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Sunlei

(22,651 posts)
Sat Jun 17, 2017, 06:23 PM Jun 2017

Environmental group warns of lead in baby food

Source: usatoday

9:03 a.m. ET June 17, 2017
SALEM, Ore. — Low levels of lead contaminate many of the foods Americans eat, including nearly all categories of baby food, a report by the Environmental Defense Fund shows.

Fruit juices, root vegetables and cookies were the baby foods most likely to contain lead. “No child gets high levels of lead from food alone,” said Tom Neltner, chemicals policy director for the 50-year-old nonpartisan, non-profit advocacy group. “But low levels of lead cause a lot of harm to kids

Lowry — who is not affiliated with the research — said there is no safe level of lead and lead in baby food can contribute to a child's elevated blood lead level.“Children who have elevated blood lead levels are more likely to have speech delays, cognitive difficulties, lower IQs,” she said. “Only a slight difference in IQ is enough to sometimes cause difficulty in school and learning.” Lower IQs caused by lead exposure translate into a total of $27 billion per year in lost lifetime earnings nationwide, the Environmental Defense Fund calculates in its report.

The Environmental Defense Fund analyzed publicly available data from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s Total Diet Study, which each year collects samples of food from around the country and tests it for a host of nutrients and contaminants, including lead. The report found 20% of the 2,164 baby food samples were positive for lead, compared with 14% of the 10,064 regular food samples. The highest level was detected in a sample of vegetable and beef dinner



Read more: https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation-now/2017/06/17/report-lead-baby-food/398926001/



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Environmental group warns of lead in baby food (Original Post) Sunlei Jun 2017 OP
I think if I were a mom, I would make my own baby food Motley13 Jun 2017 #1
if you read the report the lead is in the base ingredients. pets have it even worse because Sunlei Jun 2017 #2
+1 dalton99a Jun 2017 #3
The weird thing was the juices. Igel Jun 2017 #4

Motley13

(3,867 posts)
1. I think if I were a mom, I would make my own baby food
Sat Jun 17, 2017, 06:33 PM
Jun 2017

I made my cat's food several years back when dogs & cats were being poisoned by meal imported from China & used in almost every kind of pet food.

Sunlei

(22,651 posts)
2. if you read the report the lead is in the base ingredients. pets have it even worse because
Sat Jun 17, 2017, 06:39 PM
Jun 2017

pet foods have no regulations at all.

If not for Banfield Vets, a group of 100s of vets/clinics noticing how many pets were dropping from acute renal failure the melamine issue may have not even have been discovered.

Igel

(35,300 posts)
4. The weird thing was the juices.
Sat Jun 17, 2017, 07:40 PM
Jun 2017

I can't think of any principled reason why baby apple juice would have a higher incidence of lead contamination than regular apple juice.

The best I can come up with is accidental: It depends on the water supply used by the manufacturer, or the region they pulled their produce from. I don't like that as an explanation, but it's what we're stuck with. But it also means that farm-to-table restaurants and farmers markets would also be producing a lot of marginally contaminated food.

Or perhaps baby juices are more concentrated, more pure whatever the juice is. Apple-ier, grapier, whatever.

On the other hand ... the government says 5 ppb or below is acceptable for water. (Not "safe," but since some areas have Pb in the water already and 0.000 ppb of Pb can be rough to get to, okay.)

The report said "lead was detected." I've seen studies where 15 ppt of lead, 0.015 ppb, were reported. Now, it's nice that they point out instances where the levels were over 5 ppb, but unless they say something about what their sensitivity cut-off was "lead was detected" is pretty much fear-mongering.

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