Document Type
Article
Language
eng
Publication Date
4-2017
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Source Publication
Oxford Research Encyclopedia in Communication
Abstract
It has been since 1990 that the landmark Nutritional Labeling Education Act (NLEA) was passed in the United States, and since 1969 that the first White House Conference on Food, Nutrition and Health occurred. In the time since these important events, considerable research has been conducted on how U.S. consumers process and use nutritional labeling. An up-to-date review of nutritional labeling research must address key findings on the processing and use of nutrition facts panels (NFPs), restaurant labeling, front-of-pack (FOP) symbols, health and nutrient content claims, new labeling efforts (e.g., for meat products), and claims not regulated by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Message structure mediates the ways in which consumers process nutritional labeling while moderating conditions affect research outcomes associated with labeling efforts.
The most recent policy issues and problems to be considered (e.g., by the FDA) include nutritional labeling as well as identifying opportunities for consumer research in helping to promote healthy lifestyles and reducing obesity in the United States and throughout the world. For example, several unanswered research questions remain regarding how the proposed changes to the NFPs—beef, poultry, and seafood labeling; restaurant chain calorie labeling; alternative FOP formats; and regulated and unregulated health and nutrient content claims—will affect consumers. Researchers have yet to examine not only these different labeling and nutrition information formats, but also how they might interact with one another and the role of key moderating conditions (e.g., one’s motivation, ability opportunity to process nutrition information) in affecting consumer processing and behavior.
Recommended Citation
Andrews, J. Craig; Burton, Scot; and Cook, Laurel Aynne, "Nutrition Labeling in the United States and the Role of Consumer Processing, Message Structure, and Moderating Conditions" (2017). Marketing Faculty Research and Publications. 263.
https://epublications.marquette.edu/market_fac/263
Comments
Published version. Oxford Research Encyclopedia in Communication (April/June 2017). DOI. © 2018 Oxford University Press. Used with permission.