Researchers are calling on the food industry to slash calories in food served in restaurants and for the mandatory labelling of all restaurant food.
This follows the findings of researchers at the University of Liverpool which found that the calorie content of popular main meals served in restaurant chains is excessive.
It added that only a minority met public health recommendations.
England’s national public health agency recently recommended that midday and evening meals contain no more than 600 calories (kcal) each.
But while the poor nutritional content of ‘fast food’ has been well studied, the energy content of traditional ‘full service’ restaurants has received less attention.
To better understand the extent to which restaurants are contributing to overconsumption, researchers writing in The BMJ compared the calorie content of popular meals from major fast food and full service restaurant chains across several countries.
In the study researchers, led by Dr Eric Robinson from the University’s Department of Psychological Sciences, analysed the calories in 13,500 main meals from 27 large UK restaurant chains (21 full-service, six fast-food).
They found an average of 751 kcal in main meal dishes served by fast food chains, and 1,033 kcal in dishes served by full service restaurant chains.
Only a small minority of meals met the 600 kcal public health recommendations, with 89% of full service dishes and 83% of fast food dishes over this limit.
Dr Robinson said: “Only one in ten of the meals we surveyed could be considered a healthy number of calories.
“Although some of the results are shocking our findings probably underestimate the number of calories consumed in restaurants because our analysis did not include drinks, starters, desserts or side orders.
“It’s really clear what the food industry need to do, they need to act more responsibly and reduce the number of calories that they’re serving.”