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Reformulation Composition of foods, availability of healthy food options and portion sizes for infants and young children EU Platform for action on Diet, Physical Activity & Health meeting February 28th, 2013 1 What’s so special about infants & young children? 2 Content • Diet of infants and young children: focus on intake of vegetables and sugar • Our nutritional commitment • Reformulation of savoury foods and cereals • New commitment & conclusion 3 Vegetable intake 160 140 Vegetable intake (g/d) Reco. min. intake 4-8 y (125 g) 120 100 Reco. min. intake 1-3 y (75 g) 80 60 40 20 0 9-18 mo 2-3 y 4-6 y Netherlands 0-3 y 3-10 y 1-3 y 2.5-4 y 4-6 y 1.5-3 y 4-6 y 6 mo-1 y 1-4 y Italy * Netherlands Nutrition Centre Poland Belgium UK Czech Germany 4-5 y 1-4 y Ireland 4 Sugar intake Sugar and confectionery (g/d) 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 1-3 y Finland Sucrose 6mo-1y 1-4 y Germany Sugar&Sweets 1-3 y Ireland Non-milk sugar 9-18 mo 2-3 y Netherlands Sugar&Sweets 1-3 y Poland 1.5-3 y UK Sugar&SweetsNon-milk sugar 5 Why are healthy eating habits especially relevant in this period of life? MEFAB cohort First 4-12 mo: window of opportunity to introduce new tastes Overweight at age 12 years can be traced back to the first 12-24 mo of life 6 Our Nutritional Commitment DBN Nutrition Philosophy Committed to support short and long term health DBN Nutrition Goals DBN Nutritional Commitment 2nd Edition DBN Nutritional Standards (product development guidelines) E.g. reduce sugar, reduce salt, adapted portion sizes Nutritional standards Legal standards • Sugar in cereals: < 7.5 g/ 100 kcal • Sugar in meals: no legislation • Vegetables: no legislation Minimum standards • Sugar in cereals: < 3.75 g/ 100 kcal • Sugar in meals: < 2 g/ 100 g • Vegetables: >30% per portion Optimum standards • Sugar in cereals: no added sugar • Sugar in meals: no added sugar • Vegetables: >30% per portion 8 Sugar reduction roadmap 2010-2015 for all products 0% 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 -10,2% -15% -20% -14% Ambition -10% Estimate -5% -20% -25% 9 Sugar reduction – example No added sugar (NAS) in cereals Germany Nutritional standards Minimum standards Optimum standards - 373 tons sugar - 8 grams sugar per portion 0% 65% Replaced by: milk, cereals or fruit 35% Total of 400.000 young consumers 100% Before After 10 Vegetables – example 1 Increase vegetables in savoury jars in France (200g jars, 21 products) ≥ 80g vegetable in each product + 40g vegetable on average 11 Vegetables – example 2 Improvement of our first spoon pure vegetables products (4-6 mo) Nutritional standards Minimum standards Optimum standards + 77 tons vegetables - 17 tons of thickeners 88% 12% Before 100% 0% - 0.7 ton of sugar as fruit juice After 12 New commitment from Danone Baby Nutrition • Dietary habits and nutrient intakes of infants and toddlers • Rationale: Childhood obesity is rising in many European countries, whereas nutritional deficiencies (e.g. of iron and vitamin D) are still prevalent. Recent data on dietary intake of young children is lacking in many European countries. • Objective: To better understand the dietary habits and nutrient imbalances of young children, dietary surveys are done or ongoing in 7 European countries (Be, Gr, Hu, Ir, NL, Po, Sp). • Outcomes expected: Optimisation of Danone Baby products and adaptation of communication to parents. 13 Conclusions • Infants and young children have specific nutritional needs due to their rapid growth • At this stage of early development, metabolic and taste imprinting are important mechanisms that affect long term health • Increasing vegetable intake and decreasing sugar intake are important targets • DBN has significantly improved the quality of its complementary foods by reducing sugar levels, increasing the vegetable content of savoury meals and optimizing its pure vegetable varieties. • DBN is committed to increase the knowledge on dietary intake and nutritional status of infants and young children and to push for a continuous improvement of its products to support their future health. 14 Thanks for your attention!