Tag: probiotic

  • Dannon Agrees to Pay States $21 Million to Resolve Advertising Issues

    The Federal Trade Commission has announced the settlement of allegations that The Dannon Co. exaggerated the health benefits of its Activia® yogurt and DanActive® dairy beverage. Under the terms of the settlement, Dannon does not admit any law violations, but agrees to stop promoting its yogurt as a product that relieves temporary irregularity or its…

  • EFSA Issues Additional Opinions on “Functional Food” Health Claims

    In its ongoing review of food product health claims, the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) has adopted 75 new opinions addressing 808 claims. EFSA’s independent scientists opined that claimed functional-food effects, such as improves the “immune system” or “immune function,” “supports immune defences,” “reduces inflammation,” or “decreases potentially pathogenic gastro-intestinal microorganisms,” were either insufficiently defined…

  • Heartland Sweeteners Again Asked to Discontinue Artificial Sweetener Health Benefit Claims

    For the second time in less than a month, Heartland Sweeteners has apparently been told by an advertising industry self-regulatory body that the company should not promote its Nevella with Probiotics® artificial sweetener with immune system and digestive health claims unless it can support them with “competent and reliable evidence.” Information about action taken against…

  • FTC Settles First Probiotics Advertising Case, Nestlé to Stop Touting Health Benefits

    The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has announced a settlement with Nestlé HealthCare Nutrition, Inc., which the agency contends has deceptively marketed a children’s drink, BOOST Kid Essentials®, as a product clinically shown to reduce illness in children by strengthening the immune system and helping them recover more quickly from diarrhea. The beverage, intended for children…

  • EFSA Issues Opinion on Hundreds of “General Function” Health Claims

    The European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) recently published a second series of opinions on a list of “general function” health claims for foods. EFSA’s Panel on Dietetic Products, Nutrition and Allergies assessed the scientific data submitted to substantiate more than 400 hundred health claims; its opinions are forwarded to the European Commission and member states,…

  • Food Health Claims in Canada Topic of Upcoming Webcast

    The Canadian government has announced a January 20, 1010, webcast titled “Health Claims in Canada: An Update on Function Claims and Probiotic Claims for Food.” Presented by Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Health Canada and the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA), the Webcast will (i) “provide an update on the development of a modernized framework for…

  • Testing Lab Finds Problems with Probiotic Products

    According to ConsumerLab.com, many of the probiotic supplements it tested contained far less of the amount of viable organisms advertised, due, primarily, to the death of the purportedly beneficial organisms after manufacture. Some companies apparently qualify their claims of cell amounts by stating “at the time of manufacture” on product labels. ConsumerLab’s president was quoted…

  • Tara Parker-Pope, “Probiotics: Looking Underneath the Yogurt Label,” The New York Times, September 29, 2009

    “Just as a doctor would prescribe different antibiotics for strep throat or tuberculosis, different probiotic species and strains confer different health benefits,” writes New York Times columnist Tara Parker-Pope in this article examining food-labeling claims that link Lactobacillus and other probiotic families to improved digestive health. According to Parker-Pope, some experts and scientific studies have suggested that…