Foodborne diseases -- Iran -- Congresses : Foodborne disease and public health : summary of an Iranian-American workshop / Carol West Suitor and Maria Oria, rapporteurs ; Food and Nutrition Board, Office for Central Europe and Eurasia, Policy and Global Affairs Division, Institute of Medicine and National Research Council of the National Academies
Foodborne diseases -- United States -- Congresses : Foodborne disease and public health : summary of an Iranian-American workshop / Carol West Suitor and Maria Oria, rapporteurs ; Food and Nutrition Board, Office for Central Europe and Eurasia, Policy and Global Affairs Division, Institute of Medicine and National Research Council of the National Academies
Foodborne diseases -- United States -- Prevention -- Congresses : Improving food safety through a one health approach : workshop summary / Eileen R. Choffnes [and others], rapporteurs ; Forum on Microbial Threats, Board on Global Health, Institute of Medicine of the National Academies
Any food that has been supplemented with essential nutrients either in quantities that are greater than those present normally, or which are not present in the food normally. Fortified food includes also food to which various nutrients have been added to compensate for those removed by refinement or processing. (From Segen, Dictionary of Modern Medicine, 1992)
Food and dietary formulations including elemental (chemically defined formula) diets, synthetic and semisynthetic diets, space diets, weight-reduction formulas, tube-feeding diets, complete liquid diets, and supplemental liquid and solid diets
Any food that has been supplemented with essential nutrients either in quantities that are greater than those present normally, or which are not present in the food normally. Fortified food includes also food to which various nutrients have been added to compensate for those removed by refinement or processing. (From Segen, Dictionary of Modern Medicine, 1992)
Components of the usual diet that may provide health benefits beyond basic nutrients. Examples of functional foods include soy, nuts, chocolate, and cranberries (From NCCAM Backgrounder, March 2004, p3)
Food that is grown or manufactured in accordance with nationally regulated production standards that include restrictions on the use of pesticides, non-organic fertilizers, genetic engineering, growth hormones, irradiation, antibiotics, and non-organic ingredients