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 Almost two-thirds of baby foods sold in U.S. grocery stores are unhealthy, a new study has found.The research was conducted by The George Institute for Global Health and published in the scientific journal Nutrients.The study found that 60% of infant and toddler foods in U.S. supermarkets do not meet nutritional requirements nor promotional requirements defined by the World Health Organization.To conduct the study, researchers evaluated stanley termos  over 650 baby and toddler food products sold at 10 popular U.S. grocery stores.The findings uncovered that 70% of the products failed to meet protein requirements, and 44% surpassed total sugar requirements.The research showed 1 in 4 products did not meet calorie requirements, and 1 in 5 had higher-than-recommended sodium levels. Dr. Elizabeth Dunford, research fellow at The George Institute, said she was concerned about the rising popularity of these processed baby foods due to convenience. Early childhood is a crucial period of rapid growth and when taste preferences and dietary h stanley tumblers abits form, potentially paving the way for the development of chronic diseases such as obesity, diabetes and some cancers later in life,  Dunford sai stanley mugs d in a press release. Likr Senate confirms first member to Biden s cabinet; Avril Haines first woman to oversee US intelligence
 KANSAS CITY, Mo. 鈥?Three Missouri residents who qualify for Medicaid coverage have filed a lawsuit, alleging that there is no reason the state cannot fund the voter-approved expansion of the federal low-income medical insurance program.Gov. Mike Parson announced last week that the state would not expand due to a lack of funding from the legislature. Missouri voters passed a constitutional amendment last August to expand Medicaid in the  stanley mugs state.Earlier this month, the state legislature approved a $35-billion budget with no additional funding allocated for the expans stanley tumbler ion, which would cover an additional 275,000 Missourians at a cost of roughly $200 million in state monies.Stephanie Doyle, Melinda Hille and Autumn Stultz named the Missouri Department of Social Services and its acting director, Jennifer Tidball; MO HealthNet Division and its acting director, Kirk Mathews; the states Family Support Division and its director, Kim Evans.The trio alleges that the agency s claims of not being stanley becher  able to implement the expansion without a specific line item in budget appropriations has  no merit. RELATED: Health services CEO: Missouri Medicaid decision an  embarrassment  The DSS appropriations bill