Study Examines Calorie Information from Restaurants, Packaged Foods
Researchers at Tufts University analyzed the calorie content of 18 side dishes and entrees from national sit-down chain restaurants, 11 side dishes and entrees from national fast food restaurants and 10 frozen meals purchased from supermarkets. They compared their results to the calorie content information provided to the public by the restaurants and food companies. "Because we analyzed a relatively small sample of food, additional research testing more foods will be needed to see if this is a nation-wide problem," says senior author Susan B. Roberts, PhD, a professor at the Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts University.
On average, the calorie content information provided by the restaurants was 18 percent less than the researcher's calorie content analysis.
3 comments:
And here's an interesting video on why counting calories doesn't MATTER:
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=4362041487661765149&ei=NhRFS5G4Oois2ALCt6HYBQ&q=good+calories,+bad+calories&hl=en#
Well Chris, as ever,
you got me thinking
Calorie counting and Heart Rate Monitors: when they work
Part 1: calorie counting.
mc
Thanks mc - as ever I've benefited from reading your thoughts!
Post a Comment