A new study led by a University of Massachusetts Amherst economist shows that shrinking package sizes at U.S. grocery stores ...
(Nanowerk Spotlight) In today's interconnected world, food supply chains have grown increasingly complex, spanning multiple countries and involving numerous intermediaries. This complexity has led to ...
The United States Food and Drug Administration will test out labels on the front of food packages in the hope of giving shoppers better access to nutrition information, the agency said. The goal is to ...
What leads people to make better food choices? Is it price, availability, health attributes of the food or something else? This is the million-dollar question. The most common statement I hear from my ...
The Food and Drug Administration released on Tuesday its long-awaited proposal to require food manufacturers to put some nutrition facts on the front of packages, in a bid to nudge Americans and food ...
If you’d like guidance on using these new food labels or tailoring choices to your health goals, a dietitian can help you ...
The way you see nutrition labels on food packaging is about to change. By 2025, new front-of-package labels will start appearing on grocery store shelves, and by January 2026, they'll be mandatory.
In the absence of comprehensive federal regulation of PFAS in food packaging, states are dishing out their own laws. Thus far, twelve states have enacted laws addressing PFAS substances in food ...
A Canadian supermarket's tiny portion of beef is making waves on social media, highlighting how rising food costs are shrinking portion sizes and forcing people to cut back on red meat. A Reddit user ...
The proposed nutrition label provides information on saturated fat, sodium and added sugars content in a simple format. "The science on saturated fat, sodium and added sugars is clear. Nearly everyone ...
This is an archived article and the information in the article may be outdated. Please look at the time stamp on the story to see when it was last updated. (NEXSTAR) — We’ve all been there: you reach ...
Raphael Gomes compares package images versus the reality of food products.