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Marion Nestle

Raw Milk Or Raw Deal?

What To Eat / Marion Nestle

The Obesity Debate

Out With Junk Food / Marion Nestle

Another Real Truth Behind Childhood Obesity

Out With Junk Food / Marion Nestle

Marion Nestle: Fixing School Food

Schools Should Kiss Junk Food Goodbye

Lower Your Cholesterol With Cheerios? Oh Please

My neighborhood grocery store is displaying a wall of Cheerios boxes with this banner over the inevitable heart: "You can lower your cholesterol 4% in 6 weeks (see back for details)." I immediately turned to the back to learn that "Cheerios is the only leading cold cereal clinically proven to lower cholesterol. A clinical study showed that eating two 1 and 1/2 cup servings daily of Cheerios cereal reduced cholesterol when eaten as part of a diet low in saturated fat and cholesterol." I like Cheerios, but come on? What clinical study? A footnote gives the reference to a study published in Nutrition in Clinical Care (1998;1:6-12). I immediately went to look for it but alas, the journal ceased publication in 2005 and is not available online or in the NYU or Cornell libraries. Want to take a guess at who might have funded the study? The Nutrition Action Healthletter talked about the study. Surprise! It was funded by General Mills–-in 2005. The FDA used to be able to demand serious scientific substantiation for health claims like this one, but no more. Congress says one study is sufficient, no matter how old, who designed it, or who paid for it. The courts say advertising is a form of free speech and protected by the First Amendment. Caveat emptor. More Marion Nestle posts: Out With Junk Food - Part 1 - June 2 Out With Junk Food - Part 2 - June 6 Out With Junk Food - Part 3 - June 28 Out With Junk Food - Part 4 - July 11 Out With Junk Food - Part 5 - July 18 Bored With Food Recalls? You're Not Alone - July 25 The Whole Grains Mess - August 3 Raw Milk Or Raw Deal? - August 8 Nutrition Policies To Prevent Cancer? - August 28 Food Additives and Hyperactivity, Again! - September 11

Nutrition Label Overhaul Needed?

A reader of mine writes: "I was looking at the Nutrition Facts Label on a bag of carrots today ... if I read this label and compare it to packaged foods, the carrots really don''t look all that healthy. And yet I know they are. I have the same experience with apples and with other fruits and vegetables. What needs to be added and changed on the Nutrition Facts panel so that this makes more sense? Has anyone done a blind study of nutrition labels, having people compare them side-by-side and see which food they believe is more healthy without knowing what the food is, but from the label alone?"

When Congress passed the nutrition labeling act of 1990, which mandated Nutrition Facts labels on packaged foods, the FDA created a bunch of possible designs and tested them on consumers. The result: Nobody understood any of the designs. The FDA chose the one that consumers least misunderstood. The FDA has a lengthy site to teach the public to understand food labels. I think the ingredient list tells you more about the real nutritional value of foods than the Facts part.

My rule, only somewhat facetious, is to never buy foods that have more than 5 ingredients. The more processed a food is, the more ingredients it is likely to have (to cover up the losses), and the lower its nutritional quality. Fresh and some frozen foods have only one ingredient: carrots, apples, broccoli, beans.

The most important thing I'd change on food labels is the calories. The FDA proposed five years ago to require packages likely to be consumed by one person to display the total number of calories on the front panel, rather than listing calories per serving, which makes the calories appear lower than they are.

What happened to that excellent proposal? It disappeared without a trace (the packaged food industry loathes the idea). It's tricky to figure out what else an ideal food label would display. Any ideas? Forward them to the FDA and share them here if you'd like.



Nutrition Policies To Prevent Cancer?

What To Eat / Marion Nestle




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Marion Nestle writes about her strong arguments in favor of public awareness ... read more.
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Marion Nestle

Marion Nestle

Noted author Marion Nestle is a Professor in the Department of Nutrition, Food Studies, and Public Health at New York University. She is the author of What to Eat. read full bio.
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