Fish and chips

鈥楬ealthy eating鈥 campaigns have largely failed in Britain for the last four decades because consumers have adapted confusing advice, and incorporated fast and convenience foods into self-defined 鈥榖alanced鈥 lifestyles, a new study argues.

These records reveal all kinds of people ... leaning towards convenience foods while still trying to define their lifestyles as healthy

Katrina-Louise Moseley

Supermarkets and food manufacturers have been excessively blamed for Britain鈥檚 unhealthy eating habits since the 1980s, according to 国际米兰对阵科莫 historian Dr Katrina-Louise Moseley.

In an article published in Contemporary British History, Moseley argues that far from being passive victims of manipulation in this period, consumers were 鈥榗omplicit鈥 in long-term behavioural shifts, proactively selecting, rejecting and sweetening advice from the government, the food industry and the media to fit their circumstances and to satisfy their appetites.

Rather than seeking to cast blame, Moseley asserts that we should think more carefully about how people rationalise their eating behaviours and interpret advice about food. Speaking ahead of a public event entitled '' (9听July 2021), Moseley added that this is particularly relevant in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, which has had a dramatic impact on eating behaviours.

鈥淔ood is a powerful coping mechanism in times of emotional distress, so it isn鈥檛 surprising that people have been buying extra packets of their favourite snack or eating more takeaways. I鈥檓 interested in the psychology of consumption and getting away from moralising language around food, which can be damaging鈥, Moseley said. As part of the event, hosted by the University of Warwick, Moseley invites readers to complete an (closes 9听July 2021) to reflect on how their own food practices have changed during the pandemic.

In her article, Moseley contrasts the success of Britain鈥檚 anti-smoking campaign, which transformed attitudes to tobacco in the 1960s and 70s, with the failure of the 鈥榟ealthy eating鈥 campaign to counteract rising levels of obesity from the late 1980s onwards.

Moseley said: 鈥淭he state faced a really difficult task. 鈥楧on鈥檛 smoke鈥 was a clear-cut message but you can鈥檛 tell people not to eat. Food can't be rejected outright, it has to remain a part of everyday life, and that makes it so much more complicated. We鈥檙e still really struggling with this today.鈥

The historian makes fresh use of consumer interviews and surveys conducted in England and Wales in the 1980s and 90s. These include a Mass Observation directive questionnaire on 鈥楩ood and Drink鈥 completed in 1982; interviews and participant observations gathered from 1992鈥96 in response to the 1992 Health of the Nation report; and a collection of life history interviews undertaken with a sample of older people in 2017鈥18.听

Moseley argues that a major problem facing Britain鈥檚 鈥榟ealthy eating鈥 campaign has been its reliance, often unavoidable, on malleable language. Words like 鈥榖alance鈥 and 鈥榤oderation鈥 left themselves open to subjective interpretation. Moseley said: 鈥淭hese records reveal all kinds of people, not just the less affluent, leaning towards convenience foods while still trying to define their lifestyles as healthy.鈥

Looking at the 1982 questionnaire records, Moseley found that attitudes to convenience foods were 'shot through with contradictions'. Speaking for herself and her husband, one female respondent claimed, 鈥渘either of us can bear ready-made frozen dinners鈥 鈥 but she made 鈥渁n exception for certain things from Marks & Spencer 鈥 their frozen cod in parsley sauce is palatable and their cauliflower cheese makes me a quick solo meal if Neil is out for the evening.鈥

Moseley said: 鈥淔or health enthusiasts and cynics alike, official information about food didn鈥檛 always feel correct. Consumers continued to assert that foods had different effects on different individuals, that one could be overweight whilst leading a healthy lifestyle, and that 鈥 in the midst of a dizzying array of information, self-evaluation was key.鈥澨

The study describes how supermarkets and food manufacturers seized on the idea of 鈥榟ealthy eating鈥 in the 1980s in response to new nutritional guidelines being issued. In 1984, Heinz began a 25-year-programme to reduce salt and sugar in its products; and in 1986 Mars produced a pamphlet entitled 鈥楥onfectionary in a Healthy Diet鈥. Meanwhile Tesco and Sainsbury's turned their attention to nutritional labelling.听

