PREAMBLE
Most people who have
access to a balanced diet can usually obtain all the nutrients they
require from their normal diet. Because foods contain many substances
that promote health, people should therefore by encouraged to select
a balanced diet from food before considering any vitamin and mineral
supplement. In cases where the intake from the diet is insufficient
or where consumers consider their diet requires supplementation,
vitamin and mineral food supplements serve to supplement the daily
diet.
1. SCOPE
1.1 These guidelines
apply to vitamin and mineral food supplements intended for use in
supplementing the daily diet with vitamins and/or minerals.
1.2 Food supplements
containing vitamins and/or minerals as well as other ingredients
should also be in conformity with the specific rules on vitamins
and minerals laid down in these Guidelines.
1.3. These Guidelines
apply in those jurisdictions where products defined in 2.1 are regulated
as foods.
1.4. Foods for special
dietary uses as defined in the General Standard for the Labelling
of and Claims for Prepackaged Foods for Special Dietary Uses (CODEX
STAN 146-1985) are not covered by these Guidelines.
2. DEFINITIONS
2.1 Vitamin and mineral
food supplements for the purpose of these guidelines derive their
nutritional relevance primarily from the minerals and/or vitamins
they contain. Vitamin and mineral food supplements are sources of
concentrated forms of those nutrients alone or in combinations,
marketed in forms such as capsules, tablets, powders, solutions,
etc.,that are designed to be taken in measured small-unit quantities
1 but are not in a conventional food form and whose purpose is to
supplement the intake of vitamins and/or minerals from the normal
diet.
3. COMPOSITION
3.1 Selection of vitamins
and minerals
3.1.1. Vitamin and mineral
food supplements should contain vitamins/provitamins and minerals
whose nutritional value for human beings has been proven by scientific
data and whose status as vitamins and minerals is recognized by
FAO and WHO.
3.1.2. The sources of
vitamins and minerals may be either natural or synthetic and their
selection should be based on considerations such as safety and bioavailability.
In addition, purity criteria should take into account FAO/WHO standards,
or if FAO/WHO standards are not available, international Pharmacopoeias
or recognized international standards. In the absence of criteria
from these sources, national legislation may be used.
3.1.3 Vitamin and mineral
food supplements may contain all vitamins and minerals that comply
with the criteria in 3.1.1. a single and/or mineral or an appropriate
combination of vitamins and/or minerals.
3.2 Contents of vitamins
and minerals
3.2.1 The minimum level
of each vitamin and/or mineral contained in a vitamin and mineral
food supplement per daily portion of consumption as suggested by
the manufacturer should be 15% of the recommended daily intake as
determined by FAO/WHO.
3.2.2 Maximum amounts
of vitamins and minerals in vitamin and mineral food supplements
per daily portion of consumption as recommended by the manufacturer
shall be set, taking the following criteria into account:
(a) upper safe levels
of vitamins and mineral established by scientific risk assessment
based on generally accepted scientific data, taking into consideration,
as appropriate, the varying degrees of sensitivity of different
consumer groups;
(b) the daily intake
of vitamins and minerals from other dietary sources.
When the maximum levels
are set, due account may be taken of the reference intake values
of vitamins and minerals for the population. This provision should
not lead to setting of maximum levels that are solely based on recommended
nutritient intakes (e.g. Population Reference Intake or Recommended
Daily Allowance values).
4. PACKAGING
4.1 The product shall
be packed in containers which will safeguard the hygienic and other
qualities of the food.
4.2. The containers,
including packaging material, shall be made only of substances which
are safe and suitable for their intended use. Where the Codex Alimentarius
Commission has established a standard for any substance used as
packaging material, that standard shall apply.
5. LABELLING
5.1 Vitamin and mineral
food supplements should be labelled according to the Codex Standard
for the Labelling of Prepackaged Foods (Codex-Stan 1-1985 Rev. 1-1991)
as well as according to the General Guidelines on Claims (CAC/GL
1-1979).
5.2 The name of the product
shall be "food supplement" with an indication of the category(ies)
of nutrients or of the individual vitamin(s) and/or mineral(s) contained
in the product as the case may be.
5.3 The amount of the
vitamins and minerals present in the product should be declared
in the labelling in numerical form. The units to be used should
be units of weight consistent with the Codex Guidelines on Nutrition
Labelling.
5.4 The amounts of the
vitamins and minerals declared should be those per portion of the
product as recommended for daily consumption and if different, the
amount per unit for single use may also be given.
5.5 Information on vitamins
and minerals should also be expressed as a percentage of the nutrient
reference values mentioned, as the case may be, in the Codex Guidelines
on Nutrition Labelling.
5.6 The label should
indicate how the product should be used (quantity, frequency, special
conditions).
5.7 The label shall contain
advice to the consumer not to exceed the maximum one-day amount.
5.8 The label should
not state or imply that supplements can be used for the replacement
of meals or a varied diet.
5.9 The label shall contain
a statement that the product should be stored out of the reach of
young children.
1 This refers to the
physical forms of the vitamin and mineral food supplements not to
the potency of the supplements.