Nutrition and Health Related Claims

In December 2003, the Australia New Zealand Food Regulation Ministerial Council (Council) agreed to a new policy guideline for the regulation of Nutrition, Health and Related Claims. This policy is guiding Food Standards Australia New Zealand (FSANZ) during the development of the standard that will become part of the Food Standards Code. TheCode covers all foods produced and imported into Australia and New Zealand.

Currently, nutrient content claims are allowed (eg.‘this food is high in fibre’) and some function maintenance claims (eg,calcium is good for healthy bones and teeth). However, there is a ban on all health claims, other than the claim regarding the benefit of mothers consuming folate and reducing the risk of neural tube defects in unborn babies.

The new policy recommends an important change to the regulation of nutrition, health and related claims that will mean a wider range of claims will be allowed.

What is a claim?

A claim means any statement, representation, information, design words or reference in relation to a food that is not mandatory in the Food Standards Code (Standard 1.1.1).

Types of Claims

The Claims Classification Framework identifies the categories of nutrition, health and related claims. A content claim is a statement regarding the amount of a nutrient, energy or a biologically active substance in the food.   Health claims are claims that describe a relationship between the consumption of a food or constituent and particular benefits of the food in relation to health.   Health claims are furthermore divided into high level health claims and general level health claims.  The categorisation of the claim is based on the extent to which the claim identifies particular benefit(s) for consumers in consuming that food.

General level claims

General level claims are those which:

High level claims

High level health claims reference a serious disease or condition, or a biomarker of a serious disease or condition. They include:

Regulation of claims

The level of a claim determines how the claim is regulated, including the evidence required for substantiation.  

  

Substantiation

All nutrition, health and related claims on food labels or in associated advertising supplied in New Zealand and Australia will be required to be substantiated by scientific evidence, to ensure claims are soundly based and do not mislead consumers. Verification of the health benefit is required for all nutrition and health related claims except content claims, as the latter are simply a statement about content.    A substantiation framework has been developed, outlining the set of principles that will apply to the substantiation of claims. Eight diet – disease relationships are undergoing review by external experts.   If substantiated, claims about these will be allowed on food products, subject to certain conditions.

Key aspects of the requirements for substantiation of high level claims are:

General level claims will need to be substantiated, and the evidence held, by the manufacturers or suppliers. FSANZ will develop material to assist in determining whether their evidence is sufficient to substantiate a general level claim.   Key aspects of the requirements for the substantiation of general level claims are:

 Substantiation must be based on authoritative, current and generally accepted information, or on a structured review of the totality of evidence as for high level claims.

Progress on Health Claims

The first round of public consultation was conducted after the publication of the initial assessment report in September 2004. The second round of consultation occurred after the publication of the draft assessment report, in late 2005.

An additional round of public consultation is planned which will cover some aspects where FSANZ’s recommendations have changed since the draft assessment report . A preliminary final assessment report will be released in March 2007.

For More information

Further information on the development of the standard for nutrition, health and related claims, Proposal P293 - Nutrition, Health & Related Claims visit our website www.foodstandards.gov.au or contact the Information Officer on 02 6271 2241 or email info@foodstandards.gov.au

Updated October 2006