Title: Regulation on Nutrition
1Regulation on Nutrition Health Claims
Scientific substantiation of claims and
nutrient profiles
- Albert Flynn
- University College Cork
2Outline
- Regulation on Nutrition and Health Claims
- EFSAs scientific advice on nutrition and health
claims - Scientific substantiation of claims
- Nutrient profiles
- Conclusions
3Regulation on Nutrition Health Claims
- Regulation adopted by co-decision in October 2006
- Entry into force Jan 2007
- Implementation
- Interpretation by EC Regulatory Committee, EP,
EFSA - Application by industry
- Enforcement by Member States
- Evaluation (2013)
4Regulation - purpose
- To help consumer in choosing a healthy diet
- Communicate health benefits of foods to consumer
- Accurate - independent scientific substantiation
- Not misleading - overall nutritional quality of a
food - Understandable
- Incentive to industry to innovate
- Improved choice of healthy foods for consumers
- Other objectives - internal market, fair
competition, legal security for economic operators
5Classification of claims
- Nutrition claims
- Nutrient content, high fibre, low fat,
reduced salt, light - Health claims
- Function claims
- calcium helps maintain strong bones
- based on generally accepted scientific evidence
- based on newly developed scientific
data/proprietary data - Reduction of disease risk claims
- substance A reduces blood cholesterol which may
reduce the risk of heart disease - Claims for development and health of children
- scope to be defined
- Borderline claims?
- contains antioxidants, probiotics?
- Reduces cholesterol, blood pressure?
6Health Claims - key principles
- Promote nutrition policy goals and help consumer
in choosing a healthy diet - Scientifically substantiated - independently
EFSA - Understood by the average consumer
- Not mislead the consumer
- Accompanied by nutrition labelling
- Made for a food as part of a total dietary
pattern - Apply to the amount of food normally consumed and
the food as ready for consumption
7EFSA scientific advice on claims - scope
- Scientific substantiation of claims
- Evaluation of claims subject to authorization
procedure (2007) - Reduction of disease risk claims
- Claims for development and health of children
- Function claims based on newly developed
scientific data/ proprietary data - Guidance on preparation and presentation of
applications subject to authorization procedure
(2007) - Evaluation of function claims based on generally
accepted scientific evidence (2008-9) - Community list of permitted claims
- Other
- Amendments to Annex (nutrition claims), if
appropriate - Nutrient profiles
- Scientific advice to EC on establishing and
testing (2007)
8EFSA Panel on Dietetic Products, Nutrition and
Allergies (NDA)
- Mandate
- Scientific advice on dietetic products, human
nutrition, food allergy, novel foods, nutrition
and health claims - Composition
- 17 members Chair (Prof. A. Flynn) Vice-chairs
(Prof. H. Przyrembel Prof. A. Palou) - Expertise human nutrition, child nutrition,
allergy, toxicology, intake assessment,
biochemistry, epidemiology, microbiology, food
chemistry - www.efsa.europa.eu
9NDA Panel procedures for claims
- NDA Panel
- Adopts scientific opinions
- All opinions published - EFSA Journal
- NDA WG Claims
- Prepares draft scientific opinions
- 11 Panel members currently
- Additional independent experts will be added as
needed - Evaluation of claims in specific areas
- EFSA staff
- Support work of Panel and WG
10EFSA Conference on Nutrition Health
ClaimsBologna, Italy, 8-10 November 2006
- 200 participants from 21 European countries,
Australia, NZ, USA, Canada - Government agencies, consumer organisations,
industry, Academia, EC, EP, EFSA - To explain EFSAs scientific role in the new
Regulation - To exchange views, experience, to discuss issues
- Scientific substantiation
- Nutrient profiles
- Outcome
- To be used by NDA Panel for preparing scientific
advice
11Approval of reduction of disease risk claims
- Application submitted through MS to EFSA
- EC/EFSA guidance on preparation and presentation
- EFSA evaluation - opinion (5 months)
- additional time if supplementary information
needed - Community authorisation (2 months)
- EC adopts decision through Regulatory Committee
- Decision is notified to applicant and published
in OJ - similar procedure for child health and
development claims function claims based on
newly developed scientific evidence/ proprietary
data protection
12EFSA opinion
- verify
- that the proposed wording of the health claim is
substantiated by scientific data - complies with the criteria laid down in this
Regulation - include a proposal for the wording of the health
claim, including, as the case may be, the
specific conditions of use
13Scientific substantiation of health claims
- Food business responsible for justifying claim
- EFSA evaluation
- EC EFSA to provide detailed guidance on
preparation and presentation of applications
subject to authorization procedure - EFSA has given this highest priority - draft in
preparation - Consultation with stakeholders on draft guidance
(2007)
14What level/type of scientific evidence is
required to substantiate a claim?
