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Thursday, 23 July 2009
More action needed on salt content, says Wash: AUS

By FoodWeek Online @ 9:18 AM 1 Comments Article Rating Manufacturing and Marketing News
 

People in some countries are consuming more than twice as much salt in popular global brands as their counterparts elsewhere in the world.

World Action on Salt and Health (WASH) has surveyed more than 260 food products available around the world from food manufacturers such as KFC, McDonald’s, Kellogg’s, Nestle, Burger King and Subway.

Not one food product surveyed had the same salt content around the world and some displayed huge differences in salt content from one country to another.

The Australian Division of World Action on Salt and Health says the research highlights the huge potential for further salt reduction in many products.

The Australian food industry has been reducing salt in foods for some time and has shown a strong commitment to continued reductions. Coles supermarket has a strategy in place to reduce salt in its Housebrand products by 25 per cent over the next five years. The Smith’s Snackfood Company, Unilever Australasia, Kellogg’s and Baker’s Delight are just four of a growing list of manufacturing companies that have salt reduction strategies in place.

Many major market leaders in the fast food sector are also on board to reduce salt. Earlier this year AWASH published a survey of salt levels in a range of foods sold by six major fast food chains in Australia (KFC, Hungry Jack’s, Oporto, Red Rooster, Subway and McDonald’s) revealing the unacceptable levels of salt in fast foods. Four of these companies (KFC, Oporto, Subway and McDonald’s) have since been in contact to highlight ongoing or new commitments to salt reduction.

McDonald’s Australia has been making reductions in a range of foods since 2007 to meet criteria for the Heart Foundation Tick and has committed to continued reductions across its full menu range. More recently Yum! Restaurants Australia, the franchisor of KFC and Pizza Hut in Australia put out a statement saying: “Yum! is focused on reducing sodium across the core products on the menu, while still providing customers with great tasting, fresh products.”

AWASH Project Manager Jacqui Webster said today, “AWASH launched the Drop the Salt! Campaign in May 2007 with the aim of bringing all stakeholders together in a shared commitment to reduce population salt intakes. Since then around 20 major Australian companies have developed action plans showing how they plan to further reduce salt in foods”.

The WASH research revealed that Australian takeaway foods such as Hungry Jack’s Double Whopper burger, KFC Twister and the McDonald’s Big Mac were at the upper half of the table, while the McChicken sandwich and Subway six-inch were at the lowest part.

 

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By michel @ Sunday, 26 July 2009 1:15 AM

we are being poisoned by unscrupulous greedy manufacturers (who well know salt is addictive), while the authorities who have mandated the postings of the 'Nutrition Facts and Recommended Daily Intakes' labels on all food packagings have themselves not the time to read and assess the reasonableness of the level of ingredients

everyone is playing with food!

so, it is up to us , consumers, to get-up on our hind legs, ONCE AGAIN, and point out the obvious to the apathetic, who may now take action - or not

already hearing the justification: "A lack of funds to do .... ", fill the blanks - until we hear the other perennial "so it will never happen again!"
what are we paying all these bureaucrats for?

and why must these food Giants not use demonstratively healthy formulations WITHOUT the need for legislations and orders from above?
Sell! Sell! Sell! - More! More! More! - CEO's and Shareholders greeds dictates!

one would think that legislators have bigger problems to solve at this moment than justifying the qualifications of these manufacturers to be feeding the population at large, or in accounting for the inactions of their own government departments in these matters (recall food inspections)

also beware of restaurant food - all of it unreasonably super-salted by unthinking habitual motions

solution: buy local and fresh, cook it yourself, and survive
m.


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