Moseley said: 鈥淲e underestimate what a pivotal role the convenience foods sector played in producing and disseminating knowledge about 鈥榟ealthy eating鈥 in this period. Sometimes, as with Findus鈥 calorie-controlled ready meals, it was the food industry rather than politicians or doctors that gave people usable, workable public health messages. But increasingly people came to view big food companies, government and public health experts as one and the same: a mysterious force manipulating consumer behaviour.鈥澨

Testimonies collected in the 1980s and 90s emphasise that new jargon baffled many consumers. Puzzling over the term 鈥榩olyunsaturated margarine鈥, one respondent to the 1980s questionnaire said: 鈥淚 understand that poly means many and unsaturated means not chock full of something, so what is margarine poly unsaturated with or not with?鈥 In 1985, a market research study of nearly 1,500 consumers in England and Wales found that 43% were uncertain whether saturated or polyunsaturated fat was better for them.听

Moseley said: 鈥淭erms like 鈥楨-numbers鈥 and 鈥榮aturated fats鈥 entered public discourse but that didn鈥檛 mean that everyone understood or accepted health advice, let alone changed their behaviours. Naturally, people embraced foods that made their lives easier and their mealtimes tastier, often using the language of 鈥榤oderation鈥 to justify the consumption of highly processed, time-saving foods.鈥

The study examines the rise of scepticism as consumers felt overloaded with confusing, contradictory and unreliable 鈥榟ealthy eating鈥 messages. The 1992鈥96 interviews reveal that consumers became increasingly committed to using their 鈥榗ommon sense鈥 when thinking about food. Moseley said: 鈥淐onsumers didn鈥檛 respond as authorities hoped they would, but they weren鈥檛 irrational or lacking in judgement. People subscribed to their own, highly personalized logics.鈥

One 1992鈥96 interviewee said: 鈥渟ome days you just want mashed potatoes and I鈥檓 not going to feel bad about that because with the rest of my life鈥 it鈥檚 balanced鈥.鈥 Interviewees also sought reassurance from their childhood eating habits or those of older relatives, saying things like: 鈥淣an lived to a good old age鈥 or 鈥渋t didn鈥檛 seem to do us much harm at the time鈥.

Testimonies from the 1990s also reveal the emergence of a new language linking food and feeling. One woman defined healthy eating as 鈥渢hat difference between鈥 getting a good feeling from what you eat and getting this sort of not very nice feeling鈥. 鈥淐heese especially鈥 made another young woman feel 鈥渟o ugh 鈥 you know it makes me feel so fat and just weighs me down鈥. She added that she felt 鈥渕uch healthier and brighter鈥 if she avoided it.听

Moseley said: 鈥淭he idea that different foods might cause individuals to feel a certain way in their bodies prefigured a major shift towards self-diagnosed food intolerances in the early twenty-first century.鈥

The study accepts that some positive health trends did come about in the late 20th century but points out that consumers favoured easier quick-fixes like switching to brown bread and semi-skimmed milk, over sweeping dietary transformations.听

Moseley said: 鈥淢edical researchers remain very worried about public scepticism, but their studies tend to lack historical context. Thinking about the history of trust and cynicism alongside developments in public health can help us understand and reconstruct the bigger picture.鈥

Reflecting on Britain鈥檚 food culture today, Moseley points out that economic, social and geographic constraints on 鈥榟ealthy鈥 choices lack public visibility: factors like deprivation, time poverty, and mental illness delimit the choices that consumers feel able to make. She said: 鈥淭oo often, health education campaigns promote 鈥榠nformed鈥 decision making around food, as if social and economic disparities do not exist. Food has long been a site of inequality in Britain, and unfortunately it remains so today.鈥

Reference

K听Moseley, 鈥樷, Contemporary British History (2021). DOI: 10.1080/13619462.2021.1915141听



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