Posts Tagged ‘health’

Wellness Takes on a New Meaning for Consumers

Thursday, June 28th, 2012

As more Americans become take an active interest in their health, it has become apparent that wellness doesn’t just correspond to the nutrients in their food. It has become an integral part of consumers’ everyday lives. In the presentation “Formulating & Marketing for Health,” Lynn Dornblaser, Director of Innovation & Insight at Mintel, explained how wellness is manifesting itself in the marketplace, and how food manufacturers are addressing consumers’ desire for it.

Lynn DornblaserLooking at data on new product introductions in the United States, there has been growth in ethical and environmental claims. Dornblaser explained that usually this growth is about a food products’ packaging, not necessarily its formulation. This showcases consumers increased desire for environmentally-friendly and recyclable packaging and highlights the fact that wellness extends to a company’s environmental responsibility. In addition, 35% of all food product introductions contain “suitable for” claims, meaning they are suitable for diabetics, or they are Halal, or Kosher. “Consumers are demanding Kosher products not necessarily for dietary or religious reasons, but because in consumers’ minds it is more wholesome,” said Dornblaser.

This idea of wholesome can be seen in many new product introductions. For example, Kroger’s Wholesome@Home has a mac and cheese chilled side dish, which by all nutrition standards is not that healthy, but the brand name conveys a sense of home-cooked goodness.

Another factor influencing consumers’ perception of wellness is the authenticity of a product and where it came from. With consumers being more skeptical about the products they ingest, they are looking for products to come from the best possible origin. For some, this reflects the product’s sustainability, and for others it highlights a product’s safety. For example, 31% of fish eaters say that whether a fish is wild-caught or farm-raised is very important to them. Marketers are taking advantage of this, by playing up the item’s origin to add a sense of authenticity to the product. ChangingSeas has a Smoked Salmon that specifies on the packaging that is from farm-raised fish in Norway.

Dannon Pure YogurtAlthough not a new concept, the idea that natural foods are healthier than non-natural foods is now apparent at all price points. Even more than that, natural has come to reflect the inherent goodness of a product’s ingredients. Companies are taking a softer approach to the natural claim, by seeking clean labels and minimal packaging. Dannon’s yogurt brand Pure gets that natural vibe across with its name and the fact that is only has seven ingredients. Consumers want to recognize the ingredients on the back of the product, so that instead of seeing strange chemical names they aren’t familiar with they see ingredients they know and trust.

Wellness is no longer about just claims and fortification of products; it extends the packaging, marketing, and aura of a product. Dornblaser predicts that the future will be about “clean fuel” but for your body.

Delivering Appropriate Levels of Micronutrients in Food

Thursday, June 28th, 2012

Speakers at a Thursday, June 28, session titled “Helping Consumers Meet DRIs for Nutrients of Concern with Processed Foods” underscored the complexity of formulating products that give consumers the levels of micronutrients they need—without over delivering, i.e., causing them to consume levels that have the potential to harm them.

Presenter Regan Bailey, a nutritional epidemiologist with the National Institutes of Health, Office of Dietary Supplements, opened the discussion with an apt reference from 16th century physician Paracelsus, who famously stated, “The dose is the poison.”

Consumers’ intake of micronutrients is affected by whether or not they are consuming supplements, Bailey reported, and that information must be taken into consideration when making decisions about the need for food fortification. Regular supplement users represent a significant segment of the population—about half of adults and a third of children.

She explained that a higher percentage of consumers who use dietary supplements meet the EAR (estimated average requirement) for vitamins and minerals. “Dietary supplements add a large amount of nutrients,” she said. “They have to be looked at when you’re considering who’s getting too little and who’s getting too much.”

Supplements can be “wild cards,” said presenter Johanna Dwyer of Tufts University. “They complicate things in terms of analysis. They drive some intakes over the UL (tolerable upper intake level. And they rarely move people up who are at the lowest levels [of micronutrient intake].”

