2018: The Year of the Consumer

2018: The Year of the Consumer
By: Karen Howard, CEO and Executive Director of Organic & Natural Health Association
@OrgNatHealth

We no longer have to wonder about the impact of the FDA’s budget being frozen, a federal hiring freeze, or a full-out directive to terminate and prevent promulgation of ‘most’ regulations. The natural products industry, food and dietary supplements in particular, is about to experience the fallout in 2018.

The risks are real. Lack of oversight of the organic standard is likely to lead to more fraudulent products entering the United States. Failure to inspect could plague the reputation of the dietary supplement industry, jeopardizing the significant advancements in GMP compliance and public confidence being championed by industry leaders. What’s an industry to do without the loving guidance of regulators and legislators?

Move over government. Consumers are driving revolutionary change, demanding transparency, traceability and quality. The result is a weakening of the old standard bearers on Capitol Hill. Consider Campbell Soup’s voluntary labeling of GMO ingredients and its subsequent withdrawal from the Grocery Manufacturers Association. (Nestlé, Dean Foods and Mars quickly followed suit). Not even the organic industry is immune from this trend. Longtime organic champions are publically chastising the Organic Trade Association’s decision to abandon its roots and soil-building tenets by including hydroponic agriculture in the organic standard. The American Grassfed Association’s standards for meat and dairy are clarifying evidence of consumer demand for ‘clean’ food. New regenerative agriculture standards could become the hot bed for production of organic foods. And savvy dietary supplement companies are investing in production of whey, collagen and colostrum derived from grassfed beef. Restorative agriculture is now a term of art.

What else can we expect to see in 2018?

Testing: The Organic & Natural Health Association is doing a 3-year test for glyphosate residue in the dietary supplement supply chain. We’ve already learned that Roundup has crept into the Ben & Jerry’s product line, and has taken immediate action to rectify issues in its supply chain. The testing trend promises to grow as public awareness relating to heavy metals, antibiotics and pesticides increases.

Knock, Knock – merger, acquisition and market entry. These are not new issues, but they are increasingly interesting. Steady growth in the natural products association is attracting big business. Campbell, turning a new leaf is an example of how the customer has become king. Nestlé acquiring Atrium with its beloved consumer line, Garden of Life, and the highly regarded practitioner Protocol line is a sign conventional business is adopting the power of dietary supplementation into the mainstream health care solution set. How will the culture of natural and organic impact the definition of nutrition in conventional corporate America? Perhaps Mylan, following its EpiPen price-fixing scandal, will recreate itself as a new member of the Natural Products Association.

Personalized nutrition: It is DNA testing, individualized diets, personalized dietary supplement regimens and more. Organic & Natural is committed to empowering people with the ability to measure and monitor nutrient deficiencies as part of a population-based, nutrient field trial, eradicating vitamin D and omega-3 deficiency.

In the face of a new year one thing is certain. This year, and many more to come, will stand as The Year of the Consumer.

To Order An omega-3 and vitamin D test kit visit:

www.nutrientpower.org

For information on the Organic & Natural Association visit:

http://www.organicandnatural.org

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *