A February 12, 2006 article by Kerry Burke in the New York Daily News describes "freegans," a subculture of garbage-eating activists who combat what many of them see as the food waste inherent in a consumer society -- by
Search results
New York, NY -- December 4, 2006. As the New York City Health Department prepares to vote tomorrow on its proposal to reduce heart disease risk by banning the use of trans fatty acids (TFAs) in City eateries, one science group argues that it would be wiser to educate consumers about more important causes of heart disease -- and that even advising daily alcohol consumption would make more health sense than banning trans fats.
This article appeared in the New York Post.
It's time to start the preparation for your multicourse serving of Thanksgiving chemicals.
This column appeared on NationalReview.com on November 2, 2006:
On October 30, a diverse collection of New Yorkers -- and nutrition activists from outside New York -- gathered at the Heath Department to offer their view on the proposed City ban on trans fats in restaurant fare. Hundreds of others poured into the hearing room just to learn if it really was true that a killer was on the loose in City eateries.
New York, NY -- December 11, 2006. The frequently-made claim that exposure to low doses of environmental chemicals is often more hazardous than exposure to high doses of the same chemical is false. So says a peer-reviewed report released this today by a national science panel. Proponents of the "low dose theory" or the "endocrine disruptor hypothesis" argue that tiny doses of chemicals can be harmful, and they demand the removal of such chemicals from a variety of consumer products.
New York, NY -- August 10, 2006. Anti-chemical environmental activists even want to ban chemicals that save lives in fires, according to a new report. A class of brominated flame retardants known as polybrominated diphenylethers (PBDEs) are under assault from environmental activists and regulators both in the United States and overseas.
An August 9, 2006 article by John Johnston noted a piece by ACSH's Dr. Gilbert Ross, reacting to an item in New England Journal of Medicine, about the importance of vaccination:
CNBC's Larry Kudlow cited ACSH's Dr. Elizabeth Whelan in a September 29, 2006 broadcast -- featuring Stephen Joseph of BanTransFats.com -- about New York's talk of banning trans fats:
Mr. JOSEPH: It's an invisible killer, Larry. It's an invisible killer.
An AP editorial on October 19, 2006 celebrated America's booming population as it passed the 300 million mark, quoting ACSH's Todd Seavey:
Todd Seavey, director of publications at the American Council on Science and Health in New York City, gets the last word and it's a thought worth considering: "Despite the occasional growing pains, I'm inclined to think that on balance, the more Americans, the better for us and the rest of the world."
A September 22, 2006 article by Kerra Bolton notes multiple chemical fears leading to new chemical regulations on pesticides and school buses in North Carolina -- but squeezes in one skeptical sentence referring to ACSH:
State public schools will be required to limit use of pesticides and keep buses from idling too long, beginning Oct. 1.
An October 30, 2006 NewsChannel5.com piece described the trans fat controversy:
Some think the issue is overblown. The American Council on Science and Health (ACSH) said focusing on trans fat obscures the real health message.
"A little bit of trans fat will not kill you. I think the bottom line is we need to keep overall fat consumption to a minimum. If you remove trans fat we are not going to be solving this nation's obesity crisis," Jeff Stier with ACSH said.
A November 1, 2006 piece by Anita Srikameswaran notes ACSH's position on the potential use of smokeless tobacco as a harm reduction method:
According to the American Council on Science and Health, encouraging cigarette smokers to switch to chew, particularly products that contain low levels of cancer-causing nitrosamines, could substantially reduce health costs and the incidence of both lung and heart disease.
A November 29, 2006 piece by Julia A. Seymour of the Media Research Center's Business & Media Institute contrasts the scientific vindication of silicone breast implants with the fear of them in the media, noting the reaction from ACSH's Dr. Gilbert Ross:
This report provides a description of traditional and modern smokeless tobacco products. It reviews the epidemiologic evidence for low health risks associated with smokeless use, both in absolute terms and in comparison to the much higher risks of smoking.
A March 14, 2007 piece on the website of the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review describes ACSH's survey of Nutritional Accuracy in Popular Magazines:
A March 14, 2007 piece describes colon-irrigation advocate Lidia Huzar-Nash but also mentions skepticism about colonics, quoting ACSH Advisor Dr. Stephen Barrett:
A March 16, 2007 piece by Kathleen Doheny about e-mailed health rumors has some sound advice from ACSH's Jeff Stier:
"If the email is the only place you are seeing it [information about the hazard], there is a reason," says Jeff Stier, spokesman for the American Council on Science and Health, in New York. If you don't see or hear the same information on the nightly news, a mainstream newspaper, or a credible web site, be suspicious, he says.
The January 6, 2007 issue of the British science journal The Lancet included an obituary, written by Hannah Brown, for Dr. David Kritchevsky, which featured comments from his fellow ACSH Advisors Dr.s David Klurfeld and Jon Story as well as ACSH president Dr. Elizabeth Whelan:
An April 30, 2007 item by David E. Williams criticized a Wall Street Journal letter by ACSH's Todd Seavey that defended drug patents:
Todd Seavey from the American Council on Science and Health has himself worked up into a lather about Thailand’s willingness to break drug company patents to cut its spending on AIDS drugs ("Drug Patent Violations, Knock-Offs Harm Us All")...
A piece by Cornelia Kean in the May 2007 Pharmacy Practice News quotes ACSH's Dr. Gilbert Ross on direct-to-consumer drug ads:
This piece first appeared on HuffingtonPost.com.
A February 1, 2007 article by Michael Downey quotes ACSH's Dr. Elizabeth Whelan to explain why even sellers of "natural" foods ought to care about mainstream scientific research:
A January 2007 article by Heartland Institute's Aricka T. Flowers quotes ACSH on trans fat:
"There is no relation between trans fat and obesity," said Dr. Elizabeth Whelan, president of the American Council on Science and Health, a Manhattan-based consumer-education nonprofit focused on health and lifestyle issues.
Pagination
ACSH relies on donors like you. If you enjoy our work, please contribute.
Make your tax-deductible gift today!