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In this file photo, calories of each food item appear on a McDonalds drive-thru menu in New York. Calorie counts will have to be listed on restaurant menus under a provision tucked into the massive health care overhaul bill.
Ed Ou/ASSOCIATED PRESS
That Caesar salad you're about to eat? It's
800 calories, and that's without the croutons. The fettuccine
alfredo? A whopping 1,220 calories. You may choose to ignore the
numbers, but soon it's going to be tough to deny you saw them.
A requirement tucked into the nation's massive health care bill
will make calorie counts impossible for thousands of restaurants to
hide and difficult for consumers to ignore. More than 200,000 fast
food and other chain restaurants will have to include calorie
counts on menus, menu boards and even drive-throughs.
The new law, which applies to any restaurant with 20 or more
locations, directs the Food and Drug Administration to create a new
national standard for menu labeling, superseding a growing number
of state and city laws. President Barack Obama signed the health
care legislation Tuesday.
The idea is to make sure that customers process the calorie
information as they are ordering. Many restaurants currently post
nutritional information in a hallway, on a hamburger wrapper or on
their Web site. The new law will make calories immediately
available for most items.
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"The nutrition information is right on the menu or menu board
next to the name of the menu item, rather than in a pamphlet or in
tiny print on a poster, so that consumers can see it when they are
making ordering decisions," says Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin, chairman of
the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, who wrote the
provision.
It was added to the health bill with the support of the
restaurant industry, which is facing different laws from cities and
states. Sue Hensley of the National Restaurant Association says it
will help restaurants better respond to their customers.
"That growing patchwork of regulations and legislation in
different parts of the country has been a real challenge, and this
will allow operators to better be able to provide their
information," she said.
Some meals will be exempt from the calorie counts, including
specials on the menu less than 60 days, and other nutritional
information in addition to calories will have to be available
somewhere else in the restaurant.
The law will also apply to foods sold in vending machines,
specifically those that do not have visible calorie listings on the
front of the package. The requirements will be enforced by the FDA,
with the possibility of criminal penalties if operations do not
comply.
New York City was the first in the country to put a calorie
posting law in place. Since then, California, Seattle and other
places have done so.
The FDA will have a year to write the new rules, which health
advocates have been pushing for years. Margo Wootan, director of
nutrition policy at the Center for Science in the Public Interest,
said it's one step in the fight against obesity.
"Coffee drinks can range from 20 calories to 800 calories, and
burgers can range from 250 calories to well over 1,000 calories,"
she said.
Still, it's unclear what effect the labeling will have. In a
study published last year by the online journal Health Affairs,
only half of customers in poor New York City neighborhoods with
high rates of obesity and diabetes noticed the calorie counts.
The accuracy of the counts could also be called into question,
according to a different study.
In January, the Journal of the American Dietetic Association
published a survey of 10 chain restaurants, including Wendy's and
Ruby Tuesday, that said the number of calories in 29 meals or other
menu items was an average of 18 percent higher than listed. The
discrepancies were said to be due to variations in ingredients and
portion sizes.
(Copyright 2010 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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In this file photo, calories of each food item appear on a McDonalds drive-thru menu in New York. Calorie counts will have to be listed on restaurant menus under a provision tucked into the massive health care overhaul bill.
Ed Ou/ASSOCIATED PRESS
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