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Consumers’ Opinions and Use of Food Labels, Nutrition, and Health Claims: Results from Turkey
19
Citations
18
References
2017
Year
NutritionNutritional EpidemiologyNutrition LiteracyPublic Health NutritionConsumer ResearchFood ChoiceObesityFood MarketingFood LabelsPopulation NutritionFood RegulationPublic HealthFood ConsumptionFood PolicyHealth SciencesHealth ClaimsNutrition ClaimsHealth PolicyDiet QualityDietary HealthAdvertisingMarketingFood RegulationsChild NutritionNutritional SciencesDieteticsConsumer AttitudeNutrition Assessment
This study was conducted to reveal Turkish consumers’ (18–65 years residing 10 cities, n = 1200) opinions and use of food labels, nutrition, and health claims. The majority of both females and males (64.7%, 68.2%) seldom read food labels. Risk for not paying attention to food labels was increased 1.287-fold when the gender was male. The percentage of reading food labels increases as education and income levels of individuals increase (p < 0.05). Expiry dates of foods were the most frequent read item on labels (58.0%). Males mostly read information on label to learn the price of the food (71.0%) while females read it to learn the energy value of food (79.0%). Females had more knowledge on nutrition claims compared to males (p < 0.05). The nutrition claims, which were most frequently read by females and males, were trans fat free (23.5%, 21.0%) and low fat/fat free (23.3%, 20.5%). The claim organic was paid most attention on fruit and vegetables (52.0%). The claim “low cholesterol contributes to maintenance of cardiovascular-health” was the most common health claim read. In summary, Turkish consumer’s behaviour of reading labels and nutrition-health claims could change according to some sociodemographic factors and food products.
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