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FDA to Require Food
Manufacturers to List Food Allergens:
Consumers with Allergies will Benefit from Improved Food Labels
Effective January 1,
2006, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is requiring food
labels to clearly state if food products contain any ingredients
that contain protein derived from the eight major allergenic foods.
As a result of the Food Allergen Labeling and Consumer Protection
Act of 2004 (FALCPA), manufacturers are required to identify in
plain English the presence of ingredients that contain protein
derived from milk, eggs, fish, crustacean shellfish, tree nuts,
peanuts, wheat, or soybeans in the list of ingredients or to say
"contains" followed by name of the source of the food allergen after
or adjacent to the list of ingredients.
This labeling will be especially helpful to children who must learn
to recognize the presence of substances they must avoid. For
example, if a product contains the milk-derived protein, casein, the
product's label will have to use the term "milk" in addition to the
term "casein" so that those with milk allergies can clearly
understand the presence of the allergen they need to avoid.
"The eight major food allergens account for 90 percent of all
documented food allergic reactions, and some reactions may be severe
or life-threatening," said Robert E. Brackett, PhD, Director of
FDA's Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition. "Consumers will
benefit from improved food labels for products that contain food
allergens."
FALCPA does not require food manufacturers or retailers to relabel
or remove from grocery or supermarket shelves products that do not
reflect the additional allergen labeling as long as the products
were labeled before the effective date. As a result, FDA cautions
consumers that there will be a transition period of undetermined
length during which it is likely that consumers will see packaged
food on store shelves and in consumers' homes without the revised
allergen labeling.
For more information about FALCPA, visit FDA's food allergy page at:
http://www.cfsan.fda.gov/~dms/wh-alrgy.html
Trans Fat is also
coming to a label near you!
FDA has required that
saturated fat and dietary cholesterol be listed on the food label
since 1993. By adding trans fat on the Nutrition Facts panel
(required by January 1, 2006), consumers now know for the first time
how much of all three -- saturated fat, trans fat, and cholesterol
-- are in the foods they choose. Identifying saturated fat, trans
fat, and cholesterol on the food label gives consumers information
to make heart-healthy food choices. This revised label, which
includes information on trans fat as well as saturated fat and
cholesterol, will be of particular interest to people concerned
about high blood cholesterol and heart disease.
South Dakota State
University, South Dakota Counties and U.S. Department of Agriculture
Cooperating South Dakota State University is an Affirmative
Action/Equal Opportunity Employer (Male/Female) and offers all
benefits, services, and educational and employment opportunities
without regard for ancestry, age, race, citizenship, color, creed,
religion, gender, disability, national origin, sexual preference, or
Vietnam Era veteran status.
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