make healthier foods and by helping consumers follow healthier diets.
The U.S. faces an ever-growing epidemic of diet-related chronic diseases such as cardiovascular disease, diabetes and obesity. Poor nutrition plays a key role in chronic but preventable diseases, which are leading causes of death and disability in the U.S. Racial and ethnic minority groups, those with lower socioeconomic status and those living in rural areas disproportionately experience these diet-related chronic diseases. Additionally, the current pandemic has made it very clear that we need to improve nutrition, given that people with obesity, diabetes, and other chronic diseases have an increased risk of severe symptoms and death from COVID-19. In 2021, CDC issued a report indicating that sharp increases in Body Mass Index rates occurred during the COVID-19 pandemic; those with overweight or obesity and younger school-aged children experienced the largest increases.
FDA’s Role
The FDA plays a key role within a broader, whole-of-government approach to help reduce the burden of chronic diseases and advance health equity by helping to improve dietary patterns in the U.S. The FDA has taken some significant steps to support consumers in making healthier choices. For example, the FDA updated the Nutrition Facts label with a refreshed design and updated information, including the declaration of added sugars (consuming too much added sugars can make it difficult to meet nutrient needs while staying within calorie limits). Calories are also now required to be declared on certain menus and menu boards to better equip consumers with nutrition information when they eat away from home. Most recently, the FDA issued voluntary sodium reduction targets for industry in a wide variety of processed, packaged and prepared foods as part of an ongoing effort to reduce sodium in the food supply.
The FDA knows more needs to be done. We will continue to focus on creating a healthier food supply, empowering consumers and helping establish healthy starts for our youngest populations. Working with our federal partners in a whole-of-government approach, we can dramatically reduce the risk of diet-related chronic diseases, advance health equity, and improve the health of future generations.
Key Elements
On average, people in the U.S. consume 50% more sodium than the recommended limit for those 14 years and older. Excess sodium can result in hypertension – or high blood pressure – which in turn increases the risk for heart attacks and strokes. More than 4 in 10 American adults have high blood pressure, and that number increases to about 6 in 10 for non-Hispanic Black adults. About 70% of sodium intake comes from packaged and restaurant foods, making it challenging for consumers to reduce sodium intake. As a first step in an iterative approach to reduce sodium across the food supply, in October 2021, the FDA issued voluntary sodium reduction targets for the food industry in a wide variety of processed, packaged and prepared foods.
The Dietary Guidelines for Americans, 2020-2025, for the first time includes nutrition guidance for children under 2 years of age and expands guidance for those who are pregnant or breastfeeding. These updates allow the FDA to expand our work that affects these critical populations. Healthy dietary patterns early in life can influence the trajectory of eating habits and health behaviors throughout life. Our work focuses on three key areas:
- FDA/EPA fish advice. In October 2021, the FDA, in coordination with the Environmental Protection Agency, published updated advice to help those who might become pregnant, are pregnant or breastfeeding, and parents and caregivers who are feeding children make informed choices about fish that are nutritious and safe to eat. Seafood provides beneficial fatty acids and other nutrients that can help children’s growth and development. The FDA continues to work on developing a variety of educational materials—including the release of new infographics for consumers in October 2021—to enhance the ability of consumers to follow the advice and to encourage the consumption of seafood lower in mercury among these populations.
- Infant formula premarket review. Infant formula is a significant or even sole source of nutrition for many infants during a critical period of growth and development. The majority of infants in the U.S. receive infant formula by 6 months of age. The FDA requires certain nutrients in infant formulas, and infant formula manufacturers are required to make a submission containing detailed information on the safety and nutritional adequacy of a new infant formula to the FDA before introducing new infant formulas in interstate commerce. These submissions are increasing in both quantity and complexity. The FDA is looking at the latest science on novel infant formula ingredients, including new “bioactive” ingredients that are similar to components of human milk.
- Promoting nutritious and safe food choices. The FDA will continue to work with its federal partners to develop additional education and outreach efforts to ensure that those who are pregnant or might become pregnant, as well as parents and caregivers, are aware of current recommendations for healthy eating patterns. As the FDA implements its Closer to Zero Action plan, we will ensure that parents and caregivers have accessible, science-based information to help make nutritious choices to ensure their children’s healthy development, while reducing exposure to toxic elements from foods to as low as feasible.
