Future guidelines should come with a health hazard

Author(s):  
Zahra Moledina ◽  
Ashish Sharma ◽  
Aswatha Rabindranathnambi ◽  
Sandeep Varma
Keyword(s):  
2018 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 1
Author(s):  
Siti Nur Rochimiwati ◽  
Sukmawati Sukmawati ◽  
Budiman Budiman

Background : flavor enhancing food additives are often added as a flavor enhancer known as MSG that exceed the dose . if the addition of the additive is often done to cause dependence , so it will pose a health hazard to the consumer , such as stomach disorders, allergies , hypertension , asthma , cancer , diabetes , and lower intelligence. Most housewives do not know the information would adversely affect health. Objective : This study aims to describe the level of knowledge of the use of monosodium glutamate ( MSG ) housewife in backwoods village sauleya timbuseng Polongbangkeng northern districts Kab.Takalar. Methods : This is a descriptive study. samples are all housewives in the hamlet village sauleya timbuseng Polongbangkeng northern districts Kab. Takalar , who meet the criteria as much as 49 people . Data on the use MSG knowledge samples obtained by the interview method which uses a questionnaire instrument.the data presented in the from of frequency distribution graphic and narrative. Result : Results of research on the use of knowledge MSG housewives generally less category as many as 25 ( 51.0 % ) , use of MSG housewives generally can not be tolerated as many as 36 ( 73.5 % ). Conclusion : Knowledge of the use of MSG housewife classified as less and use MSG can not be tolerated.


1999 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Soyak ◽  
P. Crawford ◽  
J. Gaughan ◽  
J. Mazur

2019 ◽  
Vol 58 (2) ◽  
pp. 135-145
Author(s):  
Éric Trudel

It is by now a mere commonplace to observe that Baudelaire portrayed classical Beauty as a matron of ‘sickening health and virtue’ (New Notes on Edgar Poe). He had, after all, long opened up Aesthetics to the morbid. Few of his readers doubted that his sickly Flowers were, themselves, a dangerous source of infection. Baudelaire's poetics exacerbate and embody a veritable ‘anxiety of perpetual disquiet’ (‘Twilight’). Gazing at the work of Brueghel the elder (‘the Droll’), Baudelaire joyously exclaims that they too ‘seem to spread contagion,’ imparting a pressing practical lesson: ‘often in history […] we find proof of the immense power of contagion’ (‘Some Foreign Caricaturists’). This article examines the multiple forms and uses that contagion takes in Baudelaire's œuvre. It suggests that its transformative agency—vital and viral—is not only a health-hazard, but also an epistemological risk that needs to be contained.


1998 ◽  
Vol 168 (07) ◽  
pp. 767-791 ◽  
Author(s):  
N.G. Ptitsyna ◽  
G. Villoresi ◽  
L.I. Dorman ◽  
N. Iucci ◽  
Marta I. Tyasto

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