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Health, Food, Nutrition & Hibiscus Tea News Archive26-Jan-2006
- 'Sizing up alternatives to fast food (Denver Post)
An intriguing flow of e-mails filled my inbox following a recent column concerning the zoning battle over McDonald's on Colfax Avenue. No, most writers weren't crabby about the traffic, crime or zoning regulations. Most of them focused on food.
- 'Scottish Obesity, Disease Prompt Junk-Food Campaign (Update1) (Bloomberg.com)
Jan. 25 (Bloomberg) -- Scottish teacher Eileen Dempsey says she needs a lesson in nutrition.
- 'Discharged patients get free food delivery (Bradenton Herald)
Donna Wright Health Matters Hospital patients covered by Humana Medicare Advantage HMO and PPO plans now have a new benefit - 10 days of free food delivered to their door following discharge from a hospital stay.
- 'Health claims move closer but big issues remain (Food Production Daily)
23/01/2006 - Debate over the proposed EU regulation on nutrition and health claims for food products is likely to heat up in the first half of 2006 as the EU parliament revises its timetable and shunted the process forward by several months.
- 'Fancy food proves healthy, too (San Jose Mercury News)
Gourmet fare and health food may sound incompatible, but ``good for you'' was a recurrent theme this week at the 31st Winter Fancy Food Show in San Francisco. From pomegranate juice to low-mercury canned tuna, many of the 80,000 specialty-food products on exhibit were pitched for their health benefits as much as their taste.
- 'Ethiopia Needs More in Emergency Food Aid (AllAfrica.com)
Over 2 million Ethiopians are in need of emergency food aid despite good harvest in some regions of the country, Agency said on Monday.
- 'District dietitian makes pitch for ?food localism? (Fort Frances Times)
Jarrod Gunn-McQuillan, a dietitian with the Northwestern Health Unit, hasn?t even been here a year yet he already can tell Rainy River District surely would benefit from ?food localism??the concept of creating markets for food to be processed and sold locally.
- 'Food expert suggests that gift buyers go ?chopping? (Montana Standard)
A simple kitchen gadget can help in preparing meals and in making sure your food remains safe to eat, says Lynn Paul, a food and nutrition specialist with Montana State University Extension.
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