date:Jun 22, 2012
and behavioural problems in children. The agency ordered the US cereal firm to revise its claims and the section headed Sugar Health has since been entirely removed from the website.
Marion Nestle, NYU nutrition professor, cited in a statement released by the, said:Cereal companies have spent fortunes on convincing parents that a kids breakfast means cereal, and that sugary cereals are fun, benign, and all kids will eat No public health agency has anywhere near the education budget equivalent