Photo by Mike Licht, NotionsCapital.com/Flickr CC
Richard Blumenthal, the Connecticult Attorney General, says he is about to conduct an investigation into the Smart Choices program because it is "overly simplistic, inaccurate and ultimately misleading." Recall that Froot Loops, a product with sugar as its first ingredient, qualifies as a better-for-you option. Apparently, Mr. Blumenthal is talking to the Attorneys General of other states and several want to join his investigation. While they are at it, maybe they should also take a look at the role of the American Society of Nutrition in developing and managing this program.
But count on the American Council on Science and Health (ACSH) to defend Froot Loops as a Smart Choice. Explains ACSH's Jeff Stier:
Froot Loops and Lucky Charms have the 'Smart Choices' label. They have sugar in them, but they also contain half of a person's daily requirement of some vitamins. If we're able to give kids those nutrients, it should be okay to give them some sugar. If they sold these products without sugar, kids wouldn't eat them, or they might end up adding even more on their own....Don't companies have the right to say those foods are better than others? It's not as if they are making specific health claims, rather these are just comparative claims.
This Richard Blumenthal is the same one who has been seeking to ban e-cigarettes...Connecticut may have more serious problems to focus on than banning e-cigarettes and worrying about companies trying to point consumers to healthier products. Froot Loops obviously isn't the healthiest food out there, but it's better than many others.
It's that debatable philosophic argument again: Is a so-called "better-for-you" product necessarily a good choice?
[Note: I'm in Rome this week and am most grateful to the six people who sent me the Times article and the two who sent the ACSH post. Thanks so much!]
For more from Marion Nestle on the Smart Choices program, click here, here, and here.




I'm a little sympathetic to the ACSH here. Yes, Lucky Charms are vitamin-fortified and a better choice for breakfast than, say, M&M's, but if there's any point in using a program like Smart Choices it's in trying to improve people's nutrition. It's no challenge to get kids to eat Lucky Charms or Cinnamon Toast Crunch - no one needs a government program to do that. ACSH could at least set its sights on something a little more ambitious - Cheerios, for example.
When my son was in elementary school (he is now 40) and they had just started to give the totals of calories and sodium etc. I noticed that there was more sodium per serving in Cheerios than in Doritos!!
Not sure if that is still the case, but it was an interesting to compare the two. One was supposed to be a "healthy" breakfast, the other a salty snack!!
WSJ gets it right:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704500604574483912367996226.html
"Smart Choices is exactly the kind of program that Mr. Blumenthal and consumer advocates should be in favor of since it makes nutritional information more visible to consumers."
Let me be clear- I do not think Froot Loops are a health food. I know Dr. Nestle would like you to think ACSH is in favor of kids eating "junk foods" in favor of unsweetened oatmeal (which I actually prefer for breakfast).
Do you really think a parent who sees the Smart Choices label considers Froot Loops a health food? Really...