Nutrition and health claims (NHC) made on foods are categorised as nutrition, health or reduction of disease risk claims, according to EU Regulation 1924/2006(1). Consumer protection and information is the primary remit of this legislation. Research on consumer use of, understanding of and belief in health claims is limited(Reference van Trijp2, Reference Williams3). The aim of the present study was thus to investigate consumer behaviour in relation to NHC.
An interview-assisted questionnaire was administered to supermarket consumers (n 400). Consumer preference for five claim types across six products was tested. Perception of claims was assessed across a further eight different food products.
Older (P<0.001) female (P<0.01) participants were more likely to seek NHC. Structure–function and content claims were preferred across six products (Table 1). Consumer interest in NHC was associated with the health benefit claimed rather than the strength of the claim itself (Table 2). Preference for type of claim and perception of claims differed with gender, age and education level.
Irish consumers prefer content and simpler health claims, rather than disease-risk reduction claims. This finding is in broad agreement with data from some other European countries. Although reported levels of understanding were high, evidence of positivity bias, and misinterpretation were found. Thus, in relation to EU Regulation 1924/2006 consumers need more information concerning both simpler and more complex claims. Public health messages should be targeted according to gender, age and education level.