Thursday, 17 December 2015

Dr. Harold Goldstein

Dr. Harold Goldstein: Harold Goldstein, DrPH is the Executive Director of the California Center for Public Health Advocacy, which he founded in 1999. CCPHA is a nationally recognized leader in advocating for public policies to address the social, economic, and community conditions that perpetuate the obesity epidemic.

Battle on sugar: Davis moves closer to soda tax | Local News - KCRA Home

Battle on sugar: Davis moves closer to soda tax | Local News - KCRA Home

Tuesday, 15 December 2015

Nearly HALF of teenage girls in England think they are 'too fat' | Daily Mail Online

Nearly HALF of teenage girls in England think they are 'too fat' | Daily Mail Online

Rising Obesity Puts Strain On Nursing Homes | The Lund Report

Rising Obesity Puts Strain On Nursing Homes | The Lund Report

Stigma And ‘Fat Shaming’ Can Fuel Depression And Increase Obesity | Here & Now

Stigma And ‘Fat Shaming’ Can Fuel Depression And Increase Obesity | Here & Now

Attitudes of ‘coldness, indifference’ behind thousands of residential school deaths: TRC report

Attitudes of ‘coldness, indifference’ behind thousands of residential school deaths: TRC report

Marie Claire Stands By 'Should Fatties Get A Room?' Blog Post By Maura Kelly

<em>Marie Claire</em> Stands By 'Should Fatties Get A Room?' Blog Post By Maura Kelly

Tax sugary drinks to improve public health, address unfunded needs

Tax sugary drinks to improve public health, address unfunded needs

Wednesday, 9 December 2015

Why Is It So Hard to Tax Soda? - Eater

Why Is It So Hard to Tax Soda? - Eater

What if It's All Been a Big Fat Lie? - NYTimes.com

What if It's All Been a Big Fat Lie? - NYTimes.com

Michael Pollan: The Omnivore's Dilemma


" Gas stations make more money selling food than gasoline".

Navigating the Supermarket Aisles With Michael Pollan and Michael Moss | The New York Times


Navigating the Supermarket Aisles With Michael Pollan and Michael Moss | The New York Times

Anatomy of a Supermarket Purchase



Published on Jun 29, 2015
Of course we make the decisions about what to eat and feed our families. But what influences the choices we make?

Our new video “Anatomy of a Supermarket Purchase” highlights several strategies food companies use to influence what people buy and eat.

Drawing from advances in psychology and companies’ own marketing strategies, our video shows how companies are able to influence the food choices of even the best intentioned and most disciplined people, often so subtly that we don’t even realize it.

‘Share a Coke With Obesity’ Bottle Gets Real About Effects of Drinking Soda | TakePart




‘Share a Coke With Obesity’ Bottle Gets Real About Effects of Drinking Soda | TakePart

Indonesian Sugar-Tax Talk Chills Drinks Industry - WSJ

Indonesian Sugar-Tax Talk Chills Drinks Industry - WSJ

Dani and Lizzy - Dancing in the sky - YouTube

http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2013/09/25/dancing-in-the-sky_n_3989745.html
Dani and Lizzy - Dancing in the sky - YouTube

Coca-Cola apologizes for indigenous people ad intended as 'message of unity' | World news | The Guardian

Coca-Cola apologizes for indigenous people ad intended as 'message of unity' | World news | The Guardian

Tuesday, 1 December 2015

Sugar-sweetened beverages: availability and purchasing behaviour within the school fringe | Food Active

Sugar-sweetened beverages: availability and purchasing behaviour within the school fringe | Food Active

Stopping slurping | The Economist

Stopping slurping | The Economist

The Greatest Speech Ever Made


Uploaded on Jul 15, 2011
Charlie Chaplin's final speech in the film the great dictator, with a splash of modern imagery. Song: Window by The Album Leaf

If you need video editing work or know someone who does, send me a message. If you would like to donate to help a young self-taught filmmaker go to thelakeysisters.tumblr.com

