PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Allen L. Pelletier AU - Wayne W. Chang AU - John E. Delzell, Jr. AU - John W. McCall TI - Patients’ Understanding and Use of Snack Food Package Nutrition Labels AID - 10.3122/jabfm.17.5.319 DP - 2004 Sep 01 TA - The Journal of the American Board of Family Practice PG - 319--323 VI - 17 IP - 5 4099 - http://www.jabfm.org/content/17/5/319.short 4100 - http://www.jabfm.org/content/17/5/319.full SO - J Am Board Fam Med2004 Sep 01; 17 AB - Purpose: Little information exists on how patients in medical practice use food package nutrition labels. We theorized that patients in a general medical practice might not make the distinction between serving size and total package nutrition information, and this might lead to obesity.Methods: Ninety patients between ages of 18 and 65 attending the St. Francis/University of Tennessee Family Practice Center were interviewed to determine whether they could calculate the total calories in sample snack food packages that contained more than one serving.Results: Ninety percent of our patient sample correctly identified the number of calories per individual serving, but only 37% were able to recognize that the sample packages contained multiple servings. Confusion between calories per serving size and total calories per package was correlated with lower educational levels (P = .011) and with the presence of cardiovascular heart disease in our patient sample.Conclusions: Our patients tended to think of a multiple serving package as one serving. They underestimated and under-reported caloric intake from snack food sources. We conclude that snack food labels as actually used by patients do not lead to informed dietary choices. These findings could impact our understanding and management of the obesity epidemic in the United States.