- Regulation - substantiation based on
- Generally accepted scientific evidence
- Take into account the totality of available
scientific data and by weighing the evidence - EFSA guidance
- Previous activities
- Swedish Nutrition Foundation (1990, 1997, 2001)
- Netherlands Ministry of Health (1998, 2004)
- US FDA, CFSAN (1999, 2003)
- UK JHCI (2002)
- ILSI Europe PASSCLAIM (2001-2005)
15Evaluating scientific evidence(EFSA Conference,
Bologna, 2006)
- Transparent process for evaluating evidence
- Hierarchy of evidence
- Importance of human studies
- Totality of evidence - multiple types/sources of
evidence - Weighing of evidence
- Allow for a case by case approach
- Conference outcome
- To NDA Panel for establishing a process for
evaluating claims and preparing guidance to
industry
16Data protection
- Scientific data and other information submitted
for substantiation of a health claim designated
as proprietary by the original applicant are
protected for a period of 5 years
17Health claims not allowed
- Claims which suggest that health could be
affected by not consuming the food - Claims which make a reference to the rate or
amount of weight loss - Claims which make a reference to recommendations
of individual doctors - Vague claims for health benefits of food
(component)
18Foods that may not carry health claims
- Beverages containing gt1.2 by volume of alcohol
- Foods (categories) with inappropriate nutrient
profiles - to ensure consumer is not misled by unbalanced
information on overall nutritional quality of a
food - How to develop apply nutrient profiles?
19Nutrient profiles - Regulation
- Based on generally accepted scientific knowledge
on the relationship between diet and health - Should take into account
- Nutrient content of a food (e.g. fat, saturated
fat, trans fatty acids, sugar, salt others with
an effect on health) - Variability of dietary habits and traditions
- Role, importance and dietary contribution of a
food in the context of the overall diet - Product innovation
20Setting nutrient profiles
- Will be set by the EC Regulatory Committee
- EFSA scientific advice
- Consultation with industry, consumer groups
- Co-ordination by EC MS ( EFSA) ongoing
- Process for establishing profiles
- Frame request to EFSA for scientific advice
21Nutrient profiles - EFSA role
- In setting the nutrient profiles, the Commission
shall request EFSA to provide, within 12 months,
relevant scientific advice, focusing on - Profiles for food in general and/or food
categories - Choice and balance of nutrients
- Reference quantity/basis
- Approach to calculation of profiles
- Feasibility and testing of a proposed system
22Nutrient profiles - scientific aspects (EFSA
Conference, Bologna, 2006)
- General concept of nutrient profiles
- Review of existing scientific approaches
- Europe - UK, Sweden, NL
- USA
- Australia/NZ
- Science-based validation of nutrient profiles
- Consumers perspective
- Industry perspective
- Outcome
- To NDA Panel for preparing scientific advice to EC
23Conclusions (1)
- Regulation on Nutrition and Health Claims
- Key aim - to help consumer in choosing a healthy
diet - EFSA role - independent scientific advice
- Claims - accurate, understandable, not misleading
- Guidance to industry on preparation of claims
applications (with EC) - Highest priority
- Draft guidance for consultation with stakeholders
in 2007 - Evaluation of claims applications subject to
authorization (2007- ) - Evaluation of Community list of function claims
(2008-9)
24Conclusions (2)
- Nutrient profiles
- To be established by EC MS (Jan 2009)
- EFSA - scientific advice
- EFSA committed to a transparent, consultative
process - Ensure that consumers and industry have
confidence in nutrition and health claims on foods