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Thursday, Oct 17 2024

Full Issue

Alcohol Safety Study Stirs Controversy Ahead Of New Dietary Guidelines

A study this year from the Interagency Coordinating Committee on the Prevention of Underage Drinking, intended to inform dietary guidelines for 2025-30, is causing outrage among a group of lawmakers, led by the co-chairs of the Congressional Wine Caucus.

Lawmakers and industry players are asking the Department of Health and Human Services to put a stop to a controversial study on alcohol and health that could inform the next round of U.S. nutrition recommendations.聽Specifically, they鈥檙e taking issue with a committee housed within HHS鈥 Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration focused on underage drinking. (DeGroot, 10/16)

The program, which provides free groceries to millions of women and children nationwide, now covers naan, soy milk, teff and more. (Schmall, 10/17)

While the occasional pouch can be part of a healthy diet, doctors and nutritionists are raising concerns that an overreliance on pouches can interfere with nutrition, long-term food preferences, dental hygiene and even speech and language development. And marketing practices can leave parents confused about what鈥檚 actually inside the packages. 鈥淧ouches are highly processed foods,鈥 said Dr. Steven Abrams, a professor of pediatrics at the University of Texas at Austin Dell Medical School. 鈥淭hey certainly serve as a quick snack, but we need to make sure that pouches don鈥檛 make up too much of a toddler鈥檚 diet. We want kids to learn to chew and eat foods like meat, and fruits and vegetables that are not processed.鈥 (Gold, 10/17)

Food and Drug Administration leaders are signaling new flexibility in the agency鈥檚 approach to evaluating new therapies to help people stop smoking.聽In a perspective paper published with the National Institutes of Health this week, the agency labeled the effort to help Americans quit smoking a top priority and said it was willing to consider broader endpoints in clinical trials of smoking cessation products. (Lawrence, 10/16)

A new national study from Saint Vincent College digs into whether certain chemicals used in fracking could affect a baby's weight and whether they're born early. "There is something that is increasing the preterm birth rate nationally," said Mary Regina Boland, an associate professor at Saint Vincent College. Boland managed to drill down into data at a county level across the United States, and she found counties with more fracking wells that use chemicals that target certain hormones had higher amounts of preterm births and low birth weights. (Guay, 10/16)

Sirish聽Subash, an ninth grader from Snellville, Georgia, was the first-place winner for the 3M聽and Discovery Education competition, the nation鈥檚 premier middle school science competition, in St. Paul, Minnesota. In his presentation, Subash used data from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) that said 70.6% of produce items contain pesticide residues. ... 鈥淢y project is called PestiSCAND. What it is, is the device that allows everybody to check for pesticide residues on their produce at home,鈥 Subash told USA TODAY. (Forbes, 10/16)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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