Labeling of Food Additive
The risks or benefits of food additive and ingredients must be clearly displayed for consumers. The FD&C Act requires, in virtually all cases, a complete of all the ingredients of a food.
The Nutrition Labeling and Education Act which amended the FD&C Act requires most foods to bear labeling and requires food labels that bear nutrient content claims and certain health massages to comply with specific requirements.
Two of the exemptions from ingredients labeling requirements have resulted in special product labeling efforts to protect the health of consumers.
First, the act provides that species, flavorings, and colorings may be declared collectively without naming each one.
One exception is the artificial color additive FD&C Yellow #5. This chemical must be specifically identified in the ingredients statement of finished foods because a small percentage of the population may be allergic or sensitive to the additive.
Second, FDA regulations exempt from ingredient declaration incidental additives, such as processing aids, that are present in a food at insignificant levels and that do no have a technical or functional effect in the finished food.
One of important example of an incidental additive is peanuts. An increasing number of products are identified that they “may contain peanuts.”
While peanut-derived ingredients were not intentionally added to these products, residues from peanut use in processing on nearby equipment or previous production runs may have contaminated these products with peanut residues.
Since peanuts are one of the leading causes of allergic responses to foods, many companies have chosen to label some product with “may contain peanuts.”
Some foods may be identified or labeled to contain additives that can improve public or individual health.
Many ready to eat breakfast cereal products are fortified with several vitamins and minerals.
A quantity of these substances is added to the cereal so that a consumer may expect to consume 25 to 100% of the recommended daily intake of that nutrient from a defined size serving.
Additives that can improve human health are sometimes advertised elsewhere in finished product packaging besides the ingredients list and nutrition label.
Labeling of Food Additive
Food safety can be defined as the “the avoidance of food borne pathogens, chemical toxicants and physical hazards, but also includes issues of nutrition, food quality and education.” The focus is on “microbial, chemical or physical hazards from substances than can cause adverse consequences.”
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