2020
DOI: 10.1111/nbu.12421
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Proceedings of a roundtable event ‘Is communicating the concept of nutrient density important?’

Abstract: The British Nutrition Foundation held a 1‐day roundtable event to gather views from a wide range of stakeholders on the relevance and importance of the concept of nutrient density in supporting and motivating people to make healthier dietary choices. The opportunities and barriers associated with the use of this concept were also explored. The roundtable involved experts from research, public health nutrition, dietetics, retail and nutrition science communication, and this report describes the main themes emer… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…It is now used by more than 300 retailers and manufacturers including multinationals. Further details of the calculation of Nutri-Score are described elsewhere (Lockyer et al, 2020). profile (i.e.…”
Section: The Adoption Of Nutri-scorementioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is now used by more than 300 retailers and manufacturers including multinationals. Further details of the calculation of Nutri-Score are described elsewhere (Lockyer et al, 2020). profile (i.e.…”
Section: The Adoption Of Nutri-scorementioning
confidence: 99%
“…2018; Lockyer et al . 2020). Furthermore, biochemical status data indicate an increased risk of iron deficiency in 9% of girls aged 11–18 years and 5% of women aged 19–64 years based on the WHO classification for iron deficiency and anaemia.…”
Section: Role Of Nutrients In Supporting the Immune Systemmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Increased availability of foods labelled as vegan has transformed choice for those who want to avoid or restrict animal‐derived foods, but a vegan label is not automatically a short cut to identifying healthy choices. We also need to consider the overall nutrient density (Lockyer et al ) and contrast the content of protein, vitamins, minerals and fibre, with the levels of salt, sugars and fat. Well‐planned vegan diets that include added vitamin B12 (not present naturally in plants) can deliver the nutrients needed for health but exclusion of milk, fish, meat and eggs is not a pre‐requisite of the largely plant‐based ‘Eatwell’ diet advocated by government (NHS ).…”
Section: Sustainable Nutrition – Does It Mean Going Vegan?mentioning
confidence: 99%