April 29th, 2011

You are browsing the archive for April 29th, 2011.

Definition of ‘Gluten-Free’ Food Eludes Regulators

When is a food gluten-free? That may seem like an obvious question but, as The Washington Post reports, the Food and Drug Administration has struggled to answer it for seven years. In 2004, Congress ordered the FDA to come up with a threshhold by 2008 dictating when a food can be labeled as free of ... Read more »

Brain Damage Linked to Botox Yields Jury Award of $212 Million

A federal jury in Virginia has awarded $212 million to a 67-year-old man who sued the maker of the drug Botox, claiming the medication caused brain damage and left him totally disabled. As the Richmond Times-Dispatch reports, Douglas Ray of Fredericksburg, Va., was given Botox to treat a hand tremor and writer’s cramp in 2007. ... Read more »

Marketers Urged to Junk Ads for Unhealthy Kids’ Foods

As the U.S. struggles to address a childhood obesity epidemic, federal officials are seeking to rein in the ways unhealthy foods are marketed to minors. Proposed guidelines presented Thursday by the Interagency Working Group on Food Marketed to Children, which was established by Congress in 2009, would address a wide range of advertising aimed at 2- ... Read more »

China Girds for Ban on Smoking in Indoor Public Places

Starting Sunday, the Chinese government will take on a huge challenge — imposing a smoking ban in all indoor public venues in a country with 350 million smokers and a deep-rooted tobacco culture. The ban, which was announced by the Ministry of Health in March, applies to bars, restaurants and hotels, but not to workplaces. ... Read more »

Coke Shareholders Reject Bid to Rid Cans of BPA

Coca-Cola Co. shareholders have rejected a resolution to pressure the world’s largest beverage company to stop using the controversial chemical BPA, or bisphenol A, in soda can linings. The resolution went down to defeat by a vote of 74 percent to 26 percent. But proponents are encouraged that the support was up from 22 percent ... Read more »