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"Kids are being bombarded daily with ads for unhealthy foods and it is long past time that we limit the amount of junk food advertising," he said. It is unclear whether government pressure will be effective enough to get many companies to sign on. Some of the country's largest food companies, including McDonalds, General Mills Inc., Kellogg Co., Kraft Foods Global and PepsiCo Inc., already have joined an initiative sponsored by the Better Business Bureau to limit their marketing to children. The standards are similar but not as strict. Scott Faber, lobbyist for the Grocery Manufacturers Association, says many companies already have reformulated foods to reduce unhealthy ingredients. "While the outside of the box hasn't changed, what's in the inside the box has changed dramatically," he says. The food industry's efforts to change recipes and limit advertising have come as consumers are increasingly educated and aware of what they are eating. The president's wife, Michelle Obama, also has been leading a campaign to fight childhood obesity. Still, public health advocates say they believe a lot of work remains. Margo Wootan, director of nutrition policy at the advocacy group Center for Science in the Public Interest, says advocates hope the guidelines will make a greater impact. "As a mom watching television with my daughter or walking through the aisles of the supermarket, it seems like nothing has changed," she says. "If companies applied these standards it would get rid of almost all junk food marketing to kids."
[Associated
Press;
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