Public Health Decision-Making in CARICOM: Strengthening the Front-of-Package Nutrition Labelling Standardisation Programme.
In March 2024, The Global Center for Legal Innovation on Food Environments Center, O’Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law, Georgetown University in Washington D.C. in partnership with the Law and Health Research Unit at the University of the West Indies and the HCC launched a joint report entitled: PUBLIC HEALTH DECISION-MAKING IN CARICOM: Strengthening the Front-of-Package Nutrition Labelling Standardisation Programme.
Authors: Shajoe Lake, Isabel Barbosa, Kimberley Benjamin, Andrés Constantin, Maisha Hutton, Nicole Foster, March 19, 2024.
Noncommunicable diseases are the leading cause of disability, morbidity and mortality in the Caribbean, where over 70% of all deaths are NCD-related. Unhealthy diets, alongside other modifiable risk factors, are fuelling the region’s NCD crisis. Several recommendations at the international and regional level endorse regulating nutrition labelling of food and beverages as an essential part of a comprehensive suite of public health policies. Since 2018, the CARICOM Regional Organisation for Standards and Quality, the regional institution with responsibility for developing and harmonizing regional standards, embarked upon the process of revising the CARICOM Regional Standard Specification for the labelling of pre-packaged foods (CRS 5:2010) to include octagonal ‘high-in’ warning labels. The process has been protracted – involving two rounds of voting by CARICOM countries, and subjected to inordinate food and beverage industry interference.
Watch the launch webinar here.
Issues
Food and Nutrition, Noncommunicable diseases, Caribbean, Governance
Related Initiatives
Health and Human Rights
Related Projects
Noncommunicable Diseases and the Law, Global Center for Legal Innovation in Food Environments