
The Affordable Care Act requires certain restaurants to provide nutritional information on their menus and menu boards, which is referred to as menu labeling. Menu labeling presupposes that providing consumers with the nutritional information about their food will cause them to reconsider their food choices by picking healthier food options over less healthy options, thereby reducing the nation's high obesity rate. However, several studies have shown that consumers do not make healthier food choices even when armed with menu labeling. The issue then becomes whether menu labeling provides a correlative benefit to consumers or whether there are unintended consequences that ultimately harm consumers.
Restaurants, Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, Choice Behavior, United States, Menu Planning, Food Labeling, Government Regulation, Humans, Energy Intake
Restaurants, Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, Choice Behavior, United States, Menu Planning, Food Labeling, Government Regulation, Humans, Energy Intake
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