PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Calorie labelling linked to 2% average reduction in energy content of menu items

Changes primarily due to swapping in slightly lower calorie items, rather than reformulation; Likely to have “moderate to limited” impact on population health, conclude researchers

2025-10-07
(Press-News.org) Calorie labelling, which became law in April 2022 in England, is associated with only a small (2%) average reduction in the energy content of food that is available away from home, finds research published in the open access journal BMJ Public Health.

 

And these changes are primarily due to swapping in slightly lower calorie items, rather than reformulating existing ones, with no changes observed in continuously available items. The impact on population health is likely to be “moderate to limited,” conclude the researchers.

 

Eating at restaurants, fast food outlets, and ordering takeaways, collectively known as out-of-home food outlets, is common and associated with poorer dietary quality, weight gain, and obesity, explain the researchers. 

 

Calorie labelling aims to try and counter this and improve public health by providing consumers with calorie information at the point of sale, they add.

 

In England calorie labelling regulations require large (at least 250 employees) food and non-alcoholic drink outlets to display kilocalories on their offerings.

 

The international evidence on how these policies affect what is offered is somewhat mixed, note the researchers. To strengthen the evidence base, they compared changes in the energy content of menu items before and after the introduction of calorie labelling, stratified by food group and food business (chain) type.

 

They used the MenuTracker database to find out what changes had been made to the average energy content (Kcal values) of new, removed, and continuously available food items, and to assess the proportions of menu items exceeding recommended energy intake  (above 600 kcal) per meal.

 

MenuTracker collects the food item name and description, serving size, energy, macronutrients, fibre, salt, allergens, special dietary information and menu section (children’s or sharing items, for example).

 

The researchers focused on data collected in September 2021 for 79 chains (before the introduction of the regulations) and September 2022 for 90 chains (after the regulations had come into force). The final analysis included 31,045 menu items from 78 chains in both time periods.

 

The chains were classified as: cafes and bakeries; Western fast food and takeaways; pubs, bars, and inns; restaurants; sports and entertainment venues; and Asian fast food.

 

And menu items were classified as appetisers and sides; baked goods; beverages; burgers; desserts; fried potatoes; mains; pizza; salads; sandwiches; soup; and toppings and ingredients.

 

A significant average reduction per item was observed for non-alcoholic and soft drinks of 36 kcal, equivalent to a drop of nearly 16.5% in energy content.

 

And the average energy content of burgers fell by 103 kcal (11% reduction), and by 30 kcal for mains (4% reduction). 

 

But, overall, only a small reduction of 9 kcal (2% reduction) in average energy content per item was observed after the regulations had come on stream. 

 

Analysis of chain type revealed significant average reductions per item in pubs, bars, and inns (a reduction of 52 kcal; 9%); restaurants (a reduction of 23 kcal; 5%); and sports and entertainment venues (a reduction of 49 kcal;13.5%).

 

But changes were driven primarily by the removal of higher (average 458) kcal items and the addition of lower (average 434) kcal new items. 

 

And there was no significant change in energy content for continuously available items, indicating limited evidence of reformulation, say the researchers.

 

Before the introduction of the regulations continuously available items had an average energy content of 437 kcal; afterwards they had an average energy content of 439 kcal. 

 

Removed items contained an average of 21 kcal more than continuously available items and 25 kcal more than new items.

 

As to the recommended 600 kcal limit per meal, 22% of items remained over this limit. The food groups with the most items over 600 kcal were burgers, mains, and pizzas, and the

chain types with the most items exceeding this limit were restaurants and pubs, bars and inns.

 

The researchers acknowledge various limitations to their findings, including that MenuTracker only includes menu information from chains that posted kcal information online before and after the policy. 

 

The calorie labelling regulations also allow kcal information to be within plus or minus 20% and permit several different methods for estimating energy content, they add.

 

“We found more evidence of menu change rather than reformulation, with items removed from menus being higher energy than continuous items. Thus, the impact of a calorie labelling policy on food may differ from other policies like the Soft Drinks Industry Levy, which created an economic incentive for, and was associated with, substantial reformulation,” point out the researchers.

 

Reformulating drinks may be easier for manufacturers to do than reformulating foods, and previous research indicates that large outlets are reluctant to reduce portion sizes because of how customers might perceive this, they acknowledge. 

