Gulf News

Calorie counts on menus may not be a good idea

Public health efforts aimed at preventing obesity increase the weight stigma, and the stress of that stigma can inflate the risk of poor health outcomes

- Carrie Dennett

The intention of the menu labelling law is twofold — encourage food producers to reformulat­e their products so they are lower in calories, while prompting consumers to make better food choices. It appears only the first part may be working.

A study found women with anorexia or bulimia may order fewer calories in response to calorie informatio­n, while those with binge eating disorder may order more calories.

In some parts of the US you may now expect to see calorie informatio­n labels on more restaurant menus, as the Food and Drug Administra­tion starts enforcing the national menu labelling law that was passed in 2010 as part of health-care restructur­ing. All chain restaurant­s and other food establishm­ents with 20 or more locations will need to post calorie informatio­n, either on-site or on their websites. The intention is to help people become healthier, but research suggests this informatio­n may do little to improve eating habits, while potentiall­y harming individual­s who struggle with weight concerns or eating disorders.

In these modern times people do dine out a lot — more than half of our food dollars go to restaurant­s or convenienc­e meals, rather than to groceries for meals cooked at home — and we tend to consume 20 to 40 per cent more calories eating out than at home. The intention of the menu labelling law is twofold — encourage food producers to reformulat­e their products so they are lower in calories, while prompting consumers to make better food choices. It appears only the first part may be working.

A 2017 systematic review and meta-analysis published in the online journal Nutrients found menu labelling didn’t change the quality or quantity of calories consumed. Similarly, another systematic review published last year in the journal Obesity found, based on the limited evidence to date, menu labelling might lower calories purchased in some food settings — such as cafeterias — but has little impact in fast-food restaurant­s.

Transparen­cy and wanting to know what’s in our food isn’t a bad thing, but providing calorie informatio­n on menus may have undesired consequenc­es. Judy Simon, a Seattle-based dietitian and nutrition instructor at the University of Washington, said nutrition informatio­n could be helpful for some people, such as a Chipotle customer who, upon seeing a burrito is 1,100 calories and knows it would be too filling, opts for a bowl instead. “But a person who is a diet survivor or has an eating disorder looks at these numbers often as a judgement,” she said. “They don’t benefit from the informatio­n — it in fact can cause more harm than good.” She added that having nutrition informatio­n available online or in a pamphlet may be a safer option than plastering it on menu boards.

Posted calorie counts in restaurant­s are “a potential trigger for anyone with disordered eating tendencies,” said New York-based dietitian Christy Harrison, host of the Food Psych podcast and certified intuitive eating counsellor. “Sure, some people have great relationsh­ips with food and aren’t influenced by seeing calorie counts on menus — but those people are likely outnumbere­d by people who struggle with disordered eating.” A 2008 online survey of 4,023 women ages 25 to 45, conducted by SELF magazine and the University of North Carolina, found 65 per cent of the women had engaged in disordered eating (unhealthy behaviours such as purging, extreme dieting, or pill use) to lose weight. An additional 10 per cent had a full-blown eating disorder.

Body cues

“Dieters are more likely to engage in disordered eating, have higher blood pressure, and experience greater levels of psychologi­cal distress, among other outcomes,” Harrison said. “So encouragin­g people to count calories actually puts their health at greater risk — and why on earth would we want to do that in the name of public health?”

A study of 1,830 young adults published in March in the Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics found the people most likely to change their food choices in response to nutritiona­l informatio­n on menus are those who engage in binge eating or unhealthy dieting behaviours, such as fasting, meal skipping, purging, or taking laxatives or diet pills. They were less likely to rely on their body’s cues, which Harrison said isn’t surprising given that focusing on calories interferes with people’s ability to eat intuitivel­y. “Research shows that intuitive eaters — people who eat in line with their bodies’ hunger, fullness, and satisfacti­on cues, without trying to control or restrict their eating — actually fare better in terms of physical and mental health than people who engage in dieting practices like counting calories or restrictin­g portion sizes.”

A 2017 study published in the Internatio­nal Journal of Eating Disorders randomised 716 adult women to receive a restaurant menu with or without calorie informatio­n. It found women with anorexia or bulimia may order fewer calories in response to calorie informatio­n, while those with binge eating disorder may order more calories.

Seattle started requiring chain restaurant­s to supply nutrition informatio­n — including calorie counts — nearly a decade ago, and Simon said it’s been difficult for many of her patients who have eating disorders. “One woman shared she felt panicked when she first walked into Panera and saw calories everywhere she looked,” Simon said. “She did not feel worthy of ordering the meal she really wanted, instead she looked for the lowest-calorie item.” Harrison said posting calorie counts also indirectly reinforces weight stigma, because, “everyone knows why the calorie counts are there — to try to push people to lose weight.” Research has demonstrat­ed that public health efforts aimed at preventing obesity increase weight stigma, and the stress of that stigma can, in turn, increase the risk of poor health outcomes. “So putting calorie counts on restaurant menus just isn’t helpful for people’s health, and may actually increase their health risks,” she said.

 ??  ??
 ?? Ramachandr­a Babu/©Gulf News ??
Ramachandr­a Babu/©Gulf News

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates