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Discover the truth behind the Cerelac controversy in India and find out how moms can prepare healthy baby food without added sugars. Take control of your baby's nutrition with homemade alternatives.
Nestle, Cerelac, and NGOs Public Eye and IBFAN are in scrutiny for high sugar content in baby food. WHO recommends limiting sugar intake for children's health. The report says, the sugar content ...
Discover the fallout from Nestle's Cerelac controversy and the rising demand for healthier sugar alternatives suitable for children's diets. Written by Ankit Kumar | Updated : April 18, 2024 3:31 ...
In Switzerland, the label of Nestlé’s Cerelac baby cereal says it contains “no added sugar.” But in Senegal and South Africa, the same product has 6 grams of added sugar per serving ...
A recent report by Public Eye, a Swiss watchdog group, has sparked controversy over Nestle's practices in infant food. The report alleges that Nestle adds sugar to its Cerelac baby cereal sold in ...
Tests on Cerelac products sold in India showed, on average, more than 2.7g of added sugar for every serving.
Nestle Row: In India, all 15 Cerelac varieties contain an average of 3g of added sugar per serving, the report reveals. Written by Sushmita Panda April 18, 2024 18:30 IST ...
In Thailand, Ethiopia, South Africa, India and Bangladesh, among others, Nestlé added up to 6 grams of sugar per serving of Cerelac. The same brand was sold containing zero sugar in Britain and ...
In a Cerelac wheat cereal product, for instance, the product contained up to 6 grams of added sugar in countries including Thailand, Ethiopia, South Africa, Pakistan, India, and Bangladesh.
The Nestlé boycott begins March 21 and lasts until March 28. Nestlé produces several everyday items, including Cheerios cereal, Purina and Fancy Feast pet food, KitKat chocolate, Cerelac baby ...
Cerelac, made by Nestle Kenya (since 1967), was a highly nutritional infant cereal, which, back in the day, enjoyed a ‘top of the mind positioning’ and was the near preserve of the loaded.