Tuesday,  June 17, 2014 • Vol. 16--No. 333 • 33 of 39

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FDA preparing long-awaited plan to ask food industry to lower levels of salt in foods

• WASHINGTON (AP) -- Food companies and restaurants could soon face government pressure to make their foods less salty -- a long-awaited federal effort to try to prevent thousands of deaths each year from heart disease and stroke.
• The Food and Drug Administration is preparing to issue voluntary guidelines asking the food industry to lower sodium levels, FDA Commissioner Margaret Hamburg told The Associated Press. Hamburg said in a recent interview that the sodium is "of huge interest and concern" and she hopes the guidelines will be issued "relatively soon."
• "We believe we can make a big impact working with the industry to bring sodium levels down, because the current level of consumption really is higher than it should be for health," Hamburg said.
• The food industry has already made some reductions, and has prepared for government action since a 2010 Institute of Medicine report said companies had not made enough progress on making foods less salty. The IOM advised the government to establish maximum sodium levels for different foods, though the FDA said then -- and maintains now -- that it favors a voluntary route.
• Americans eat about 1½ teaspoons of salt daily, about a third more than the government recommends for good health and enough to increase the risk of high blood pressure, strokes and other problems. Most of that sodium is hidden inside common processed foods and restaurant meals.
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General Motors recalls 3.4M more cars in North America due to ignition switch problems

• DETROIT (AP) -- General Motors is recalling another 3 million cars because of a defect that causes a similar problem to one that led to an earlier massive recall of small cars, and is linked to 13 deaths.
• The ignition switches in Chevrolet Impalas, Cadillac Devilles and five other models can slip out of the "run" position if the keychain has too much weight on it and the car is jarred, for example, by hitting a pothole. To fix the problem, GM will revise or replace the key.
• Similar to the 2.6 million small cars GM began recalling in February, drivers of

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