KX Conversation, Joel Porter spoke with Katie Johnke, the Nutrition and Health Promotion Coordinator at Bismarck-Burleigh ...
Nutrition labels on your favorite grocery items may soon sport a new look. The Food and Drug Administration announced a new proposal Tuesday that would require food and drink manufacturers to ...
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration wants to put nutrition information front and center on food products to give consumers ...
The proposed label, also called the nutrition info box, would break down information about sodium, added sugar and saturated fat content by saying whether the food contains “Low,” “Med” or ...
This week, the Food and Drug Administration unveiled a long-awaited proposal that would require food and drink manufacturers to display nutrition labels on the front of most of their packages ...
The labels would be called a front-of-package nutrition label and give "consumers readily visible information about a food’s saturated fat, sodium and added sugars content." Those three ...
The front-of-package (FOP) nutrition label — or the “Nutrition Info box”— would include information on three key nutrients: saturated fat, sodium and added sugar content. The FOP label ...
The label, also called the “Nutrition info box,” would show customers whether products have low, medium or high levels of the following: Saturated Fat Sodium Added Sugars Community members ...
Nutrition labels are intended to help you choose good-for-you foods. But their densely packed, jargon-heavy information can be hard to make sense of. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA ...
The proposed label, also called the nutrition info box, would break down information about sodium, added sugar and saturated fat content by saying whether the food contains "Low," "Med" or "High ...