Category: Other Developments

  • PHA Issues Report on Childhood Obesity

    A non-profit focusing on childhood obesity has issued its first annual progress report on private sector commitments to address the issue. According to the Partnership for a Healthier America (PHA), nearly 3 million children “got moving in 2012,” more than 8,000 “new physical activity opportunities became available for kids in 2012,” dozens of new or renovated…

  • IOM Issues Workshop Summary on Trends in Food and Beverage Marketing to Children

    The Institute of Medicine (IOM) has issued a pre-publication summary of its workshop “New Challenges and Opportunities for Change in Food Marketing to Children and Youth.” Conducted by IOM’s Standing Committee on Childhood Obesity Prevention, the November 5, 2012, workshop featured “presentations and discussion on contemporary trends in marketing of foods and beverages to children…

  • Public Health Researchers Advocate Food Marketing Regulations to Curb Obesity in Canada

    A recent article published in the Journal of Public Policy has recommended “a national regulatory system prohibiting commercial marketing of foods and beverages to children” as part of an effort to curb rising obesity rates in Canada. Kim Raine, et al., “Restricting marketing to children: Consensus on policy interventions to address obesity,” Journal of Public…

  • German Farms Caught Up in Alleged Organic Egg Fraud

    According to media sources, German officials have apparently launched an investigation into more than 160 farms accused of flouting the standards governing organic and free-range egg production. Lower Saxony and two other states have apparently announced an ongoing probe into poultry establishments, including 40 organic farms, that allegedly marketed their eggs as organic or free-range…

  • IKEA Pulls Meatballs, Sausages in Wake of Horsemeat Scandal

    IKEA Group has reportedly withdrawn its trademark meatballs and sausages from its European locations after testing revealed trace amounts of horsemeat in the products. According to a February 28, 2013, press release, the company identified horsemeat “in a few samples of our meatballs from a supplier in Sweden” and has thus suspended sales of “all…

  • One-Third of Seafood Allegedly Mislabeled, New Report Claims

    According to a recent study conducted by the nonprofit ocean conservation group Oceana, as much as one-third of seafood sold in restaurants and grocery store is mislabeled. From 2010 to 2012, Oceana evidently collected more than 1,200 seafood samples from 674 retail outlets in 21 states to determine if they were correctly labeled. After conducting…

  • New Report Critical of Digital Food Marketing to Children

    Yale University’s Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity and the Berkeley Media Studies Group have published a report criticizing top cereal manufacturers for allegedly targeting children with “sophisticated online marketing techniques.” Andrew Cheyne, et al., “Marketing Sugary Cereals to Children in the Digital Age: A Content Analysis of 17 Child-Targeted Websites,” Journal of Health Communication,…

  • Monster Energy to Reclassify Products as Beverages

    According to media sources, Monster Energy Corp. has announced plans to re-label its energy drinks as beverages regulated by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) as opposed to dietary supplements. The company reportedly told industry publication Beverage Digest that it will update product labels to include “Nutritional Facts” rather than “Supplement Facts,” as well as…