The Importance of Vitamins to Human Health Proceedings of the IV Kellogg Nutrition Symposium held at the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, London, on 14–15 December, 1978

The Kellogg Company ranks among the world's leading food manufacturers, and it follows, therefore, that our corporate policies are important to human health. Indeed food manufacturers, as a combined industrial force, must bear a major responsibility for the health of mankind because commerciall...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Taylor, J.A. (Editor)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Dordrecht Springer Netherlands 1979, 1979
Edition:1st ed. 1979
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: Springer Book Archives -2004 - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
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245 0 0 |a The Importance of Vitamins to Human Health  |h Elektronische Ressource  |b Proceedings of the IV Kellogg Nutrition Symposium held at the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, London, on 14–15 December, 1978  |c edited by J.A. Taylor 
250 |a 1st ed. 1979 
260 |a Dordrecht  |b Springer Netherlands  |c 1979, 1979 
300 |a XIII, 178 p. 2 illus  |b online resource 
505 0 |a 1 Man’s needs for vitamins — a need for review? -- 2 Developments in the determination of water-soluble vitamins in food -- 3 Vitamin B1 supply in industrialized countries -- 4 Effects of riboflavin deficiency on erythrocytes -- 5 Nutritional and biochemical aspects of vitamin B12 -- 6 Folic acid -- 7 Clinical biochemistry of vitamin B6 -- 8 Inappropriate vitamin C reserves: their frequency and significance in an urban population -- 9 Developments in analytical methods for the determination of fatsoluble vitamins in foods -- 10 Vitamin A deficiency and excess -- 11 The importance of sunlight as a source of vitamin D for man -- 12 Vitamin E in human nutrition -- 13 The effects of processing on the stability of vitamins in foods -- 14 The clinical diagnosis of vitamin deficiencies in everyday medical practice -- 15 Vitamin deficiencies in disease states -- 16 Progress in the prevention and treatment of nutritional rickets -- 17 Food enrichment 
653 |a Nutrition    
653 |a Nutrition 
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520 |a The Kellogg Company ranks among the world's leading food manufacturers, and it follows, therefore, that our corporate policies are important to human health. Indeed food manufacturers, as a combined industrial force, must bear a major responsibility for the health of mankind because commercially processed foods are increasingly an indispensable part of the mosaic of human nutrition. This is particularly true in advanced industrialised societies. Here, in Great Britain, 40% ofthe people live in major conurbations and 41 % of the food they eat is either pre-cooked or preserved, compounded or frozen, dehydrated or concentrated, or modified in some other way to satisfy a consumer need or preference. These preferences are communicated to the manufacturer through the competitive forces of the market, and are then translated into products in their most attractive and saleable form. However, it is questionable how far consumer choice, depending largely on sight and taste, can be relied upon to ensure a correctly balanced and nutritionally adequate diet. The probable answer is that if we all relied, solely, on our senses and our appetites, many of us would be suffering from some form of nutritional imbalance. A serious nutritional responsibility therefore rests with the modern food manufacturer. We, at Kellogg's, are conscious of the need, not only to make the foods we produce attractive to the purse and palate, but to ensure that they make a sound contribution in nutritional terms