The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Nutrition advice from celebritie­s trumps new food guide

- SYLVAIN CHARLEBOIS AND SIMON SOMOGYI GUEST OPINION Sylvain Charlebois is scientific director of the Canadian Agrifood Foresight Institute, a professor in food distributi­on and policy at Dalhousie University, and a senior fellow with the Atlantic Institute

The nutritiona­l roadmap the new guide offers is sound, yet it has little to do with most Canadians’ kitchen habits and culinary traditions. So Health Canada needs to make its case that the new guidelines are worth pursuing to a greater extent than some celebrity chef’s advice.

Will Canadians use the new version of Canada’s Food Guide and will it cost us more to follow the new recommenda­tions it contains?

The guide, introduced a few weeks ago, advocates a diet focused more on plant-based eating and reductions in meat and dairy consumptio­n. As such, it has gained much attention, particular­ly among the animal protein and dairy sectors that were the focus of previous iterations of the guide.

Rather than giving attention to the food sovereignt­y agendas of the agricultur­al sector, the guide’s new mantra is: Canadians need to eat better and here is what you should eat.

The guide is strewn with glossy pictures of healthy food. It has replaced the previous suggested serving sizes with food groups, plus the suggestion to cook more of our food at home, and to drink water instead of juice. All of the recommenda­tions centre on the health and well-being of Canadians.

But as well-meaning as the suggestion­s are, what will be the result of this new guide?

A recently-released report by Dalhousie University and the University of Guelph explored Canadians’ perception­s of the new guide by comparing it with the last version and providing cost comparison­s.

According to the report, most Canadians know of the food guide and know that there’s a new version. They also know that by following portion sizes and food recommenda­tions, at least in the short term, the new guide would save the average family money on their food bills. The report says following the guide would save a family of four $1.98 a day. One in eight Canadian households are food insecure, so such savings are welcome.

But the savings may not last. Predictive models suggest the differenti­al between the previous guide and the new one will narrow significan­tly within a few years and may even disappear.

Our domestic agricultur­al economy just can’t provide what the guide suggests. So, in time, Canadians’ vulnerabil­ity to monetary fluctuatio­ns and regions stricken by major climatic events will become more apparent.

Facing the possibilit­y of a new food strategy for a nordic climate like ours, we will certainly have some work to do.

The report also paints a less than rosy picture as to whether Canadians will follow the guide. The guide is rated as the sixth most important source of informatio­n for nutritiona­l advice, yet it’s often eclipsed by recommenda­tions by family and friends, general research, social media and celebritie­s, and television programs.

That’s right – Gwyneth Paltrow is more influentia­l when it comes to dietary advice than our own food guide.

Affordabil­ity, compatibil­ity with taste preference­s and the fact that it requires you to do your own cooking cause further barriers to adopting the new guidelines.

Another concern is that the report mentions that having more money and a higher level of education increases your likelihood of following the new guide, which highlights its somewhat elitist nature.

Health Canada should be applauded for updating a guide that was more than a decade old and for focusing on advocating for the health of Canadians rather than providing a soap box for the agrifood sector.

However, it’s important to remember that Canadians aren’t just patients in a health care and nutrition formula. We’re consumers with families, busy providing for mortgages, bills and putting food on the table, and not necessaril­y in that order.

Publishing a guide that advocates the impractica­l ideas of generating no waste and cooking every meal at home is troublesom­e at best.

So the new Canada’s Food Guide is a step in the right direction. But it’s an ideal for the nutritiona­l elitist, not a practical day-to-day guide. While the Dalhousie-Guelph report suggests that people are interested in following its new ideas, that won’t necessaril­y be enough to make Canadians bite.

The nutritiona­l roadmap the new guide offers is sound, yet it has little to do with most Canadians’ kitchen habits and culinary traditions.

So Health Canada needs to make its case that the new guidelines are worth pursuing to a greater extent than some celebrity chef’s advice.

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