Showing 1 to 12 of 12 results


U.S. States Crack Down on Food Additives Amidst Consumer Pressure and Political Shift
Across the U.S., dozens of states proposed bills in 2024 to limit synthetic food colorings and chemical additives, spurred by consumer pressure and a surprising political shift, with Arizona and Utah banning such dyes in school meals and Texas requiring warning labels for 44 additives.
U.S. States Crack Down on Food Additives Amidst Consumer Pressure and Political Shift
Across the U.S., dozens of states proposed bills in 2024 to limit synthetic food colorings and chemical additives, spurred by consumer pressure and a surprising political shift, with Arizona and Utah banning such dyes in school meals and Texas requiring warning labels for 44 additives.
Progress
40% Bias Score


FDA to Phase Out Artificial Food Dyes in US Food Supply
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) plans to work with the food industry to phase out petroleum-based synthetic dyes, such as Red No. 40 and Yellow No. 5, due to health concerns and following state bans on artificial food dyes; the FDA will also fast-track the approval of four new natural colo...
FDA to Phase Out Artificial Food Dyes in US Food Supply
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) plans to work with the food industry to phase out petroleum-based synthetic dyes, such as Red No. 40 and Yellow No. 5, due to health concerns and following state bans on artificial food dyes; the FDA will also fast-track the approval of four new natural colo...
Progress
40% Bias Score


FDA to Phase Out Petroleum-Based Food Dyes by 2024
The US FDA announced plans to eliminate six petroleum-based synthetic food dyes (red No. 40, yellow Nos. 5 & 6, blue Nos. 1 & 2, green No. 3) from the US food supply by the end of 2024 due to health concerns, citing animal studies linking some dyes to cancer and evidence of negative effects on sensi...
FDA to Phase Out Petroleum-Based Food Dyes by 2024
The US FDA announced plans to eliminate six petroleum-based synthetic food dyes (red No. 40, yellow Nos. 5 & 6, blue Nos. 1 & 2, green No. 3) from the US food supply by the end of 2024 due to health concerns, citing animal studies linking some dyes to cancer and evidence of negative effects on sensi...
Progress
48% Bias Score


FDA Urges Food Industry to Replace Six Synthetic Food Dyes by 2026
The FDA is urging the food industry to voluntarily replace six synthetic food dyes with natural alternatives by 2026, driven by concerns about potential health effects and following pressure from HHS Secretary Kennedy, despite industry claims that there is no safety issue and that the reformulation ...
FDA Urges Food Industry to Replace Six Synthetic Food Dyes by 2026
The FDA is urging the food industry to voluntarily replace six synthetic food dyes with natural alternatives by 2026, driven by concerns about potential health effects and following pressure from HHS Secretary Kennedy, despite industry claims that there is no safety issue and that the reformulation ...
Progress
60% Bias Score


Trump Administration to Remove Artificial Food Dyes from US Food Supply
The Trump administration will announce plans to remove artificial food dyes from the US food supply on Tuesday, addressing health concerns and a patchwork of state regulations; this follows an FDA ban on Red Dye No. 3 and bipartisan legislative efforts.
Trump Administration to Remove Artificial Food Dyes from US Food Supply
The Trump administration will announce plans to remove artificial food dyes from the US food supply on Tuesday, addressing health concerns and a patchwork of state regulations; this follows an FDA ban on Red Dye No. 3 and bipartisan legislative efforts.
Progress
40% Bias Score


West Virginia Poised to Enact Nation's Strictest Food Dye Ban
West Virginia is set to ban nine cancer-linked food dyes and additives—Red 3, Red 40, Yellow 5, Yellow 6, Blue 1, Blue 2, Green 3, BHA, and propylparaben—in schools by August 2025 and statewide by January 2028, potentially becoming the strictest such ban in the US, mirroring similar state actions an...
West Virginia Poised to Enact Nation's Strictest Food Dye Ban
West Virginia is set to ban nine cancer-linked food dyes and additives—Red 3, Red 40, Yellow 5, Yellow 6, Blue 1, Blue 2, Green 3, BHA, and propylparaben—in schools by August 2025 and statewide by January 2028, potentially becoming the strictest such ban in the US, mirroring similar state actions an...
Progress
52% Bias Score

