The Food and Drug Administration rolled out its
long-anticipated new food labels Friday, and they'll include new details
on how much sugar is in food and reflect the sad fact that Americans
eat more than they used to.
They won't look much different from the old labels, but they'll have
to use slightly larger and bolder type, and they will make sure that
customers aren't fooled into thinking a giant bag of potato chips only
has a quarter of the calories, fat and salt that it really does.
That's because many of the new labels will have
to reflect what people really eat, not what they should eat. So even if a
package of caramel corn is meant to serve six, the label will have to
acknowledge that it's most likely going to be scarfed down by a single
person.
"In addition to added sugars, new nutrients that must be declared
include Vitamin D, which is important in bone development, and
potassium, which is good for controlling blood pressure; both nutrients
of which people aren't getting enough," FDA administrator Dr. Robert
Califf said in a blog post.
Click here for the full article.
Source: NBC News
Note: In 2015, The G-Man Interviews conducted an investigation on a chemical that has been used in hundreds-of-thousands of supermarket products for over 20 years, but it has been banned in Brazil, Canada and the majority of European countries.
Here is the special report: Potassium Bromate: A Warning to All Americans.
Here is the special report: Potassium Bromate: A Warning to All Americans.
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