(Translations below)
Albanian - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DFR-hX...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uHO0rn...
Amharic - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TikYB1...
Arabic - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kltOje...
Bosnian- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3cbdhG...
Bulgarian - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U0ToV9...
Chinese - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ehBTKb...
Croatian - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uMmYuP...
Czech - http://youtu.be/OPKR0ISKK30
Danish - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=juMpQT...
Dutch - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dPmRsE...
Estonian - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SzYFXx...
Filipino - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pNH5pb...
Finnish - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oN93hU...
French - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JhiMZI...
Georgian - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HvdOHu...
German - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gMwYhg...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8zlNXO...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6PZwi8...
Greek - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nR0ZRM...
Hebrew - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=07KB1S...
Hindi - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gR-nVX...
Hungarian - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5J0D1c...
Italian - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OjQs9j...
Japanese - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RzTmko...
Korean - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SR8Y7t...
Latvian- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s5TdTv...
Lithuanian - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pa_hO5...
Macedonian - http://youtu.be/qHjhn3qBRuc
Polish - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tuqbon...
Portuguese - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7CE35k...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sGpCds...
Romanian - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OrrK37...
Russian - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WKCWu8...
Serbian - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sSSFgo...
Slovenian - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iXnmyh...
Spanish - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gEAp8H...
Thai - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eqTu_O...
Turkish - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9tY4CY...
Vietnamese - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LhyGQw...

*If you have a version of this video with subtitles in a language not already on the list above, send me the link and I will gladly add it. Apologies for the advertisements. The speech is matched 3rd party content, so youtube is trying to turn a profit. I do not make any money off of ads on this this video, nor would I want to. Just trying to spread a little hope.

Abstract art samples by ScottDraves.com and ElectricSheep.org

Rudd Center -Health Digest November 2015

November 2015 Rudd Center Health Digest
View this email in your browser
Health Digest - November 2015

Rudd Center Recent Publications

Unhealthy Snack Food Advertising to Children Increased Despite Industry Pledges to Self-Regulate

Children saw substantially more television advertising for unhealthy snacks in the past five years, comparing 2014 to 2010, according to a new study, Snack FACTS, by the Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity at the University of Connecticut. Children's and teen's exposure to TV ads for unhealthy snacks including cookies, chips, and fruit snacks increased in this period, despite companies' promises to market healthier products to children. Companies have developed some healthier snacks to meet updated national standards for snacks sold in schools, "Smart Snacks," but with the exception of yogurt, these healthier products were not advertised to children on TV or the internet, the new study shows. "Companies have recognized the business opportunity in marketing healthy snacks to children and teens in schools. Now they must also recognize that aggressive marketing of unhealthy snack foods to young people is not worth the cost to children's health," said Jennifer Harris, the lead author of the study and the Rudd Center's Director of Marketing Initiatives.


 
New Continuing Medical Education Course Addresses Weight Bias and Strategies to Improve Health Care Delivery for Patients with Overweight/Obesity

The Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity and the University of Connecticut School of Medicine have developed an online Continuing Medical Education Course (CME) for health care providers to improve the quality of care for patients with overweight and obesity, and help reduce weight stigmatization in clinical settings. The novel, free course can be completed online. "This course responds to increasing calls for training and education to improve obesity care and prevent negative stigma toward patients with obesity. For clinicians working with this patient population, the course equips them with strategies to improve provider-patient communication, make positive changes in the medical office environment, and increase awareness of personal biases that could unintentionally compromise patient care," said Rebecca Puhl, Deputy Director of the UConn Rudd Center, who led the course development.


 

Rudd Center in the News
 
Jennifer Harris, the Rudd Center's Director of Marketing Initiatives, was among the public health researchers and advocates criticizing an integrated-advertising deal between Pepsi and Fox for the hit TV show Empire, about a fictional family of hip-hop stars. "Soda consumption is going down overall, so it would make sense for (Pepsi) to really reinforce their product with their core users," Dr. Harris told The Wrap in a Nov. 25 article, "Critics Slam 'Empire-Pepsi Deal as a 'Public Health Tragedy.'" "The issue with that is that their product is hurting their core users. So it's probably good for their bottom line, but it's not good for the black community."
 