“You can’t tell who is going to take them, and if the right people are going to take them,” she observed. Dwyer also touched upon the potential for health problems linked to overconsumption of micronutrients. She cited the example of folic acid and a link that one researcher has proposed between colon cancer and folic acid fortification. While links such as these are far from established, it is clear that potential examples of micronutrient overconsumption must be carefully monitored, Dwyer said.

Dwyer focused some of her discussion on the “nutrients of concern” identified by the 2010 Dietary Guidelines for Americans Advisory Committee and the issues surrounding attempts to address these concerns, zeroing in on potassium in particular.

“That to me is a real problem,” she said. Potassium is a nutrient of concern because many Americans do not get enough of it, but it is a bitter mineral, so fortifying foods or beverages with it presents a major technical challenge to product developers.

Dwyer also noted that foods that have been fortified don’t always reach the intended target audience of at-risk consumers. For example, teen girls and older women who would benefit from consuming fortified milk tend not to consume it.

She urged product developers to avoid fortifying foods that do not have a healthy nutritional halo. “Consumer backlash will be considerable if you’re fortifying unhealthy foods,” she said.

Dwyer concluded her presentation by urging product developers to take a responsible approach to fortification—targeting population subgroups that would most benefit from it, fortifying appropriate foods, and working to address technical challenges. “Fortification and enrichment really have helped, but it’s up to you to overcome the challenges that remain,” she said.

“If we are going to modify foods, we need to modify in ways that will resonate with consumers,” agreed the session’s final presenter Marianne Smith Edge of the International Food Information Council (IFIC).

Smith Edge shared IFIC research data that suggests that consumers are open to consuming foods that have been formulated to help them achieve better health. IFIC research has shown that three out of four people agree that foods with added benefits can have a meaningful impact on their health, she said.

Also according to IFIC data, 62% of consumers report that they’ve considered the fiber content of food prior to making a purchase decision and 53% have looked at vitamin and mineral content. And, of particular interest in the context of the presentation, 28% have considered whether or not a food contains potassium when considering a purchase.

Smith Edge cited data from a 2011 IFIC survey that shows that about a third of Americans believe that fortification does have a moderate or great impact on health. In addition, about four out of five Americans purchase a variety of foods and beverages specifically because of a benefit delivered by fortification, with milk, juice, eggs, yogurt, and ready-to-eat cereal leading that list.

Healthy Beginnings Lead to Healthy Lives

Wednesday, June 27th, 2012

Jose SaavedraFrom the time humans are born, everything they put in their mouths ultimately affects the body’s immunological response and how they metabolize food. During the Beacon Lecture on Wednesday, June 27, Jose Saavedra, Nestlé Nutrition and Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, said that among the biggest problems the world’s population faces today are chronic non-communicable diseases associated with obesity and a poor immune system. These diseases include allergies, celiac disease, irritable bowel disease, and diabetes. Saavedra said that a healthy diet combined with healthy intestinal microbiota is the combination necessary to lead a healthy life. Abnormal or poor microbiota in the gut are associated with acute and chronic diseases.

The foundation for a healthy gut does not automatically occur. Children delivered by cesarean birth have an increased chance of having a non-communicable chronic disease because they do not come in contact with the inoculative bacteria in the vagina and gastrointestinal tract. Cesarean births are sterile; vaginal births are not. This is why doctors encourage vaginal births as well as breast feeding. Both give infants their first exposure to microbes that are integral in the development of a healthy immune system.

The introduction of common food antigens (gluten, nuts, dairy products, etc.) must be timed properly as well. Introducing antigens too soon in life is counterproductive as is introducing them too late. Nevertheless, it is important to feed healthy foods to children as early as possible, Saavedra said. If healthy dietary preferences are not established early in life, most people never acquire them. Poor dietary choices begun at an early age tend to continue throughout one’s lifetime. “It is much easier to prevent poor behavioral tendencies [such as eating a poor diet] than to change it,” Saavedra said.

Ideally, a child’s initiation to healthy foods should begin in the womb. The infants of women who consume a healthy diet before and during pregnancy, give birth vaginally, and breast feed have healthy gut microbiota and a greatly reduced chance of developing any of the non-communicable chronic diseases, Saavedra said.