FDA to Phase Out Artificial Food Dyes, Spurring Shift to Natural Alternatives
The FDA plans to phase out petroleum-based synthetic food dyes in the US food supply by 2027, prompting a shift to natural alternatives due to health concerns and following state-level bans on artificial dyes.

FDA to Phase Out Artificial Food Dyes, Spurring Shift to Natural Alternatives
The FDA plans to phase out petroleum-based synthetic food dyes in the US food supply by 2027, prompting a shift to natural alternatives due to health concerns and following state-level bans on artificial dyes.
Progress
36% Bias Score

FDA to Phase Out Artificial Food Dyes, Promoting Natural Alternatives
The FDA is urging US food companies to voluntarily replace petroleum-based synthetic dyes with natural alternatives due to health concerns, following state-level bans and a growing consumer preference for natural ingredients.

FDA to Phase Out Artificial Food Dyes, Promoting Natural Alternatives
The FDA is urging US food companies to voluntarily replace petroleum-based synthetic dyes with natural alternatives due to health concerns, following state-level bans and a growing consumer preference for natural ingredients.
Progress
32% Bias Score

U.S. to Phase Out Petroleum-Based Food Dyes Within Four Years
The FDA and HHS announced a four-year phase-out of petroleum-based synthetic food dyes in U.S. foods due to health concerns, following a January ban on Red Dye No. 3; labeling and an open-source database will help consumers identify compliant products.

U.S. to Phase Out Petroleum-Based Food Dyes Within Four Years
The FDA and HHS announced a four-year phase-out of petroleum-based synthetic food dyes in U.S. foods due to health concerns, following a January ban on Red Dye No. 3; labeling and an open-source database will help consumers identify compliant products.
Progress
56% Bias Score

FDA to Eliminate Petroleum-Based Food Dyes by 2024
The US FDA plans to phase out six petroleum-based synthetic food dyes by the end of 2024, citing health concerns and working with the food industry to transition to natural alternatives, following a January ban on red dye No. 3 and amidst growing state-level regulations.

FDA to Eliminate Petroleum-Based Food Dyes by 2024
The US FDA plans to phase out six petroleum-based synthetic food dyes by the end of 2024, citing health concerns and working with the food industry to transition to natural alternatives, following a January ban on red dye No. 3 and amidst growing state-level regulations.
Progress
40% Bias Score

Surge in US State Bills to Ban Artificial Food Dyes
Driven by parental concerns and the "Make America Healthy Again" movement, a record number of U.S. states are introducing bills to ban artificial food dyes in 2024, with West Virginia leading the charge by passing a bill to ban seven dyes starting in 2028.

Surge in US State Bills to Ban Artificial Food Dyes
Driven by parental concerns and the "Make America Healthy Again" movement, a record number of U.S. states are introducing bills to ban artificial food dyes in 2024, with West Virginia leading the charge by passing a bill to ban seven dyes starting in 2028.
Progress
44% Bias Score

Kennedy's HHS Nomination Hearing Sparks Public Health Debate
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s confirmation hearing for the HHS leadership is on Wednesday; his controversial stances on vaccines, food additives, and fluoride contradict scientific consensus, raising concerns about potential policy shifts impacting public health.

Kennedy's HHS Nomination Hearing Sparks Public Health Debate
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s confirmation hearing for the HHS leadership is on Wednesday; his controversial stances on vaccines, food additives, and fluoride contradict scientific consensus, raising concerns about potential policy shifts impacting public health.
Progress
48% Bias Score
Showing 1 to 12 of 12 results