A synthetic red dye used in thousands of food and drink products has been banned by US officials after being linked to cancer. Bright cherry-colored Red No 3 had its use authorization revoked on Wednesday by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA),
The move came following a a petition from the Center for Science in the Public Interest and 23 other organizations ... to high levels of Red No. 3 got cancer. But CSPI’s Principal Scientist ...
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has officially banned red dye — called Red 3, or Erythrosine — from foods, dietary supplements and ingested medicines, as reported on Wednesday.
The FDA revokes FD&C Red No. 3 authorization due to cancer concerns under the Delaney Clause, impacting food and drug manufacturers.
Food dye Red No. 3 has been banned by the FDA. Are there other food additives that could soon be forbidden the same way?
The FDA issued a ban on the use of red dye No. 3 in food and beverage products and ingested drugs. The synthetic dye has been linked to cancer in animal studies and was banned more than 30 years ago in cosmetics and topical drugs.
In her first-ever daily briefing, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt characterized the freeze as "not a blanket pause" and said that assistance that goes directly to people, such as Social Security, Medicare, food stamps and welfare benefits, will not be affected.
The FDA banned Red Dye No. 3. The additive is found in over 9,000 U.S. products. Here’s how to avoid it, and what to reach for instead.
Holding the lifeblood of medical research ransom — without warning, without consultation — is shortsighted at best and incredibly harmful at worst,” writes researcher David Victorson.
As part of the second Trump Administration's diversity witchhunt, cancer research and other crucial projects have been paused indefinitely. As Mother Jones reports, this administration's pushback against diversity,
Cancer accounted for nearly 10 million deaths in 2020—almost one in every six deaths globally—according to the World Health Organization. Because the detection of abnormal diseased cellular growth often occurs too late,
Frankie is joined by Colonel Chris Hadfield, a retired astronaut and the first Canadian Commander of the International Space Station, to discuss Princess Margaret Cancer Foundation's 'Carry the Fire' initiative.