CNN carried a comprehensive piece entitled "Kids seeing more unhealthy snack ads" on our Snack FACTS report. The Nov. 2 article, accompanied by 10 photos of snack ads, quoted Dr. Harris on the targeting of black and Hispanic youth with ads for unhealthy snacks. "It's really an irresponsible practice ... given that these minority groups have higher rates of obesity, diabetes and weight-related conditions," Harris said. The CNN article was picked up by dozens of other media outlets around the country.

Coinciding with the Nov. 2 release of Snack FACTS at the American Public Health Association's annual meeting in Chicago, TV news segments and interviews with Dr. Harris were aired across the country, reaching millions of viewers in 49 markets. "Companies aren't helping parents who want to raise healthy kids and get their kids to enjoy the healthier snack foods, not the junk," she told KFXV in Harlingen, TX, for example.

UConn Today reported on Snack Facts in a Nov. 2 article. Companies participating in the Children's Food and Beverage Advertising Initiative (CFBAI) have voluntarily pledged not to market unhealthy products like chips to children ages six to 12, and not to advertise to children under six at all. Despite these promises, children aged six to 11 saw 53 percent more TV ads in 2014 than 2010 for snack foods that companies pledged they would not advertise directly to children under 12.

Many other publications covered Snack FACTS, including JET magazine, the Latin Post, The Daily Meal and Food Dive. The study was still getting media attention two week after its release in a piece in Fusion.

UConn Today highlighted the Nov. 3 launch of the Continuing Medical Education (CME) Course for health care providers to help reduce weight stigmatization in clinical settings.

Timed to coincide with the CME's launch, Rudd Center Deputy Director Rebecca Puhl wrote an article for Medscape on the inadequate provision of obesity care by health care professionals. "Education and training are clearly warranted to equip health care professionals with the appropriate knowledge and tools to care for patients with obesity and to do so without reinforcing or communicating bias and stigma," Dr. Puhl said in the Nov. 3 piece, entitled: Obesity: Treatment Options and Communication Strategies.

PR Newswire reported Nov. 6 on a new survey released by the Rudd Center and the Obesity Action Coalition. The survey of more than 73,000 U.S. adults conducted from 2013 to 2015 showed that, "while there is public recognition that obesity-focused shaming and blaming is wrong, social acceptance of people affected by obesity has declined." Dr. Puhl noted, "This study highlights the need for societal-level efforts to broaden acceptance of people of diverse body sizes."

Dr. Puhl explained in a Nov. 11 article in The New York Times, "Is Fat Stigma Making Us Miserable?," that weight stigmatization and shaming, so common in our society, do not motivate people to lose weight. "Research shows that the opposite is true," Dr. Puhl said in the article. "Messages that shame, blame and stigmatize people about their weight have a negative impact and interfere with efforts to improve health."

A study co-authored by Tatiana Andreyeva, Rudd Center Director of Economic Initiatives, found that severe obesity cost the 50 states' Medicaid programs $8 billion a year, ranging from a low of $5 million in Wyoming to $1.3 billion in California. Published in the November edition of the journal Health Affairs, the study received media coverage Nov. 3 in Eureka Alert and Healthcare Dive.


 


News to Chew On

 
 
National Geographic (The Plate)
Why We Crave Sweets and Fats

US News & Report
Calorie Counts on Menus May Prompt Healthier Offerings

Today.com
Parents protest "McDonald's diet" ambassador for speaking in schools

The New York Times (Opinion)
A Seismic Shift in How People Eat

PBS NewsHour
Mexico's sugar clinics help patients gain control over diabetes

The Daily Campus
Professor leads lecture on how food companies market to children

Education News
TV Ads Targeting Children Include Parent Appeals, Too

Latinos Health
Foods that increase obesity, diabetes risk like sugar should be taxed: IDF


HuffPost Healthy Living
These Women Were Fat-Shamed By Their Doctors – And it Almost Cost Them Their Lives
 

What's Simmering with Our Friends
 
 
  • After hearing from many parents, Applebee's has become the first family-dining restaurant chain to agree to remove soda from its kids' menus. The move was praised by the Center for Science in the Public Interest, MomsRising.org, the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility, and the UConn Rudd Center, which together in 2014 launched a campaign to urge all restaurant chains to remove soda and other sugary drinks from their children's menus and meals. Applebee's follows fast-food chains McDonald's, Burger King, Wendy's and Dairy Queen.
                                                   
