A tape measure on a nutrition label.

The Food Industry Needs to Stop Hiding Nutrition Information

December 14, 2017

As the U.S. obesity rate climbs toward an all-time high, the food industry continues to postpone the rollout of new FDA nutrition labelling guidelines that would allow consumers to make healthier choices. “Americans can’t afford these delays. The obesity epidemic is taking a major toll on our waistlines—and our wallets,” says Mindy Haar, Ph.D., RDN, assistant dean, Undergraduate Affairs in NYIT School of Health Professions, in an op-ed published in The Hill.

Obesity puts people at greater risk for many diseases, including diabetes, cancer, stroke, and heart disease—four illnesses, that in total, kill nearly 1.6 million Americans every year, and cost the nation almost $700 billion. While many believe the solution to the obesity crisis is simply to eat healthier, Haar maintains that combatting the epidemic will require federal lawmakers to enact two proposed regulations that would require food manufacturers and chain restaurants to be more transparent about calorie counts and nutrition information.

The first would require chain restaurants to include calorie counts on their menus so customers can make informed choices. The second would update the Nutrition Facts Label—the black-and-white nutritional content box found on everything from soda cans to potato chip bags. Arguing that transparent nutrition labels not only empower consumers to make healthier decisions, Haar notes that the changes will also prompt the food industry to eliminate unhealthy ingredients. Additionally, she advocates for manufacturers to provide realistic serving sizes.

While the FDA has finally announced that beginning in May 2018 restaurants will be required to post calorie counts on menu boards nationwide, Haar urges the agency not to give in to the persistent lobbying that has pressured regulators to postpone this rollout since 2010.

“The obesity epidemic will only worsen—sickening Americans and bankrupting the healthcare system—if regulators continue to cave to the food industry. It’s time for restaurants and manufacturers to tell Americans what’s really in their food,” she concludes.

Watch more. Mindy Haar and Assistant Professor Lorraine Mongiello, DrPH recently spoke about the subject during a Facebook Live session.

This op-ed is part of an NYIT thought-leadership campaign designed to help generate awareness and build reputation for the university on topics of national relevance. Read more op-eds by NYIT experts.

More Features

An Alumnus’ Commitment to the Environment

As an energy management graduate from New York Tech’s Vancouver campus, Jasdeep Gulati (M.S. ’22) is highly invested in educating people about environmental and climate sustainability.

Vancouver Faculty Win University-Sponsored Research Awards in New Program

The new Global Impact Research Grant (GIRG) program has been developed to keep Vancouver-based faculty connected to faculty and research projects being conducted on the university’s New York campuses.

Studying Climate Change One Degree at a Time

Junhua Qu (M.S. ’24) began her collegiate journey in Beijing. But, her interest in climate change took her to New York Tech’s Vancouver campus to study energy management.