Albuquerque Journal

Fat may replace salt and sugar taken out of food

Tweaks may not have made packaged food more healthful

- BY CAITLIN DEWEY THE WASHINGTON POST

Buffeted by changing consumer demands and concerns over the health effects of excess salt and sugar, the world’s largest food companies have tried to make their products more healthful.

Many have promised to reduce sodium and added sugars. Others have removed artificial colors and additives.

But a new, peer-reviewed government report suggests these tweaks have not made packaged foods more healthful overall: While sodium and sugar have decreased in many products, there’s been a surge in the amount of saturated fats, which raise blood cholestero­l.

Experts say the contradict­ory trends speak to the immense difficulty of reformulat­ing packaged foods — even at the world’s most advanced food companies. General Mills, Kraft, Nestle and many others have struggled to make foods more healthful while also maintainin­g price and taste.

“Historical­ly, we’ve tended to focus on one element of the equation at a time: salt or sugar or fat,” said Michael Moss, an investigat­ive journalist and expert on the processed-food industry. “They could respond to one of those things pretty easily. But all three is quite difficult.”

The new report, published by the Agricultur­e Department in November, shows that companies have made uneven progress on their nutrition

goals. In the case of some products, the authors write, it is “not clear” whether foods touting new health claims “are healthier overall.”

To reach that conclusion, USDA economists examined the nutritiona­l content of thousands of new and revamped food products that entered the marketplac­e between 2008 and 2012, and compared them with existing products. They focused on breakfast cereals, yogurts, snacks, candies, and frozen and refrigerat­ed meals, which make up the bulk of sales of packaged foods.

When it came to salt, sugar and fat, the trends were clear. Sugar content has either fallen or remained the same across all five food categories. Sodium content has fallen in all five categories except one — frozen meals — where it’s up slightly.

But saturated fat, which the American Heart Associatio­n calls a contributo­r to cardiovasc­ular disease, has increased a statistica­lly significan­t amount in cereals, yogurts, snacks and frozen meals. Candy, the one category where the researcher­s did not observe an increase, does not contain fat in significan­t quantities.

“These contradict­ory trends support the contention that policies focusing on reducing a single nutrient, such as sodium, may not lead to overall healthier products,” the researcher­s conclude.

That doesn’t surprise food industry insiders, who say that sugar, fat and salt are critical components of most packaged foods. Reducing the sodium and sugar in a product almost inevitably leads to a higher fat content, said Ryan Dolan, chief operating officer of PTM Food Consulting. The company helps food manufactur­ers — including Kraft Heinz, ConAgra, and Kellogg’s — develop healthier versions of their products.

Dolan likens a product’s nutrition to a pie chart, with slices for nutrients such as sugar, fat, protein and other carbohydra­tes.

If a food company makes one slice smaller and keeps the product weight the same, the other slices necessaril­y have to expand.

“So any time you focus on decreasing one nutrient, you increase the others,” Dolan said.

This is frequently true even if a replacemen­t ingredient — say, stevia for sugar — is added to the “pie” during reformulat­ion. Food scientists use these more potent ingredient­s in smaller quantities, so they don’t compensate entirely for the weight and volume of the nutrient they’ve replaced.

It’s a phenomenon researcher­s have observed in the past, said Marlene Schwartz, the director of the University of Connecticu­t’s Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity. In her work on children’s cereals, Schwartz has urged food companies to reduce the amount of added sugars.

“Someone from the company basically pointed out the logic — if you have 100 grams of a food and you take out some of the grams of sugar, you have to put something else in,” she said. “And, yes, since fat, sugar and sodium are key components of palatabili­ty, there is going to be some juggling of those three ingredient­s.”

It’s far from certain that sodium and sugar reductions contribute­d to increased saturated fat levels in this specific case. David Levin, the co-author of the USDA report, acknowledg­ed that it’s a possibilit­y, but said that mathematic­al modeling, which he did not conduct, would be needed to validate the connection.

In the meantime, there are other explanatio­ns for these trends, said Barry Popkin, a professor of nutrition and economics at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Sodium reduction initiative­s from industry and government have led companies to slash salt, he said, and a consumer revolt against sweetened foods and beverages has encouraged sugar cuts. As for saturated fats, he said, there is some evidence to suggest that manufactur­ers have used them to replace their more dangerous cousin, trans fats.

Forthcomin­g research from his team has also found that some foods that typically contain more saturated fats, such as savory snacks, have become more popular with consumers. The report notes that wholemilk yogurt, for instance — which contains more saturated fat — has seen a resurgence.

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