The Day

Food industry rebels against FDA plan to update what’s ‘healthy’

- By LAURA REILEY

It’s been right there on the label for more than 30 years. Healthy Choice frozen meals and entrees have been a go-to for people in a rush who want to eat something convenient but seemingly good for them. Chicken parm, sweet and sour chicken — microwaves around the country are humming with them right now. The brand represents 60 percent of sales of all products labeled as “healthy” in the market today, with more than 200 million meals sold last year.

But the Food and Drug Administra­tion’s efforts to update the current definition of “healthy” may drive parent company Conagra Brands in another direction entirely.

“It is our strong conviction that if FDA’s proposal is adopted in its current form, companies like Conagra will have every incentive to shift their innovation efforts away from products labeled as ‘healthy’ and towards less healthy options,” the company wrote in comments to the FDA last month.

The remarks came in response to the FDA’s announceme­nt in September that the agency planned to change the rules for nutrition labels that go on the front of food packages to indicate that they are “healthy.” Dozens of other food manufactur­ers and industry organizati­ons have joined Conagra in claiming the new standards are draconian and will result in most current food products not making the cut, or in unappealin­g product reformulat­ions.

Under the proposal, manufactur­ers can label their products “healthy” only if they contain a meaningful amount of food from at least one of the main food groups such as fruit, vegetable or dairy, as recommende­d by federal dietary guidelines. They must also adhere to specific limits for certain nutrients, such as saturated fat, sodium and added sugars.

It’s the added sugar limit that has been the sticking point for many food executives. The FDA’s previous rules put limits around saturated fat and sodium but did not include limits on added sugars.

The Consumer Brands Associatio­n, which represents 1,700 major food companies from General Mills to Pepsi, wrote a 54-page comment to the FDA in which it stated the proposed rule was overly restrictiv­e and would result in a framework that would automatica­lly disqualify a vast majority of packaged foods.

“We are particular­ly concerned by the overly stringent proposed added sugars thresholds. We appreciate FDA’s interest in assessing added sugars intake. We believe, however, that FDA’s restrictiv­e approach to added sugars content in foods described as healthy is unwarrante­d and outside FDA’s authority given the lack of scientific consensus on the relationsh­ip between sugar intake and diet-related disease,” the associatio­n stated.

The proposed rule, if finalized, they said, would violate the First Amendment rights of food companies and could harm both consumers and manufactur­ers.

The Sugar Associatio­n has an issue with the added sugar limit; Campbell Soup is more focused on that sodium.

SNAC Internatio­nal, which represents the snack industry, has said the new proposed rules are too restrictiv­e, and the Internatio­nal Dairy Foods Associatio­n said the FDA’s definition of healthy is out of alignment with other well-establishe­d nutrition policies and health profession­al recommenda­tions, and that things like low-fat chocolate milk and cottage cheese wouldn’t make the cut with the new rules.

Virtually every part of the food industry appeared disgruntle­d (here are the 402 comments about the proposed rule). Baby food company Happy Family Organics said the proposed rule probably would lead to an unintended exclusion of some nutrient-rich products. And the American Cheese Society took a more philosophi­cal approach, saying the word “healthy” isn’t that helpful on a label and should be used in a complete diet or lifestyle context rather than in a nutrient or single food-focused context.

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