The Daily Courier

Food guide ‘out of reach’ for most

- By HOLLY MCKENZIE-SUTTER

The fruit-and-vegetable-heavy fare touted in the new federal food guide may be too expensive — or perhaps just not enticing enough — to easily form the basis of most Canadians’ diets, a new report suggests.

Researcher­s at Dalhousie University and the University of Guelph found over 52 per cent of consumers surveyed said they face barriers in adopting the guide’s recommenda­tions.

More than 26 per cent of people cited affordabil­ity, with others blaming taste preference­s, lack of free time, dietary and cultural restrictio­ns and a lack of availabili­ty in their area.

The survey generally found a lack of reliance on Canada’s Food Guide for advice, though 74 per cent of respondent­s were aware of its 2019 upgrade.

The guide ranked as the sixth most popular source of nutrition informatio­n among respondent­s, following friends and family, social media, magazines and cookbooks.

“I would say that many Canadians are struggling with the concept of how the food guide, the plate they see on the pamphlet, connects with their own reality and frankly, Canadian agricultur­e,” said Sylvain Charlebois, a food researcher at Dalhousie and lead author on the report.

“It’s great to celebrate this ideal but if it’s out of reach, if many Canadians feel it’s out of reach, how good is it?”

Using a series of test plates, researcher­s found that switching from the 2007 food guide to the 2019 upgrade would save an average Canadian family of four 6.8 per cent on annual food costs.

But that number is not predicted to stay stable. The report cautioned that Canadians’ rapidly changing diets, fluctuatin­g food costs and availabili­ty of produce could make the new recommenda­tions less affordable over the next few years.

The number of vegans, vegetarian­s and “flexitaria­ns” — people consciousl­y eating less meat — is on the rise in Canada, now totalling at around 6.5 million people, a group roughly the same size as the population of the Greater Toronto Area.

The report detailed how fruit and vegetable prices are increasing faster than the price of meats.

If the trend continues as more people cut meat from their diets and turn to plant-based proteins, demand for and price of fruits and vegetables could increase further. That could price people out of the food guide’s suggested diet.

While a lot can change in the world economy over two years, Charlebois said the projection­s spell trouble for future food security in Canada, where most produce is imported and prices fluctuate.

“Over time, we do believe that there’s going to be an increasing number of Canadian households that will become food insecure, if they are to follow the new food guide,” Charlebois said.

Health Canada said the department welcomes the researcher­s’ study and is currently reviewing it.

It said Canadians had complained they had trouble following the recommende­d servings and sizes in the previous guide, and that the cost of food was considered in the revision.

 ?? The Canadian Press ?? Fresh produce is on display at a Canadian grocery store. A new report has found many Canadian households face barriers to adopting new federal food guidelines.
The Canadian Press Fresh produce is on display at a Canadian grocery store. A new report has found many Canadian households face barriers to adopting new federal food guidelines.

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