January ARS Food and Nutrition Briefs Posted

January ARS Food and Nutrition Briefs Posted

The following press release was published by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service on Jan. 22, 2001. It is reproduced in full below.

The Agricultural Research Service has posted the January 2001 issue of the Food & Nutrition Research Briefs to its web site at:

/is/np/fnrb/fnrb101.htm

The Research Briefs is a quarterly newsletter containing the latest ARS findings in human nutrition, food freshness and safety, and new foods and varieties.

Included in this issue:

* A generation of "TV-dinner" kids might be learning poor eating habits. Overweight children in a Houston-area survey reported eating 50 percent of their dinner meals in front of the television, compared to just 35 percent by normal-weight children.

* Parents who tightly control what their children eat actually might be promoting a preference for "off limit" foods and a less-than-healthy relationship with food.

* Older people may regain some of their youthful resting metabolic rate and get off the slow boat to obesity by regular muscle-building exercises.

* The potential of different lines of broccoli to stimulate a key enzyme that may protect against certain cancers can vary greatly.

ARS is the chief scientific agency of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Contact:Judy McBride, ARS Information Staff, Beltsville, Md., phone(301) 504-1628, fax (301) 504-1641, jmcbride@ars.usda.gov.

Source: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service

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