Canada should ban all unhealthy food marketing children may be exposed to
2024-03-20
(Press-News.org) Quebec City, March 20, 2024–Canada should ban marketing of unhealthy foods wherever children may be exposed, whether on TV, social media or billboards. This is one of the main conclusions of a Canada-wide study involving more than fifty food and nutrition experts made public today by a team from Université Laval's Faculty of Agriculture and Food Sciences.
The study, conducted as part of a research program funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, also recommends better funding for school food programs, limits on salt, sugar and saturated fats in restaurants and packaged foods, and a tax on sugary drinks, among other measures.
Led by Professor Lana Vanderlee, Canada Research Chair in Healthy Food Policy, the main objective of the Food-EPI Canada 2023 survey was to assess Canada's progress in developing public policies aimed at creating a healthy food environment.
The authors note that Canada has taken concrete action in a number of areas in recent years: prohibiting partially hydrogenated oils in foods, updating food labelling regulations on packaged products, and revising Canada's food guide based on recent scientific evidence, among others.
But despite the good news, the average Canadian is not consuming a healthy diet: 78% of those ages 12 and over don't eat a minimum of five servings of fruit and vegetables daily, 58% of the population consumes more sodium than recommended, and 46% of energy intake among Canadians comes from ultra-processed foods.
"The progress made in recent years should not blind us to the major work that remains to ensure a healthy food environment for the entire population, and particularly children," stresses Professor Vanderlee, who is also a researcher at Université Laval's Centre NUTRISS. "Even in a province like Quebec, where targeting children in food marketing campaigns is prohibited, young people are exposed to an enormous amount of unhealthy food marketing that negatively influences their attitudes, preferences and eating habits. Yet a growing number of studies confirm that limiting children's exposure to unhealthy food marketing can have a significant positive impact on the quality of their diets. It's time for Canada to follow the example of countries like the UK and Mexico, who are proposing novel policies to address this issue."
"Bold, comprehensive and concerted political action will be required if we are to create healthy food environments for all and make real progress in the fight against diet-related diseases such as diabetes, cardiovascular disease and many types of cancer," concludes Vanderlee.
-30-
END
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2024-03-20
The 7th World Conference on Targeting Phage Therapy 2024 is set to take place on June 20-21 at the Corinthia Palace Malta, introducing the latest advancements within the field of phage research and therapy.
Robert T. Schooley, M.D., Professor of Medicine at the University of California, San Diego, and Co-Director of the Center for Innovative Phage Applications and Therapeutics, will lead the discourse, presenting insights and strategies essential to Phage Therapy in his talk titled "Phage Therapeutics 2024: Essential Translational Research Components for Clinical Trials."
Agenda at a Glance
Day One: will focus on Phages, Hosts & Microbiome, exploring ...
2024-03-20
Many companies proclaiming ethical credentials resist paying a premium to test their suppliers’ sustainability claims, new research suggests.
A team from Bayes Business School (formerly Cass), City, University of London, studied responses from 234 managers with procurement decision-making powers.
While buyers’ purchasing decisions are not solely price-driven, the team found, they are often happy to accept suppliers’ reassurances about sustainability rather than pay a premium for third party verification. Despite accepting ...
2024-03-20
To “breathe” in an environment without oxygen, bacteria in the ground beneath our feet depend upon a single family of proteins to transfer excess electrons, produced during the “burning” of nutrients, to electric hairs called nanowires projecting from their surface, found by researchers at Yale University and NOVA School of Science and Technology, NOVA University Lisbon (NOVA-FCT).
This family of proteins in essence acts as plugs that power these nanowires to create a natural electrical ...
2024-03-20
With the rise in gestational diabetes and metabolic disorders during pregnancy, metformin is also being prescribed more frequently. Although it is known that the oral antidiabetic agent can cross the placental barrier, the impacts on the brain development of the child are largely unknown. An interdisciplinary research team from the German Institute of Human Nutrition Potsdam-Rehbrücke (DIfE) have now been able to demonstrate in a mouse model that although metformin has positive effects in pregnant animals, it does not in the offspring. The results were published in the specialist journal ‘Molecular ...
2024-03-20
Research Highlights:
Exposure to tobacco before birth and beginning smoking during childhood or adolescence were significantly associated with the development of Type 2 diabetes in adulthood, according to a study of nearly half a million adults in the UK Biobank.
Among those exposed to tobacco before birth or who began smoking during childhood or adolescence, participants who had a genetic predisposition to develop Type 2 diabetes and started smoking in childhood or adolescence had the highest risk of developing Type 2 diabetes.
Embargoed until 10:30 a.m. ...
2024-03-20
NEW YORK, NY — Motor neurons are the cells the brain uses to command muscles to act. Scientists typically thought of them as simple connections, much like the cables that link computers with their accessories. Now, in fly studies, researchers at Columbia's Zuckerman Institute have discovered that single motor neurons can each direct an insect’s body to move in far more complex ways than previously thought.
The findings were published in Nature on March 20.
"This is one of the first times scientists have analyzed in 3D what single motor neurons do ...
2024-03-20
Modern humans dispersed from Africa multiple times, but the event that led to global expansion occurred less than 100,000 years ago. Some researchers hypothesize that dispersals were restricted to “green corridors” formed during humid intervals when food was abundant and human populations expanded in lockstep with their environments. But a new study in Nature, including ASU researchers Curtis Marean, Christopher Campisano, and Jayde Hirniak, suggests that humans also may have dispersed during arid intervals along “blue highways” created by seasonal rivers. Researchers also found evidence of cooking and stone tools that represent the oldest evidence of archery.
Working ...
2024-03-20
Researchers at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center have found that a specific subtype of a microbe commonly found in the mouth is able to travel to the gut and grow within colorectal cancer tumors. This microbe is also a culprit for driving cancer progression and leads to poorer patient outcomes after cancer treatment.
The findings, published March 20 in the journal Nature, could help improve therapeutic approaches and early screening methods for colorectal cancer, which is the second most common cause of cancer deaths in adults in the U.S. according to the American Cancer Society.
Examining colorectal cancer tumors removed from ...
2024-03-20
Some anti-cancer treatments not only target tumour cells but also healthy cells. If their effects on the latter are too strong, their use can become limiting. A team from the University of Geneva (UNIGE), in collaboration with Basel-based FoRx Therapeutics, has identified the mechanism of action of PARP inhibitors, used in particular for breast and ovarian cancer in patients carrying the BRCA gene mutation. These inhibitors block two specific activities of the PARP proteins. By blocking one of them, the toxic effect on cancer cells is maintained, while healthy cells are preserved. This work, published in the journal Nature, will help improve the efficacy of these treatments.
Despite ...
2024-03-20
Imagine being able to count the different types of blood cells being formed inside the tiny bones of a mouse and pinpointing the strings and clusters of cells within the bone marrow that are responsible for producing specific types of blood cells.
That’s exactly what a team of scientists led by experts at Cincinnati Children’s achieved in a far-reaching study published March 20, 2024, in the prestigious journal Nature. Their work adds unprecedented new understanding of the “elegant” and “resilient” anatomy of bone marrow while also generating evidence of unexpected variations in how the skeleton ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Canada should ban all unhealthy food marketing children may be exposed to