 

But they suggest: “The small reduction in average kcal of items available on menus we found is likely to have modest to limited impact on population health.”

 

And for these “to lead to meaningful population health improvements, consumers would need to shift purchases towards the lower calorie items,” they add. 

 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Widely prescribed opioid painkiller tramadol not that effective for easing chronic pain

2025-10-07
The strong opioid painkiller, tramadol, is not that effective at easing chronic pain for which it’s widely prescribed, finds a pooled data analysis of the available research, published online in BMJ Evidence Based Medicine.   And it likely increases the risk of serious side effects, including heart disease, the findings indicate, prompting the researchers to conclude that the potential harms of tramadol probably outweigh its benefits, and that its use should be minimised.   Tramadol is a dual action opioid widely prescribed for the treatment of moderate ...

Exercise snacks may boost cardiorespiratory fitness of physically inactive adults

2025-10-07
Exercise snacks—intentional short bursts of physical activity—may be an effective way of boosting the cardiorespiratory fitness of physically inactive adults, finds a synthesis of the available research, published online in the British Journal of Sports Medicine.   Adherence to exercise snacking throughout the day was high, the findings indicate, and this approach could counter perceived lack of time and low motivation—frequently cited barriers to fulfilling the recommended weekly quota of physical activity for health—say the researchers.   Globally, ...

15,000 women a year with breast cancer could benefit from whole genome sequencing, say researchers

2025-10-07
Whole genome sequencing offered to breast cancer patients is likely to identify unique genetic features that could either guide immediate treatment or help match patients to clinical trials for over 15,000 women a year, say scientists at the University of Cambridge. In 2022, 2.3 million women were diagnosed with breast cancer worldwide and there were 670,000 related deaths. Despite significant progress in recent years, it remains challenging to accurately identify the best treatments for individual patients and to predict cases with poorer prognosis. Whole genome sequencing ...

Study highlights risks of Caesarean births to future pregnancies

2025-10-07
Women who have Caesarean births at an advanced stage of labour are about eight times more likely to develop scars in the womb which are known to increase the likelihood of premature births in future pregnancies, UCL researchers have found. The study, published in the American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology, looked at how the stage of labour when the operation is performed affects where the scar forms and how well it heals. More than 40 per cent of all births in high-income countries including England are now by Caesarean. As labour progresses, ...

GLP-1 agonists pose emerging challenge for PET-CT imaging, study finds

2025-10-07
(Barcelona, Spain, Wednesday 8 September 2025) The growing use of GLP-1 receptor agonists may affect the interpretation of oncological FDG PET-CT scans, new research presented today at the 38th Annual Congress of the European Association of Nuclear Medicine (EANM'25) has revealed.1 GLP-1 receptor agonists are now widely prescribed for individuals with type 2 diabetes and weight loss, with a 700% increase in usage reported in the United States between 2019 and 2023.² These medications alter glucose metabolism, gastric motility and sympathetic tone, which may lead to unique uptake patterns on PET-CT. Previous case reports have shown increased FDG uptake in skeletal ...

Scripps Research scientists unlock new patterns of protein behavior in cell membranes

2025-10-07
LA JOLLA, CA— Cellular membrane proteins play many important roles throughout the body, including transporting substances in and out of the cell, transmitting signals, speeding up reactions and helping neighboring cells stick together. When they malfunction, it can cause serious diseases including cancer, making them attractive drug targets. But understanding how membrane proteins behave and function can be challenging because their position within the cell’s lipid membrane—a tightly-packed double layer of fat-like molecules—makes them difficult to study. Now, Scripps Research ...

Panama Canal may face frequent extreme water lows in coming decades

2025-10-07
WASHINGTON — In 2023, Panama experienced one of the worst droughts in its recorded history, and it severely depleted water available to the Panama Canal, so much that it decreased shipping by 30%. A new study projected that those historic water lows could become the new norm if greenhouse gas emissions continue to rise. “If we mitigate emissions and we choose one of the lower emissions pathways, then it really keeps this system pretty stable,” said Samuel Muñoz, lead author of the a new study and a researcher studying  hydrologic and climatic variability at Northeastern University. “But if we don't, then these low water levels that ...