Your Skin and Hair Look Very Nutritious

Wednesday, June 27th, 2012

The ingredient list of many skin and hair products today read as if they are food labels. This is because many foods provide nutrients that not only enhance health but also benefit skin and hair. During the session “Food Science, Nutrition, and the Skin” on Wednesday afternoon, June 27, speakers discussed how nutrients from food improve the health and appearance of skin and hair. Some of the most important nutrients for skin and hair are iron, zinc, fatty acids, and vitamins. For example, omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids, which can only be obtained through food or dietary supplements, help skin retain moisture and a youthful appearance. Vitamin C helps skin form fibrous structural protein (i.e., collagen) and speeds the healing of wounds, and vitamin D is essential for hair growth.

A healthy, well-rounded diet can greatly benefit hair and skin, but some foods can have the opposite effect: Acne is caused by a myriad of contributing factors, such as sebum production, hormones, bacteria, and heredity. But emerging scientific evidence suggests that as more and more people consume Westernized diets, the incidence of acne has increased. Speaker Apostolos Pappas, Johnson & Johnson, referred to a study that proved that switching from a high glycemic diet to a low glycemic diet reduced the severity of acne in study participants.

In addition, poor nourishment patterns or habits can have a deleterious effect on skin and hair, according to speaker Michael Anthonavage, Presperse Corp. In rodent studies, caloric restriction and malabsorption syndromes caused hair loss and dermatitis. Anthonavage emphasized that regular intake and metabolizing of lipid-soluble vitamins has a positive effect on the health of hair follicles.

Not only do nutrients from a healthy diet nourish skin and hair; when applied topically, the same nutrients found in foods are very effective at maintaining the health of skin and hair. So instead of spending hundreds of dollars on hair extensions and dermatological treatments, head to the produce aisle at the grocery store, and let food be thy medicine.

Anthocyanins: Not Just a Colorful Facade

Wednesday, June 27th, 2012

What makes blueberries, strawberries, cranberries, and blackberries so rich in color? The answer is anthocyanins. Because of their rich hues of red, purple, and blue, anthocyanins are used as food colorants to produce some of the more popular food colors in the food and beverage industry. Anthocyanins are flavonoids, so in addition to their ability to provide a spectrum of intense hues, they have a wealth of antioxidant properties that researchers are beginning to explore.

Strawberry, Blueberries, Blackberry, Cranberries

During the session “Anthocyanins: A Colorful Array of Health-Promoting Properties” on Wednesday morning, June 27, speakers presented epidemiological studies that seem to prove that anthocyanins exhibit health-promoting benefits against chronic inflammatory diseases. Seven hundred anthocyanins have been identified in nature, but not all of them have the same properties or behave the same way. According to speaker Elvira de Mejia, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, certain anthocyanins were demonstrably effective in reducing at least two biomarkers for inflammation: nitric oxide and cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2). Nitric oxide is associated with many diseases, including cardiovascular disease; COX-2 is associated with rheumatoid arthritis and osteoarthritis. Other epidemiological evidence also demonstrates the effectiveness of anthocyanins’ anti-inflammatory action. In the real world, however, the effectiveness of anthocyanins against disease may not be realized.

Speaker Taylor Wallace, Council for Responsible Nutrition, pointed out that only 3% of Americans follow the U.S. Dietary Guidelines for consumption of vegetables and fruits, the primary dietary sources for anthocyanins. This means the intake of anthocyanins by U.S. consumers is very low and perhaps accounts for the high incidence of cardiovascular disease among Americans. Despite the fact that studies indicate anthocyanins can lower levels of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) and glucose in the blood, Mary Lila, The Ohio State University, offered a caution: Such studies rely on concentrated doses of anthocyanins, and the potency of anthocyanins is often diluted during processing and preserving. In addition, the bioactivity of any one phytochemical compound is often dependent on the many other compounds present in plant foods.

So until researchers learn more about the interactions of anthocyanins and other phytochemicals in plant foods, the best practice is to maintain a diet rich in whole vegetables and fruits for a healthy lifestyle.

