Concise guide reviewed favorably by American Academy of Nurse Practitioners

Newswise — (Washington, D.C., September 13, 2012) — A new consumer resource, What’s in Our Food: Understanding Common Food Ingredients, takes the mystery out of common food ingredients by describing how and why they are used and the U.S. government’s process for determining if they are safe to eat and accurately labeled.

The concise reference guide was developed by the International Food Information Council (IFIC) Foundation and favorably reviewed by the American Academy of Nurse Practitioners® (AANP). It can be downloaded here and will also be available in select nurse practitioner offices and clinics.

“Our Food & Health Survey results show that nine out of ten consumers give thought to what’s in their food and pay attention to ingredients listed on food labels,” said Marianne Smith Edge, RD, LD, FADA, IFIC Foundation Senior Vice President, Nutrition and Food Safety. “For this reason, it is important to bring clarity to those unfamiliar ‘chemical’ sounding names of ingredients that are really quite common, readily found in nature and play important roles in keeping our food safe, affordable, and delicious.”

“AANP is pleased to be part of this important effort to provide information about food safety,” said AANP President Angela Golden, DNP, FNP-C, FAANP. “In addition to diagnosing and managing acute and chronic illness, NPs place a strong emphasis on health promotion and disease prevention, counseling their patients to make healthy lifestyle choices. Providing patients with information about the ingredients in food and food safety is a natural fit.”

Food ingredients, which include anti-caking agents, emulsifiers, enzymes, fats and oils, food colors and leavening agents, are added to foods for a variety of reasons, such as to maintain or improve safety and freshness, improve taste, provide texture, or improve appearance. Some food ingredients have been used for centuries, whereas some were developed more recently, and they can contribute to making foods safer, more convenient, healthful, flavorful and more affordable.

The long names of some food ingredients listed on food labels are often unfamiliar to consumers, leading to many questions, but that is because the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) requires them to be listed using their formal, scientific names. Baking soda, for example, is referred to as sodium bicarbonate. The new IFIC Foundation resource includes a “Quick Reference Guide to What’s in Our Food” that describes many common food ingredients and their functions in our food, provides more familiar terms for some ingredients, examples of foods that contain certain ingredients and an outline of FDA’s approval process for food ingredients.

For additional information or to schedule an interview, please call the IFIC Media Team at 202-296-6540.

Founded in 1985, the American Academy of Nurse Practitioners® (AANP) is the largest, full-service national professional membership organization created for NPs of all specialties. As The Voice of the Nurse Practitioner®, AANP represents the interests of the approximately 155,000 NPs around the country, advocating for the active role of NPs as providers of high-quality, cost-effective health care.

The International Food Information Council Foundation is dedicated to the mission of effectively communicating science-based information on health, food safety and nutrition for the public good. The IFIC Foundation is supported primarily by the broad-based food, beverage and agricultural industries. Visit http://www.foodinsight.org

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