New Zealand should tighten rules and halt the advertising of unhealthy foods to children in a bid to tackle obesity, researchers say.
The University of Auckland team checked a database of 13,066 packaged foods and found that more were considered "healthier" options under New Zealand's Health Star Rating (HSR) system than under the World Health Organisation's (WHO) criteria for foods that can be promoted to children.
Three and a half stars or more on the 5-star scale can be considered "healthier", they say. Overall, 36 per cent of the foods were in that category, while only 29 per cent qualified as "permitted" by the WHO for advertising to children.
The disparity was much greater for many sweet foods, such as 12 per cent of biscuits in the star system versus 0.3 per cent for the WHO; 77 versus 34 per cent of breakfast cereals; and 44 versus 1 per cent of dried fruits. The Health Ministry's food and beverage classification system (FBCS) was also looser than the WHO's.
"The HSR and FBCS systems would permit marketing of a number of food products of concern, particularly high-sugar breakfast cereals, fruit juices and ready meals," say Professor Cliona Ni Mhurchu and colleagues, reporting their findings in today's NZ Medical Journal.