Congressional investigators requested test results from baby food brands. Some popular baby foods contain "significant" levels of toxic heavy metals that have the potential to harm babies' ...
Shocking Levels of Heavy Metals and Pesticides Discovered in Popular Nutrition Bars, Report Finds originally appeared on Men's Fitness. If you grab a nutrition or snack bar between workouts, a new ...
Exclusive new testing by Consumer Reports highlights safer infant formulas while also identifying some that contain potentially harmful levels of heavy metals, including lead and arsenic. Here’s what ...
Samples of store-bought rice from more than 100 different brands purchased in the United States contained dangerously high levels of arsenic and cadmium, according to a new report shared first with ...
This article originally appeared on The Conversation. Powder and ready-to-drink protein sales have exploded, reaching over $32 billion globally from 2024 to 2025. Increasingly, consumers are using ...
A new Consumer Reports investigation found lead, arsenic, BPA, and PFAS in popular brands. But there are steps you can take to mitigate risk. Andi Breitowich works across digital and print magazines ...
Consumer Reports and Unleaded Kids, a nonprofit focused on protecting kids from lead exposure, recently evaluated 39 baby food brands to see how easy they make it for parents to check their baby’s ...
Plant-based powders, particularly those made with pea protein, were found to have the highest lead levels — and only a handful of brands were deemed safe for regular use in the nonprofit’s analysis.
Heavy metals get a bad rap. For the most part, it is deserved because they are usually toxic. Except when they aren't. You have probably consumed a whole lot of at least one or two of them, yet you ...
If you grab a nutrition or snack bar between workouts, a new report might make you think twice before taking your next bite. The Clean Label Project recently released a report revealing surprisingly ...