Second, "Is grape seedless cultivated with birth control pills?" In fact, birth control pills are animal hormones and have no effect on plants at all.
Third, "Vitamin A hurts the baby's brain?" In fact, there is enough evidence to prove that the rated vitamin A supplement is safe.
Fourth, "Is the meat duck growing too fast to be injected with hormones?" From the perspective of cost-benefit, hormone therapy is not cost-effective, and the rapid growth of meat ducks is the result of scientific breeding.
5. "Does the U.S. government say that cholesterol is beneficial and harmless?" The new version of Dietary Guidelines for American Residents does cancel the suggestion of restricting cholesterol intake, but it also emphasizes that this does not mean that cholesterol is no longer valued when establishing a healthy eating model.
6. "The American people don't eat genetically modified again?" In fact, the United States is a big country in research, development and consumption of genetically modified foods, and has been eating genetically modified foods for more than 20 years.
Seven, "Watermelon and peach eat together to kill people?" This "profit-seeking theory" has caused countless "unjust cases", and there is no evidence that eating watermelon and peaches at the same time will be fatal.
Eight, "Instant noodles contain preservatives, do not digest for 32 hours, or even cause cancer?" Experts believe that there is no bad food, only bad food collocation, which is more nutritious with some meat and vegetables.
Nine, "Eat cherry infected with H7N9 virus?" Rumors such as "eating pork infected with H7N9" and "eating mala Tang infected with H7N9" continue. Experts pointed out that H7N9 is an avian influenza virus, and the rumor is "random labeling".
Ten, "The pork gave birth to invincible hookworms?" After identification, the photos of hookworms spread on the Internet are tissues such as lymph and blood vessels of pigs, and there are no hookworms in pork.
The above information comes from Netease News.