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  1. The Feingold diet was a popular, yet controversial, treatment for hyperactive children during the 1970s which blamed food additives for the disorder. Although parents and the media were attracted to the Feingold diet, the medical community was suspicious and designed trials to test it.

  2. Mar 24, 1982 · Dr. Ben F. Feingold, a pediatric allergist and author who believed that many hyperactive children could benefit from a diet that excluded all artificial colors and flavors, died yesterday at...

  3. The author, San Francisco allergist Ben F. Feingold, claimed that hyperactivity was caused by food additives and was best prevented and treated with a diet, subsequently dubbed the ‘Feingold diet’, free of such substances.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ben_FinegoldBen Finegold - Wikipedia

    Benjamin Philip Finegold (born September 6, 1969) is an American chess grandmaster and YouTuber / Twitch streamer. He had previously been nicknamed the "strongest International Master in the United States" until receiving his Grandmaster (GM) title in 2009. [1]

  5. The Feingold diet is an elimination diet initially devised by Benjamin Feingold following research in the 1970s that appeared to link food additives with hyperactivity; by eliminating these additives and various foods the diet was supposed to alleviate the condition.

  6. Jan 1, 1979 · Dietary Management of Juvenile Delinquency. Program Plan, Law Enforcement Assistance Administration, United States Department of Justice (Fiscal Year 1978, Washington, D.C. 20531.

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  8. Benjamin F. Feingold (June 15, 1899 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania – March 23, 1982) was a pediatric allergist from California who proposed in 1973 that salicylates, artificial colors, and artificial flavors cause hyperactivity in children.

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