Flash Joule heating lights up lithium extraction from ores

2025-10-07
A new one-step, water- acid- and alkali-free method for extracting high-purity lithium from spodumene ore has the potential to transform critical metal processing and enhance renewable energy supply chains. This study is set to be published in Science Advances Oct. 3, 2025. As the demand for lithium continues to rise, particularly for use in electric cars, smartphones and power storage, current extraction methods are struggling to keep pace. Extracting lithium from salty water is a lengthy process, and traditional methods that use heat and chemicals ...

COMBINEDBrain and MUSC announce partnership to establish biorepository for pediatric cerebrospinal fluid and CNS tissue bank

2025-10-07
Nashville, TN – COMBINEDBrain, a leader in advancing translational neuroscience research, and the Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC), one of the nation's premier academic health centers, are excited to announce a strategic partnership to establish a cutting-edge biorepository for pediatric central nervous system (CNS) tissue and biofluids. This collaborative effort, led by MUSC’s Dr. Ramin Eskandari and COMBINEDBrain’s Dr. Anna Pfalzer, aims to accelerate the development of treatments for neurological diseases and significantly aid drug companies in biomarker discovery and therapeutic development. The biorepository will house ...

Questionable lead reporting for drinking water virtually vanished after Flint water crisis, study reveals

2025-10-07
Public water systems in the U.S. were far less likely to report suspiciously rounded lead levels after the Flint, Michigan water crisis drew national outrage and federal scrutiny, according to new research led by the University of Massachusetts Amherst.  The study, published as the first article in the latest issue of American Economic Review: Insights, introduces new statistical methods to distinguish between natural rounding and potential “threshold manipulation” in reported figures. “Existing ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Trailblazing Young Scientists honored with $250,000 prizes at Blavatnik National Awards Gala

Revolutionary blood test for ME / Chronic Fatigue unveiled

Calorie labelling linked to 2% average reduction in energy content of menu items

Widely prescribed opioid painkiller tramadol not that effective for easing chronic pain

Exercise snacks may boost cardiorespiratory fitness of physically inactive adults

15,000 women a year with breast cancer could benefit from whole genome sequencing, say researchers

Study highlights risks of Caesarean births to future pregnancies

GLP-1 agonists pose emerging challenge for PET-CT imaging, study finds

Scripps Research scientists unlock new patterns of protein behavior in cell membranes

Panama Canal may face frequent extreme water lows in coming decades

Flash Joule heating lights up lithium extraction from ores

COMBINEDBrain and MUSC announce partnership to establish biorepository for pediatric cerebrospinal fluid and CNS tissue bank

Questionable lead reporting for drinking water virtually vanished after Flint water crisis, study reveals

Assessing overconfidence among national security officials

Bridging two frontiers: Mitochondria & microbiota, Targeting Extracellular Vesicles 2025 to explore game-changing pathways in medicine

New imaging tech promises to help doctors better diagnose and treat skin cancers

Once dominant, US agricultural exports falter amid trade disputes and rising competition

Biochar from invasive weed shields rice from toxic nanoplastics and heavy metals

Rice University announces second cohort of Chevron Energy Graduate Fellows

Soil bacteria and minerals form a natural “battery” that breaks down antibiotics in the dark

Jamestown colonists brought donkeys, not just horses, to North America, old bones reveal

FIU cybersecurity researchers develop midflight defense against drone hijacking

Kennesaw State researcher aims to discover how ideas spread in the digital age

Next-generation perovskite solar cells are closer to commercial use

Sleep patterns linked to variation in health, cognition, lifestyle, and brain organization

University of Oklahoma researcher awarded funding to bridge gap between molecular data and tissue architecture

Nationally-recognized pathologist Paul N. Staats, MD, named Chair of Pathology at University of Maryland School of Medicine

The world’s snow leopards are very similar genetically. That doesn’t bode well for their future

Researchers find key to stopping deadly infection

Leafcutter ants have blind spots, just like truck drivers

[Press-News.org] Calorie labelling linked to 2% average reduction in energy content of menu items
Changes primarily due to swapping in slightly lower calorie items, rather than reformulation; Likely to have “moderate to limited” impact on population health, conclude researchers