 
 

Rudd Center Employment Opportunities

 
Postdoctoral Fellow
The UConn Rudd Center for Food Policy & Obesity invites applications for a Postdoctoral Fellow position beginning Summer 2016. Candidates will be expected to contribute to the research mission of the center addressing the topic of weight-related stigma. This is a full time, annually renewable position with a maximum duration of 2 years. This Postdoctoral Fellow will contribute to research on obesity-related stigma, bullying, and discrimination under Dr. Rebecca Puhl, Deputy Director of the Rudd Center, and Professor of Human Development & Family Studies. Responsibilities will include designing, conducting, and analyzing research studies, literature reviews, grant writing, and writing scientific papers.

Job ID: 2016182

Applications are due Dec. 15.
For more information and to apply, click here.

Postdoctoral Fellow
The UConn Rudd Center for Food Policy & Obesity invites applications for a Postdoctoral Fellow position beginning Summer 2016. Candidates will be expected to contribute to the research mission of the center addressing food insecurity, nutrition, and health disparities. This is a full time, annually renewable position with a maximum duration of 2 years. This Postdoctoral Fellow will contribute to research on food insecurity, nutrition and health disparities under Dr. Marlene Schwartz, the Rudd Center Director, and Professor of Human Development & Family Studies. Responsibilities include quantitative data collection, community engagement throughout the research process, data analyses, literature reviews, grant writing, and writing scientific papers.

Job ID: 2016183

Applications are due Dec. 15.
For more information and to apply, click here.
 
 
 
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Anti-obesity group funded by Coke, Global Energy Balance Network, disbanding - CBS News

Anti-obesity group funded by Coke, Global Energy Balance Network, disbanding - CBS News


http://www.cbsnews.com/news/anti-obesity-group-funded-by-coke-global-energy-balance-network-disbanding/



      

Wednesday, 18 November 2015

Black kids see more ads for snacks than white kids | Fusion

Black kids see more ads for snacks than white kids | Fusion

Resources | Salud America! | Community Commons

Resources | Salud America! | Community Commons



"

Posted on by .
The Office of Minority Health at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has recently released the first Implementation Progress Report of the HHS Disparities Action Plan, which details the agency’s efforts to address disparities in health and healthcare among racial and ethnic minorities.


Covering the study period from 2011-2014, the report addressing
disparities in coverage and access to healthcare. The report also
highlights HHS’ covers cultural competency of the workforce, advancing
community-based approaches to promote health and wellness, and
furthering research on racial and ethnic health disparities.


The Implementation Progress Report addresses the HHS’ commitment to addressing and eliminating health disparities.


The plan was first released in 2011 and is a comprehensive tool used by the federal government to address health disparities.



Comment











Public Hub
Hub Tree: Salud America!


Salud America! is a national online network of researchers,
community group leaders, decision-makers, and members of the public
working together to support healthy policy and environmental changes
that can help reverse obesity among Latino children.


The network, funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, is a project of the Institute for Health Promotion Research (IHPR) at The UT Health Science Center at San Antonio.


Policies,
comments, external links, and contributed stories and images are not
affiliated with Salud America!, RWJF, or The UT Health Science Center at
San Antonio, nor do they necessarily reflect the views of or
endorsement by these organizations.


Andrew Lansley takes post advising drugs firm involved in dispute with NHS | Politics | The Guardian

Andrew Lansley takes post advising drugs firm involved in dispute with NHS | Politics | The Guardian

Tuesday, 17 November 2015

New Campaign Calls for Junk Food and Sugary Drinks to be Removed From Children’s Lives in Mexico, Where, Without Action, 1/3 Will Develop Diabetes

New Campaign Calls for Junk Food and Sugary Drinks to be Removed From Children’s Lives in Mexico, Where, Without Action, 1/3 Will Develop Diabetes




New Campaign Calls for Junk Food and Sugary Drinks to be Removed From Children’s Lives in Mexico, Where, Without Action, 1/3 Will Develop Diabetes
Wednesday, February 18, 2015
 