Claims and symbols can act as quick signals on the front of food packages to help consumers better understand nutrition information and select foods that are part of healthy eating patterns. Labels provide consumers with further valuable information to help them to choose healthier foods. Labeling on food packages can also encourage food manufacturers to reformulate and develop healthier foods. For example, after requiring trans fat be declared on the Nutrition Facts label in 2006, trans fat was reduced by almost 80% in the food supply. The FDA’s work in labeling and claims includes:
- Updated the nutrient content claim “healthy.” The FDA issued a proposed rule on September 28, 2022 to update the definition of the “healthy” claim that can appear on food packages to align it with current nutrition and dietary guidance, as well as the Nutrition Facts label. Updating the voluntary “healthy” claim will help consumers more easily identify foods that are consistent with healthy eating patterns and potentially encourage manufacturers to reformulate and produce new foods that could bear the “healthy” claim.
- Developing a “healthy” symbol. To further help consumers easily identify packaged foods that would meet an updated “healthy” definition, the FDA is conducting consumer research to develop a “healthy” symbol that could appear on food packages.
- Providing food companies with guidance on Dietary Guidance Statements. In keeping with the Dietary Guidelines for Americans’ focus on eating patterns and food groups, the FDA is developing guidance for industry on statements that could be used on food packages to help consumers understand how a food or food group can contribute to a healthy eating pattern.
- Exploring recommendations for nutrition labeling for online grocery shopping. Consumers are increasingly using e-commerce to shop for groceries. This trend was accelerated during the COVID-19 pandemic and cuts across all demographics, including Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) participants who are now able to use such benefits for online grocery shopping. Therefore, it is important for the FDA to learn more about what and how food labeling information is available to consumers at the point of purchase when grocery shopping online. As a first step, the FDA discussed labeling in online grocery shopping in a session at the FDA’s New Era E-Commerce Summit in October 2021. The FDA plans to engage further with stakeholders on the issue to inform next steps.
Creating healthier foods depends, in part, on industry’s ability to innovate. Standards of identity (SOI) establish guardrails on the composition of certain foods that may include specifying mandatory or optional ingredients and production methods. There are SOI for foods such as milk and certain cheeses, juices, and breads and many more. Updating SOI can enable industry to innovate, and in some cases, produce healthier food (see FDA’s SOI work). Our SOI work that focuses on nutrition includes:
- Establishing SOI principles to help determine when to establish, revise or eliminate a food standard. A key factor in these principles will be maintaining the nutritional quality of a standardized food as well as supporting innovation and determining how food standards fit into an evolving food supply. After re-opening a comment period on a 2005 proposed rule that would establish such principles, the FDA is now working with the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) to re-issue a proposed rule.
- Facilitating healthier standardized foods by amending all SOIs that include partially hydrogenated oils (PHOs) to no longer list PHOs as an optional ingredient in standardized foods. The FDA previously determined that PHOs, or artificial trans fats, are no longer generally recognized as safe.
- Publishing draft guidance on the labeling of plant-based milk alternatives. The FDA recognizes there’s been rapid growth of plant-based foods, including plant-based milk alternatives. The FDA wants to ensure that industry can continue developing such products, while ensuring consumers understand the nature of the products and their nutritional content. This guidance is the agency’s next step after issuing a notice in 2018 requesting comment on the labeling of plant-based alternatives with names that include the names of dairy foods.
Providing tailored education on labeling and nutrition is a key principle throughout each of the key elements in FDA’s Nutrition Initiatives. Education is an important element in helping improve consumers’ diets. Providing materials to consumers about how to use food labeling empowers them with information to build healthier eating patterns. For example, in 2020 the FDA launched a national consumer education campaign to increase awareness and use of the updated Nutrition Facts label. The FDA will continue its education efforts on its labeling and nutrition work by developing and promoting education materials that are designed for various audiences, including racial and ethnic minority groups, as well as parents and caregivers.
Progress
Initiative | Progress |
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Sodium Reduction |
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Maternal and Infant Health and Nutrition |
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Labeling and Claims |
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Standards of Identity and Plant-based Labeling |
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