Functional Ingredient May Maintain Healthy Blood Sugar Levels

Wednesday, June 27th, 2012

At a press conference on Tuesday afternoon, BioGLane (booth 2549) introduced iminosugar D-fagomine—a potential functional ingredient that may help to maintain healthy blood sugar levels and improve gut health. It has a slightly sweet taste and is available as a water-soluble, white crystalline powder. It is stable under various pH and processing conditions, such as baking, frying, and boiling as well as fermentation.

Research suggests that D-fagomine may reduce post-prandial glycemic response and the incidence of a high-fat, high-sucrose diet on visceral fat. In addition, the ingredient has been shown to inhibit the adhesion of E. coli and Salmonella to the intestinal mucosa and promote the adhesion of lactobacilli and bifidobacteria.

D-fagomine occurs naturally in buckwheat and has been consumed safely for centuries. BioGLane uses a proprietary and patented enzyme technology to produce its Fagopure D-fagomine. The Spanish company is in the initial stages of affirming GRAS status and is looking for food industry partners to commercialize the ingredient.

Gut Health Beyond Fiber

Wednesday, June 27th, 2012

Researchers are trying to determine mechanisms of bioactive compounds in foods and have found the gut to be a “black box” that needs to be investigated. Breakthroughs in understanding interactions happening in the gut will bring health and wellness research of foods to a new level. Various dietary phenolic compounds have antimicrobial, antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, anti-cholestemic, anti-diabetic, and anti-cancer activities. Are many of these activities interrelated? Are these phenolic compounds precursors of simpler molecules that are then absorbed into the bloodstream to perform their bioactivities? How does the gut microflora change with what we eat?

What is currently known about these and many other questions that can be posed about this black box will be discussed during Session 248 The Microbiome: Beyond Fiber on Thursday morning from 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. in Room N109.

Competition Showcases Healthy Snacks for Kids

Tuesday, June 26th, 2012

Disney characters add a big element of fun to nutritious fare created for the annual Disney-IFT Student Association Product Development Competition, which enters its final phase at the IFT Annual Meeting & Food Expo. Sponsored by Disney Consumer Products, the competition is now in its fourth year. Five student teams are competing for top honors in Las Vegas.

The competition challenges teams with developing a product concept suitable for retail or foodservice that is unique, innovative, and healthful and targeted to children under the age of 12. Specifically, the products are to incorporate at least one of the following: a fruit, a vegetable, low-fat dairy, and/or whole grains. Participating teams develop their product around one Disney character franchise.

Here’s a preview of the new product creativity that will be on display in Las Vegas from the finalists.

• The Cornell University team’s concept is Phineas and Ferb’s Vegginators, a convenient snack packed with fiber and a full serving of vegetables.

• The University of Florida team will be showcasing Yum-e-Milk, a fizzy chocolate milk enriched with natural nutrients from almonds and dates and sweetened with stevia.

• The offering from the University of Minnesota team is Mickey’s Fantasticos, a Mickey-shaped sandwich cracker formulated with vegetables in the cracker batter and a filling of low-fat cream cheese. 

• A team from the University of Wisconsin-Madison has developed Peanut Butter Jamsicles, which are frozen treats on a stick that swirl creamy peanut butter and high-protein Greek yogurt with a burst of 100% grape juice concentrate—ingredients designed to give the product the familiar flavor of a classic peanut butter and jelly sandwich.

• The entry from another University of Wisconsin-Madison team is Pit-Stop, a portable smoothie beverage made with a blend of fruit and vegetable juice and Greek yogurt.

Check out the competition’s oral finals in the Special Events Pavilion, Booth 776, right on the Food Expo floor, from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. on Wednesday, June 27. Disney will present the winning teams with prizes at the IFTSA Welcome Assembly on Wednesday night. The grand prize is $7,500, and first place is $3,500. In addition, three teams will receive honorary prizes of $1,000.