Policy measures and behavior change needed to protect future generations from a lifetime of obesity and illness
(Mexico City, Mexico and New York, United States) – World Lung Foundation (WLF) today congratulated the Mexican civil society network, the Alliance for Healthy Food, on the launch of the second phase of its childhood obesity prevention mass media campaign. This new, provocative campaign, called What did your children eat today?, has been designed to raise awareness that one-third of Mexican children will develop diabetes during their lifetime, largely because of their consumption of junk food and sugary drinks, and to call for the removal of all junk food and related marketing from children’s lives. WLF provided technical assistance on the design and development of the campaign, which will run on radio, out of home media, and the subway in Mexico City, as well as social and digital media.
http://www.worldlungfoundation.org/ht/a/GetImageAction/i/35629The Alliance for Healthy Food (http://alianzasalud.org.mx)
The campaign’s print ad shows a young girl surrounded by junk food and sugary drinks, alluding to the fact that Mexican children are constantly exposed to these products and the marketing of these products, increasing the likelihood of children consuming unhealthy foods. A red banner at the top of the ad highlights the shocking fact that one in three Mexican children will suffer from diabetes during their lives and the campaign slogan, Let’s remove all junk food from their world, is a call to act in children’s best interests. The campaign is targeted at parents and guardians, to persuade them to make better dietary choices for their children and to be active participants in calling for healthy environments for children. It is also targeted at policymakers who can fully implement and enforce existing school food legislation as well as frame new legislation to stop the pervasive junk food and sugary drink advertising that targets Mexican children and to introduce effective, comprehensive food labels for Mexican consumers. Mexico’s recently-introduced “Soda Tax” is showing that health taxes encourage consumers to change their behaviour, but food and beverage companies have been using commercial strategies and legal complaints to try to block and circumvent full national implementation of the “Soda Tax” and “Snack Tax”, as well as other health policies aimed at curbing overweight and obesity.
Sandra Mullin, Senior Vice President, Policy and Communications, World Lung Foundation, commented: “No-one would wish to place a child at risk of a lifetime of illness, economic harm and premature death. This campaign makes it clear that by facilitating consumption of junk food and sugary drinks, parents, guardians and policymakers are doing exactly that. It will take a concerted effort by all these stakeholders to reverse a situation where poor dietary habits are leaving one in three Mexican children with a lifetime risk of developing diabetes. Alarmingly, the incidence of children developing type 2 diabetes – normally found in adults – is also increasing in many countries around the world, including Mexico.
“While parents can make a difference by being good role models and by providing healthy food and drink choices inside the home, we also encourage the Mexican government to strengthen its efforts to combat this public health crisis. This includes standing firm against the lobbying tactics and threatening words of Big Food and Big Soda, aimed at preventing the passage, implementation and enforcement of rigorous laws, regulations and policies to help curb overweight, obesity and diabetes. We would also encourage comprehensive restrictions on the marketing of junk food and sugary drinks – particularly when it’s targeted at children. Government could enforce school lunch policies and restrict the sale of junk food and sugary drinks near schools and other child-centric environments to improve the diets of school-age children. Government could also improve food labelling so that it is informative and understandable, to further demonstrate its determination to tackle obesity at a national level.
“Urgent and aggressive action is the only way to prevent Mexico’s children from having a shorter life expectancy than their parents. We applaud the Alliance for Healthy Food for raising Mexico’s awareness of this health crisis and for trying to create an environment in which Mexican children are free of the junk food and sugary drinks that are detrimental to their present and future well-being.”
On behalf of the Alliance for Healthy Food, Alejandro Calvillo of the consumer rights organization El Poder del Consumidor commented, “Government officials and legislators have a decisive role to play everywhere in safeguarding the future of children. When children see junk food and its pervasive marketing in every corner of their environment, and when the government and educators fail to inform consumers and children of the health risks of certain foods, we are failing our children.”
The concept of What did your children eat today? was pre-tested with audiences to determine the effectiveness of the campaign’s ability to grab the viewer’s attention, its personal relevance, the strength of the take-away message and its likely impact. An evaluation of a previous campaign, Don’t harm yourself drinking sugary drinks (Sugary Drinks), found that three-quarters of respondents said they intended to reduce their children’s consumption of sugary drinks after seeing the ad. Two-thirds of respondents agreed that sugary drinks are bad for health. The Sugary Drinks campaign informed the public of the health risks associated with their consumption and built support for legislation to introduce a national tax on sugary drinks in Mexico.
The Bloomberg Philanthropies Obesity Prevention Program provided funding and support for the launch of the campaign, and supported World Lung Foundation’s technical support. 
The toll of obesity on health and the economy
According to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization, Mexico has the world’s highest rate of adult obesity, with one third of all adults obese. One-third of children and seventy percent of adults are overweight or obese. This has resulted in an alarming increase in the incidence of non-communicable diseases (NCDs), which experts believe will result in the current generation of Mexican children being the first to enjoy a shorter life expectancy than their parents. It is estimated that 14 percent of Mexican adults have diabetes; Mexico has the sixth-highest incidence of diabetes-related mortality in the world, claiming half a million lives during the last six years.
The Mexican President, the National Academy of Medicine and the Secretary of Health all recognize that such a high incidence of overweight and obesity is one of Mexico’s greatest public health problems. Obesity and diabetes cost the public health sector more than 40 billion pesos a year. The total costs of obesity in Mexico were estimated at US$5.5bn in 2008 and are estimated to reach US$12.5bn per year by 2017 (USD conversions from pesos are variable according to the exchange rate). As diabetes takes its toll on the country’s poorest families, who make up the majority of the population, the sustainability of the nation’s public health system and the nation’s economy both are jeopardized. These issues motivated the government to announce its National Strategy for the Prevention and Control of Overweight, Obesity and Diabetes in 2013. Public health advocates in Mexico welcomed the Strategy as an important first step in addressing this public health crisis, but believe that much more needs to be done to stop the rising trends of obesity and diabetes among the Mexican population.
About the Alliance for Healthy Food in Mexico
In August 2012, concerned about staggering rates of malnutrition and obesity in Mexico and serious deterioration of healthy eating habits, more than 20 public interest organizations and social movements, together with academics, created a national coalition called the Alianza por la Salud Alimentaria (the Alliance for Healthy Food). This alliance of producers, consumers, nutrition, development and environmental experts advocates for comprehensive policies to restore healthy eating habits and environments, and to combat all forms of malnutrition including obesity. The Alliance’s manifesto explains the need for action in defense of public interest on eight priority policy issues including compulsory access to purified free drinking water, healthy food and drinks in schools, clear food labeling, protection of children from targeted marketing, fiscal measures on junk foods, access to affordable, fresh food and promotion of breastfeeding. The What did your children eat today? campaign is one of several social marketing campaigns that the Alliance has sponsored to date. For more information, please visit http://alianzasalud.org.mx or @actuaporlasalud on Twitter

