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Doritos and Skittles could carry ‘not recommended for human consumption' warning labels in certain parts of the US

Doritos and Skittles could carry ‘not recommended for human consumption' warning labels in certain parts of the US

Yahoo04-06-2025
Some of America's favorite snacks may be banned in certain parts of the U.S. if the packaging does not warn about certain ingredients.
New legislation in Texas would warn consumers in the state about ingredients that are 'not recommended for human consumption' in other countries, but still allowed in the U.S., Bloomberg reported.
More than 40 ingredients, from synthetic food dyes to bleached flour, would require warning labels on the products' packaging starting in 2027, if the bill is signed into law.
The legislation would affect snacks and candies such as Nacho Cheese Doritos, Little Bites Chocolate Chip Muffins, Skittles, M&Ms and Sour Patch Kids Watermelon, as well as breakfast cereals and sodas such as Froot Loops, Cinnamon Toast Crunch and Mountain Dew.
If the bill is signed by Governor Greg Abbott, it would affect snacks sold statewide. This could also open the door for a nationwide switch-up. Bloomberg reported that companies forced to comply with state regulations often chose to roll out changes across the whole country to streamline production.
Abbott has less than 20 days to sign the bill, and it's unclear whether he will.
His press secretary, Andrew Mahaleris, told Bloomberg before the bill was sent to the governor: 'Abbott will continue to work with the legislature to ensure Texans have access to healthy foods to care for themselves and their families and will thoughtfully review any legislation they send to his desk.'
If the bill is signed into law, there are instances when the state-mandated labeling won't be required: if the Food and Drug Administration or Department of Agriculture deems an ingredient safe, restricts its use or bans it after September 1.
Industry groups and companies, including food and drink makers and retail giant Walmart, had sent a letter to Texas lawmakers 'in strong opposition' to the bill.
'As it's written, the food labeling provision in this bill casts an incredibly wide net — triggering warning labels on everyday grocery items based on assertions that foreign governments have banned such items, rather than on standards established by Texas regulators or by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration,' read the letter, which had circulated on social media.
The letter warned that this potential change 'could destabilize local and regional economies at a time when businesses are already fighting to keep prices down, maintain inventory, and avoid layoffs.'
If the bill did get signed into law, it would be a win for not only Texas lawmakers but Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a vocal critic of certain chemicals in food like synthetic dyes. Supporters of the Texas bill have claimed that Kennedy backs the legislation, Bloomberg reported.
According to the outlet, Texas Representative Lacey Hull claimed she received a call from the HHS secretary when it passed.
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A man had to organize his day around restroom trips. After 6 years, he was diagnosed with a tight pelvic floor.
A man had to organize his day around restroom trips. After 6 years, he was diagnosed with a tight pelvic floor.

Business Insider

time11 minutes ago

  • Business Insider

A man had to organize his day around restroom trips. After 6 years, he was diagnosed with a tight pelvic floor.

Adam Gvili was 19 when he first started needing to pee 20 times a day. It would take him six years of misdiagnoses, costly appointments, and ineffective treatments to learn that his pelvic floor — a body part typically associated with women — was the culprit. Gvili, now 35 and a New York-based physical therapist specializing in male pelvic health, told Business Insider that needing to pee often was the most frustrating symptom and affected his quality of life. "That sucked because I was constantly reorganizing my life based off that. I get in the car and I'm like 'wait, maybe I shouldn't have coffee now, that might affect me. It's a diuretic. Okay, I'll wait until I get to work.' "Finally, I get to work. I was like, 'okay, I'm going to a meeting now. This is not good. What if I have to pee? Maybe I should pee now.'" Within six to eight months of treatment involving manual therapy and exercises, Gvili's symptoms were gone. "Part of the journey now is educating the masses on what pelvic floor is," he said. Gvili said that lots of men are unaware they even have a pelvic floor and feel shameful of intimate problems. "As a man, so much is tied to this region," he said. "I think it's important that people feel supported and they know that this is temporary and once you find the right treatment, you'll get better." Research suggests up to 16% of American men under 50 experience pelvic floor dysfunction, where the hammock of muscles that sit in the pelvis and help us pee, poop, and have sex aren't working correctly. (For women, it's around 40%). While it's more common for women to have loose pelvic floor muscles, causing symptoms like urinary or bowel incontinence, men tend to have an over-active, tight pelvic floor. There are a number of causes of a tight pelvic floor, including stress (Bloomberg recently reported on the rise of tight pelvic floors on Wall Street), habitually holding in urine or poop, muscular damage from prolonged sitting, abnormal posture or gait, sexual trauma, or injury to the pelvic muscles during surgery or childbirth. As well as needing to pee often, Gvili experienced constipation, occasional premature ejaculation, and soreness in the penile and rectal area after going to the bathroom. Some men also feel pain in their penis, rectum, groin, or testicles, and erectile dysfunction. Gvili was prescribed antibiotics and antidepressants, which didn't help Gvili knew his frequent peeing, which was "driving him nuts," wasn't normal. He consulted his primary care physician, who referred him to a urologist. There, he "went through the gamut of testing" (physical exams, blood tests, and urine and sperm cultures) to check for inflammation or infection. Everything came back clear, so doctors would chalk his symptoms up to anxiety or stress. "They were just like, 'Listen, objectively, everything is OK. You're good. Just chill out.' And it was far from OK," he said. Gvili saw a long line of specialists and tried multiple medications before he got the correct diagnosis. "I even went to Trump's urologist," he said. A different doctor diagnosed him with chronic non-bacterial prostatitis, where the prostate or the surrounding muscles and tissue become inflamed, but not because of a bug. Although a test for bacteria in his urine was negative, he was given an antibiotic — used for bacterial infections — which didn't help, he said. Gvili was also prescribed a drug used to treat symptoms associated with an enlarged prostate, and antidepressants, but they did nothing. He wanted his experience validated, so he turned to Google and Reddit, but he was bombarded with fads, like supplements for prostate health and fasting. "You hear things like, 'If you stop burdening your body with digestion, maybe it can finally heal,' so you do the juice fasts, the cleanses, the restrictive diets, whatever might help. But looking back, a lot of that stuff doesn't really make sense,'" he said. "You feel incredibly alone, isolated, not really supported. You do get pretty dark; you have your dark days," he said. "Like, what the hell is wrong with me? I feel like I'm breaking down." Pelvic floor therapy twice-weekly treated Gvili's symptoms The fourth pelvic floor therapist Gvili diagnosed him with a tight pelvic floor and was able to treat it. "I think the first three didn't think outside of the box as much," he said, referring to the therapist's ability to make him feel understood and relaxed during treatment. Gvili, the founder of Pelvis NYC, had physical therapy twice a week and started seeing improvements, such as needing to pee less often and experiencing less muscle tension, after two to three months. After six months, he felt fully better, he said. Now, as a trained pelvic floor therapist, he's dedicated to preventing other men from going through what he did.

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