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Friday, Oct 9 2015

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FDA Recognizes Salt As Generally 'Safe'; Advocacy Group Wants That Status Removed

In other public health news, researchers find that intense early intervention can lead to recovery for people diagnosed with schizophrenia.

A prominent consumer advocacy group sued the U.S. Food and Drug Administration on Thursday for failing to regulate the amount of salt in the nation鈥檚 food supply. The Center for Science in the Public Interest wants the FDA to act on the group鈥檚 10-year-old petition to lift salt鈥檚 status as 鈥済enerally recognized as safe.鈥 Doing so would reclassify salt as a food additive, which subjects it to more stringent regulation, like limits on the amounts allowed in processed foods. The legal action is the latest chapter in the group鈥檚 decades-long efforts to combat excessive sodium consumption. Eating too much salt can lead to high blood pressure, a major risk factor for heart disease, kidney failure and stroke. (Pugh, 10/8)

When the Places for People outreach team found Chandra Thirdkill, she was about 40 years old and had been homeless for two years. Her struggles, however, began as a teen. Everyone looked at her like she was ugly, she thought. No one liked her. She constantly got into fights. Thirdkill dropped out of high school, turned to alcohol and drugs, and was in and out of jail as the fights grew to involve dishes, knives and bricks. Shooting and injuring her then-husband landed her in prison for three years. That's when she was finally diagnosed with schizophrenia. (Munz, 10/8)

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