Choose Healthier Foods With New Labeling System

Three colorful five-sliced citrus wheels. First one has all five slices filled, second has three filled, third has one filled.

Choosing more nutritious food items will be a little easier on campus starting this fall. 

The U-M community will start seeing a colorful five-sliced citrus icon on campus vending machines and at eateries. The more slices filled in, the more nutritious. 

MHealthy and its university partners created the icon to help show the nutrient density of select foods and beverages. Nutrient dense foods include more fruits, vegetables, healthy fats, whole grains and fiber. They also have less saturated fats, added sugars and sodium.

A list of food items, along with how many slices each received, are available on the MHealthy website

“Many foods are not simply ‘good’ or ‘bad.’ Instead they tend to fall along a spectrum of healthfulness,” says Erica Owen, MHealthy’s nutrition program manager and a registered dietitian. “This information will help you make more informed food choices when dining at U-M.” 

The new labeling system was developed using benchmarking data, current literature, community feedback, and intuitive eating principles. 

MHealthy has also updated its Nutrition Guidelines to better help individuals improve their nutritional intake. Changes include updated guidelines related to sodium, added sugar and saturated fats. This update is in step with the 2020-2025 Dietary Guidelines for Americans, released from the U.S. Departments of Health and Human Services (HHS) and of Agriculture (USDA).

The food labeling system and nutrition guidelines were created in partnership with Michigan Medicine Retail Food Services; U-M School of Public Health Nutrition Services; Michigan Dining; MHealthy; Michigan Medicine Division of Metabolism, Endocrinology & Diabetes; Michigan Medicine Patient Food & Nutrition Services, and Michigan Medicine Preventive Cardiology.

For more information and to view lists with food items, visit the MHealthy vending and dining program web page.

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