About World Lung Foundation
World Lung Foundation was established in response to the global epidemic of lung disease, which kills 10 million people each year. The organization also works on maternal and infant mortality reduction initiatives. WLF improves global health by improving local health capacity, by supporting operational research, by developing public policy and by delivering public education. The organization’s areas of emphasis are tobacco control, maternal and infant mortality prevention, tuberculosis, asthma, and child lung health. For more information, please visit worldlungfoundation.org or twitter @worldlungfdn
For more information, please contact:
Tracey Johnston, World Lung Foundation at
tjohnston@worldlungfoundation.org
 
Original Link Below:

Citation:
Johnston, T. (2015, February 8). New Campaign Calls for Junk Food and Sugary Drinks to be Removed From Children’s Lives in Mexico, Where, Without Action, 1/3 Will Develop Diabetes. Retrieved November 17, 2015, from http://www.worldlungfoundation.org/ht/display/ReleaseDetails/i/35625/pid/6858





Citation:
Johnston, T. (2015, February 8). New Campaign Calls for Junk Food and Sugary Drinks to be Removed From Children’s Lives in Mexico, Where, Without Action, 1/3 Will Develop Diabetes. Retrieved November 17, 2015, from http://www.worldlungfoundation.org/ht/display/ReleaseDetails/i/35625/pid/6858