Food Standards Agency
Saturday 4 July 2009
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Listen to this siteEach year we conduct an annual investigation into your attitudes to food, covering issues such as safety and hygiene, nutrition, diet and shopping.
The results of these surveys will help to inform us about consumer trends around food. They will also help us to decide which areas we need to focus on if we are to boost public confidence about food standards and safety.
The Consumer Attitudes Survey was not run in 2008 because it is currently being reviewed by the Agency's Social Science Research Committee. Some key questions from the Consumer Attitudes Survey have instead been asked in the quarterly public attitudes tracking survey. There will also be an additional one-off public attitudes survey to investigate the public's views to food issues that have not measured for some time. Further details of this survey will be available in early 2009.
Back to topTNS conducted the seventh annual wave of the Consumer Attitudes Survey between August and October 2006. This report covers further analysis based on the Consumer Attitudes Survey data and consequent, additional qualitative exploratory research conducted in July 2007.
The Food Standards Agency's eighth annual Consumer Attitudes to Food Survey points to increased confidence among the public in the food they are consuming, and with regard to wider food issues.
The 2006 survey reveals that healthy eating is a key concern for consumers, with many people checking labels for nutritional information on a regular basis as well as an increasing awareness of 5-a-day messaging.
Our sixth consumer attitudes survey reveals that an increasing number of consumers say they are taking an active interest in their food and diet, with more people checking food labels and trying to eat more fruit and vegetables.
The Food Standards Agency's fifth Consumer Attitudes to Food survey shows an increase in people's concerns about their diet and health.
The Food Standards Agency's fourth Consumer Attitudes to Food survey shows a decrease in concern about BSE, eggs and the safety of meat since the Agency was set up in 2000, and an increase in awareness about fruit and veg advice, and the need to cut down on salt.
The Food Standards Agency's third annual Consumer Attitudes to Food survey highlights a number of trends developing from when the first survey was carried out in 2000.
This annual survey was devised with the purpose of enabling the Food Standards Agency to improve its knowledge and understanding of consumer attitudes to food safety and food standards, to track year on year changes in public opinion, and to gauge changes in public confidence in food safety arrangements.
In our first survey, for example, your concerns included issues such as BSE, food poisoning, food hygiene and labelling. As a result of that, we decided to launch a major food hygiene campaign, due to begin early in 2002, and a food labelling action plan aimed at promoting clear labelling policies.
The Agency conducts a tracking survey among consumers on a quarterly basis to monitor changes in consumer attitudes towards the Agency and food related issues.
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