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Public health officials may cause harm in their attempt to promote breastfeeding.
One would assume that WIC's benefits would be targeted to the most needful Americans, but various formal and informal changes have liberalized eligibility criteria.
The World Health Organization will continue to fall far short in treating the eminently treatable epidemics of the twenty-first century unless it brushes aside the protectionists and extremists.
This AEI study challenges conventional wisdom that WIC is a uniquely successful program and demonstrates that claims about WIC's effectiveness are exaggerated.
Malaria continues to cause disease and death in millions of persons living in areas of the world where it is endemic.
This book analyzes the research on the effectiveness of the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children.
Federal feeding programs may be only a small part of the cause of America's growing weight problem, but they urgently need to be part of the cure.
Benefits apply only to WIC's prenatal program; the evidence suggests much more modest effects than WIC's boosters claim.