Functional Foods of Latin America

Tuesday, June 26th, 2012

The Hispanic population is the largest and fastest-growing minority in the United States. Due to this influx of immigration and high birth rates, the consumption of foods from Latin America has been rapidly increasing among Americans. However, scientific information regarding their composition, flavor characteristics, identification of bioactive compounds, processing, and potential health benefits is limited, thus constraining their commercialization in the U.S.

Session 112 Functional Foods of Latin America: Flavor, Health Benefits, and Opportunities for Commercialization will take place on Wednesday morning from 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 pm in Room N116. It will address research advances on the identification of bioactive compounds and their potential health benefits and optimized processing methods of commonly consumed Hispanic foods as well as other Latin American foods that have not yet been fully commercialized in America. Foods to be included are common beans, hot peppers, vanilla, and novel grains such as amaranth and quinoa, as well as lesser known foods in the U.S., such as loroco, nopal, and pacaya, among others.

Repositioning Food Products for Health

Monday, June 25th, 2012

The food industry has made huge strides in innovating and repositioning products for health. Speakers will review selected industry examples of strategic corporate portfolios focused on health, the role of innovation approached through technology and product acquisition, product formulation, and brand positioning. The session will also include an in-depth review of contemporary concepts and tools for innovation in the food industry.

Session 018 Food Industry Innovation for Health will take place Tuesday morning from 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. in Room N114. Speakers include Nancy Childs, Ph.D., Professor of Food Marketing, Saint Joseph’s Univ.; Lorraine Niba, Ph.D., Business Development Manager, Global Nutrition Springboard at Ingredion (formerly Corn Products Intl.); and Hamsa Thota, Ph.D., President, Innovation Business Development Inc.

Prestigious Speakers Offer Unique Perspectives on Food Science

Saturday, June 11th, 2011

by Toni Tarver

New this year at the IFT Annual Meeting is the Beacon Lecturer series. Two sessions will be led by two prestigious individuals who use their extensive experience and knowledge to dispense provocative opinions and cutting-edge strategies in the fields of science and technology. The two presenters for the Beacon Lecture Series are Patrick Wall and Regina M. Benjamin.

Patrick WallPatrick Wall is world-renowned for his contributions to consumer protection and food safety. Wall will be speaking on Sunday, June 12 at 4 p.m. He is an associate professor at the University College Dublin’s School of Public Health and Population Sciences. In addition to his professorial duties, Wall is the leader of a significant research project on the best approaches to risk and benefit communication within the European Union. Also, he is Chairman of the Advisory Body for the Delivery of Official Controls at the United Kingdom’s Food Standards Agency and is trained as both a veterinary surgeon and a medical doctor. Wall’s research covers foodborne illnesses and other diseases related to consumer behavior or lifestyle choices.

Regina BenjaminRegina M. Benjamin is the Surgeon General of the United States. Benjamin will be speaking on Monday, June 13 at 4 p.m. In her capacity as Surgeon General, she provides science-based wisdom on the best ways to improve the health of U.S. citizens and directs 6,500 uniformed health officers serving in global locations, working to accomplish the same. Prior to accepting her current post, Benjamin was Associate Dean at the University of South Alabama College of Medicine and Chair of the Federation of State Medical Boards of the United States. She founded the Bayou La Batre Rural Health Clinic in 1990 to provide much-needed medical services to an underserved rural fishing village and was the first physician under the age of 40 to be elected to the board of trustees of the American Medical Association. In 2002, she was appointed President of the State of Alabama Medical Association, making her the first black female president of a state medical society in the United States.

Dr. Benjamin has frequently referred to the preventable illnesses that have plagued her family, including the death of her father from complications due to diabetes and high blood pressure. “I cannot change my family’s past, but I can be a voice to improve our nation’s health for the future,” she has said. Benjamin has thus placed great emphasis on the importance of healthy dietary options as the solution to health problems linked to poor diets and overconsumption.

Both speakers will offer different perspectives on food and health, perhaps contradicting the opinions and philosophies of food scientists and technologists. Opposing viewpoints are part of what makes these lectures alluring and provocative.