Fortification in a sentence as a noun

I'm not sure how long the vitamin fortification has been going on, but it too is very widespread.

The key phrase is "where fortification and enrichment have occurred for so long that they’ve become invisible.

However, factors other than fortification may have\ncontributed to this decline.

The problem with that is that fortification is already rampant in premade foods, and so most first-worlders are already eating these refined ingredients in every meal.

The heavy fortification of the atlantic wall was only for first landing, the defence line was deep but it was annihilated with heavy bombardment from allied battleships.

"In fact, for products like milk and flour, where fortification and enrichment have occurred for so long that they’ve become invisible, it would be almost irresponsible not to add synthetic vitamins.

The only beneficial modification to the food system from a nutritional perspective has been fortification with certain key nutrients, This is such a shockingly misguided statement that it hurts to read it.

That fortification gives it more freedom with devices and standards, which it can play against Apple by encouraging modularity, adaptability, and customisation.

Commercial pasta and bread are terrible not only because of the carbs, but also because of the fortification - folic acid should be avoided as roughly 30% cannot metabolize it and free folic acid is without a doubt harmful - especially to Mexicans due to wide-spread methylation issues.

Cross-sectional studies suggest that current US/Canadian fortification practices are not effective in preventing hypovitaminosis D, particularly among vulnerable populations during the winter, whereas supplement use shows more promise.

The article treats the belief in supplements entirely as a case of well-nourished people pursuing quack fixes, ignoring scientifically credible practices such as food fortification using iodine and folic acid, the widely-known connection between vitamin C and scurvy, the use of iron supplements to treat anemia, and the historical experience with real malnutrition.

From the article you link:> In 2008 WHO malnutrition expert Francesco Branca cited the lack of real-world studies and uncertainty about how many people will use golden rice, concluding "giving out supplements, fortifying existing foods with vitamin A, and teaching people to grow carrots or certain leafy vegetables are, for now, more promising ways to fight the problem"Branca isn't some hippy idiot opposed to GMO for some stupid non-reason.> In that respect, it is significant that vitamin A deficiency is rarely an isolated phenomenon, but usually coupled to a general lack of a balanced dietSo these children still need additional micronutrient fortification?

Fortification definitions

noun

defensive structure consisting of walls or mounds built around a stronghold to strengthen it

See also: munition

noun

the art or science of strengthening defenses

noun

the addition of an ingredient for the purpose of enrichment (as the addition of alcohol to wine or the addition of vitamins to food)