NOTE: ALL artificial sweeteners are considered sugar in FAA Syrups, any type: agave syrup, barley syrup, brown rice syrup, corn syrup, date syrup, high fructose corn syrup, maple syrup, raisin syrup,yinnie syrup (rice syrup), etc. Sugars, any type: apple sugar, barbados sugar, bark sugar,beet sugar, brown sugar (any grade), canesugar, caramel sugars, confectioner’s sugar, date sugar, grape sugar, invert sugar, milled sugar, “natural” sugar, powdered sugar, raw sugar, turbinado sugar, unrefined sugar, etc. Maltose, mannose, polydextrose, polytose, ribose, sucralose, sucrose, tagatose, zylose ose, these additives with this suffix: colorose, dextrose, fructose, galactose, glucose, lactose, levulose, maltodextrose, Saccharides (any), trisaccharides,diglycerides, disaccharides, glycerides (any), monoglycerides, onosaccharides, etc.Ĭarbitol, glucitol, glycerol, glycol, hexitol, inversol, maltitol, mannitol, sorbitol, xylitol, etc.
ides, any additive with this suffix: monosodium glycerides, olyglycerides, NOTE: All artificial sweeteners are considered sugar in FAAįat substitutes (made from concentrated fruit paste) Jan-Feb., 1996.Acesulfame-k: (Sunette, Sweet and Safe, Sweet One)Īrtificial sweeteners of any kind: (Equal, Splenda, Sweet’n’low, Sweet Thing) "Losing Weight Safely." FDA Consumer Magazine. "Cofounder's Address: World Service Business Conference" Overeaters Anonymous. "A Fat Nation: America's 'Supersize' Diet is Fattier and Sweeter-and Deadlier." USNews 19 Aug. "Binge-eating disorder - more than just eating too much." CNN.com. Porzelius, Linda Krug and Bolton, Burt G. "To the Newcomer: You're Not Alone Anymore." OA Conference Approved Literature. The Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions of Overeaters Anonymous. "Questions and Answers: About Compulsive Overeating and the OA Program of Recovery." Overeaters Anonymous Conference Approved Literature, Inc. Abstinence: Members of Overeaters Anonymous Share Their Experience, Strength, and Hope. Obesity Trends 1985-2001." The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion. "Defining Overweight and Obesity." The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. "Joining the Size Acceptance Revolution: Doing Your Part." National Association to Advance Fat Acceptance. National Association to Advance Fat Acceptance Information Index. National Association to Advance Fat Acceptance. Publishers/Hazelden, San Francisco: 1988. Keep Coming Back: The Spiritual Journey of Recovery in Overeaters Anonymous. "Dire Warnings About Obesity Rely on a Slippery Statistic." The Wall Street Journal. "Childhood and Adolescent Obesity in America: What's a Parent to Do?" Cooperative Extension Service, College of Agriculture. "Large women discovering pluses of an active lifestyle." San Francisco Chronicle. "A body of work: As Americans continue to pack on the pounds, drug companies and obesity researchers are racing to develop the next prescription diet drug." USA Today, 29 April, 2002. "Frustrating 'need to feed': Scientists trace origins of obesity." San Francisco Chronicle. GreySheeters Anonymous World Service, Inc. "Fat Traitor: One woman walks away from the 'fat is beautiful' movement." Gettingit Dot Com, a Webzine.
"Tipping the Scales? Weight-Loss Ads Found Heavy on Deception." Federal Trade Commission Consumer Features. "Paunch Lines: Weight Loss Claims Are No Joke For Dieters." Federal Trade Commission Consumer Alert. Random House, New York: 1997.įederal Trade Commission. Knopf, New York: 1999.Ĭlaude-Pierre, Peggy. "Most Popular Diets Fail to Keep Weight Off." The Associated Press. Alcoholics Anonymous World Services, Inc.: New York, 1998.Īlimurung, "The Forgotten Woman: Revelations from a plus-size life." The LA Weekly.