In a significant public health move, U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy, MD, recently issued an advisory emphasizing the need for adding cancer warning labels to alcoholic beverages. This follows a ...
the U.S. Public Health Service is calling for alcohol-containing beverages to include warning labels about the risk of cancer associated with alcohol consumption. While the recommendations aren’t ...
FOX 13's Kylie Jones reports on the U.S. Surgeon General calling on Congress to place new health warnings on alcohol and how the overconsumption of alcohol can lead to serious health risks.
Regarding Allysia Finley’s “No, Moderate Drinking Won’t Give You Cancer” (Life Science, Jan. 6): The appropriate warning to put on all alcohol containers is: Consuming this beverage to ...
Alcohol should carry a cancer warning label, much like cigarettes. But don't bet on it. The debate over alcohol warning labels isn’t about science—it’s about money The alcohol industry is fighting ...
The new advisory contains a series of recommendations, including an update of the warning label on beverages that contain alcohol, to increase cancer risk awareness. Labels currently posted on ...
According to CNBC, the U.S. surgeon general has issued a new advisory warning about the link between alcohol consumption and increased cancer risk, calling for a new label to be added to all ...
Calls by the United States’ top doctor for alcoholic drinks to carry cancer risk warning labels has invigorated a push by Australian public health advocates who warn one-third of the country is ...
the U.S. surgeon general on Friday recommended that alcoholic beverages come with the same type of warning label currently used on packs of cigarettes. Northeastern University marketing and health ...
US Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy calls for cancer-warning labels on alcoholic beverages, highlighting the link between alcohol and cancer. Celebrities like Chrissy Teigen and Rihanna embrace ...
Surgeon general seeks to update alcohol label language, last changed in 1988 Dr. Marion Nestle points to conflicting studies, political pitfalls Congress will decide whether to revise labels ...