Fast-food giant McDonald's is health professionals roads

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n 3 polyunsaturated fatty acids , epa, plump mature , roads, excercise, fertility treatment, infancy, plump humpers , omega 3 and omega 6 fatty acids , hiv, fatty woman , universityof guelph, plump movies , golden plump , plump dumpling , covering news, plump mom , plump women galleries , The change comes at a time when one in five people nationwide, and even more in Wisconsin, health professionals are considered obese, or 30 to 40 pounds overweight. Health care costs from obesity have soared to $117 billion a year. And the food industry has found itself facing lawsuits from overweight people, a barrage of health professionals bills in Congress and even pressure from the financial community to respond to obesity. Last year two lawsuits against McDonald's were dismissed in federal court. Even so, a JP Morgan report in 2003 called obesity "a time bomb" health professionals for the food industry. Bill Whitman, a McDonald's spokesman, continued the restaurant chain's practice of denying that obesity is driving its menu changes. He described obesity's impact on the decision to end supersizing as "little to none."
Fast-food giant McDonald's is getting rid of the Super Size portion that has become one of its signatures. Sizing Up McDonald's Graphic/Alfred Elicierto Sizing roads up McDonald's Counting Calories Graphic/Alfred Elicierto Counting calories Related Coverage Editorial: Downsizing food options By the end of the year, its trademark Super Size fries and soda no longer will be available in more than 13,000 U.S. restaurants, except as occasional promotional items. They won't be missed by Janet Keller, who stopped by a roads McDonald's in Wauwatosa on Wednesday. "I don't think anybody needs a giant size," said Keller, who dines at the roads restaurant chain two to three times a month and never orders the supersize portions. Another customer in Wauwatosa, Pat Mussotter, praised the decision to end supersizing, but added, "it won't stop people from buying two of each. That's an awful lot of fat and calories." McDonald's, which has long been under fire as the leader of an industry that made overeating convenient and cheap, said in a statement Wednesday that the change "simplifies our menu" and supports a "balanced lifestyle."
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