Caricom Member State Voting on the Final Draft Caricom Regional Standard for Specification for labelling of pre-packaged foods (FDCRS 5).
Dear Caricom National Standards Bodies,
We are writing as leaders in health and nutrition across the Caribbean to urge your stakeholders representing diverse sectors of society and senior policymakers in Ministries of Trade, Commerce, Business, Finance, and Agriculture, to support the approval of the Final Draft Caricom Regional Standard for Specification for labeling of pre-packaged foods (FDCRS 5), which includes the octagonal front-of-package warning label and the PAHO Nutrient Profile Model.
Caribbean people deserve the best nutritional labelling system to reduce malnutrition in all its forms — including undernutrition and overnutrition — and improve their health.
Among various nutritional labelling systems, scientific evidence, including from the Caribbean region, underscores the superior effectiveness of the octagonal warning label, which empowers consumers to quickly, correctly, and easily identify products with unhealthy nutritional profiles.
Caribbean countries have some of the world’s most alarming rates of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) and obesity. These conditions not only place immense strain on our healthcare systems, but also pose a significant threat to our economic stability, and, as underscored in the recent Bridgetown Declaration on NCDs and Mental Health, they jeopardise our regional development objectives and the attainment of the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals.
At the heart of these diet-related health challenges lies the overconsumption of foods high in sodium/salt, sugar, and fats — a situation which is in part due to the lack of awareness of the content of many foods. Current nutrition labels are difficult to read and understand and are often misleading.
Caribbean people deserve access to a labelling system that has proven its effectiveness in helping consumers make informed food choices.
Studies conducted globally, as well as regionally in Jamaica and in Barbados, show that the octagonal warning label outperforms all other labels in allowing consumers to quickly, easily, and correctly identify foods high in sodium/salt, sugar, and fats[1]. In Barbados, the introduction of octagonal warning labels has the potential to reduce NCD deaths by 16%, while saving the government in excess of US$700 million in mortality costs annually[2].
The impact of the octagonal warning labelling system extends far beyond the supermarket aisle. It has the capacity to easily identify those food products which should be regulated in various settings, including schools, and be subjected to taxation (unhealthy products) and subsidies (healthy products). The HCC and partners’ newly launched campaign, ‘Octagonal Warning Labels help consumers #ActOnFacts’ speaks to this and the other co-benefits of implementing this labelling standard.
The time to act is now.
The time to act is now, as we echo the commitment made by Caribbean Heads of State and Government in the 2007 Declaration of Port of Spain to address the “epidemic of chronic NCDs” by prioritising the prevention of NCDs through strong policies. Approval of this Final Draft Caricom Regional Standard and the octagonal warning label not only honours this historic commitment, but also represents a significant step towards safeguarding the nutrition and health of our citizens, particularly those living with obesity and NCDs. The rising levels of childhood obesity in the region and the associated increased risk of NCDs, heighten the imperative for action; Caribbean people have a right to simple and easily understood information about the food they consume; right now, they do not.
Our collective voices build on the signatures of support from over 400 Caribbean public health professionals, academics, and ordinary citizens, and over 40 regional organisations.
We implore your stakeholders to consider the urgency of this matter and the profound impact that your decision will have on the immediate and future nutrition, health, and well-being of Caribbean people, and, by extension, national and regional development.
By approving the Final Draft Caricom Regional Standard for Specification for labelling of pre-packaged foods and the octagonal warning label, through a fair and balanced vote including all key stakeholders, you will send a clear message of commitment to improve the lives of citizens across Caricom and securing a healthier future for the region.
Signed
Regional Partners
- Sir Trevor Hassell, President, Healthy Caribbean Coalition (HCC)
- Dean Chambliss, Subregional Program Director for the Caribbean, Pan American Health Organization (PAHO)
- Dr Joy St John, Executive Director, Caribbean Public Health Agency (CARPHA)
- Dr Didacus Jules, Director General, OECS Commission
- Pieter Bult, Representative EC, UNICEF Eastern Caribbean
- Nicole Foster, Law Lecturer & Head, Law and Health Research Unit, Faculty of Law, University of the West Indies Cave Hill Campus
- Professor Simon Anderson, Director of the George Alleyne Chronic Disease Research Centre (GA-CDRC)
- HCC patron
- Sir George Alleyne, Director Emeritus, PAHO
NCD Commission Chairs
- Suleiman Bulbulia, Chair, Barbados National NCD Commission
- Dr Trevor Ferguson, Chair, Jamaica National NCD Commission
- Dr Jane Noel, Chair, Grenada National NCD Commission
Civil Society Organisation Partners
- Dr Vanessa White-Barrow, President, Caribbean Association of Nutritionists and Dieticians
- Debbie Chen, Executive Director, Heart Foundation of Jamaica
- Abi Begho, Founder and Programme Director, Lake Health and Wellbeing
- Dr Karen Sealey, Founder and Chair, Trinidad and Tobago NCD Alliance
- Dr Sonia Nixon, Chair, Grenada Cancer Society
- Laura Tucker-Longsworth, Founder and Chair of the Belize Cancer Society, Former Speaker of the House of Assembly, Belize
- Shannique Bowden, Executive Director, Jamaica Youth Advocacy Network
1. Effects of front-of-package nutrition labelling systems on understanding and purchase intention in Jamaica: results from a multiarm randomised controlled trial
2. Front-of-package warning labels save lives and resources: results from a modeling study in Barbados
While I support the inclusion of the Octagonal Warning Label at the package I will also advise that the print should be large enough that it can be easily read. It no use having this warning if most persons cannot read the warning.