A farmer sprays crops with pesticides. (photo: Dave Martin/AP)
21 March 19
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70% of fresh produce sold in the US has pesticide residues on it even
after it is washed, according to a health advocacy group.
According to the Environmental Working Group’s annual
analysis of US Department of Agriculture data, strawberries, spinach and
kale are among the most pesticide-heavy produce, while avocados,
sweetcorn and pineapples had the lowest level of residues.
More than 92% of kale tested contained two or more
pesticide residues, according to the analysis, and a single sample of
conventionally farmed kale could contain up to 18 different pesticides.
Dacthal – the most common pesticide found, which was
detected in nearly 60% of kale samples, is banned in Europe and
classified as a possible human carcinogen in the US.
“We definitely acknowledge and support that everybody
should be eating healthy fruits and vegetables as part of their diet
regardless of if they’re conventional or organic,” said Alexis Temkin, a
toxicologist working with the EWG.
“But what we try to highlight with the Shopper’s Guide to Produce is building on a body of evidence that shows mixtures of pesticides can have adverse effects.”
Other foods on the group’s “dirty dozen” list include
grapes, cherries, apples, tomatoes and potatoes. In contrast, its “clean
15” list includes avocados, onions and cauliflower.
Leonardo Trasande, an environmental medicine
specialist at the New York University medical school, called the EWG
report “widely respected” and said it can inform shoppers who want to
buy some organic fruits and vegetables, but would like to know which
ones they could prioritize.
Despite a growing body of research, scientists say it
is difficult to pinpoint how many pesticides people are exposed to in
their daily lives, and in what quantity. And it is also hard to say how
those chemicals in combination affect the body.
One recent French study
found that people eating organic foods were at a significantly lower
risk of developing cancer, although it suggested that if those findings
were confirmed, the underlying factors would require more research.
Nutritional experts at Harvard University cautioned that that study did not analyze residue levels in participants’ bodies to confirm exposure levels.
While 90% of Americans have detectable pesticide
levels in their urine and blood, “the health consequences of consuming
pesticide residues from conventionally grown foods are unknown, as are
the effects of choosing organic foods or conventionally grown foods
known to have fewer pesticide residues,” they said.
A separate Harvard study
found that for women undergoing fertility treatment, those who ate more
high-pesticide fruits and vegetables were less likely to have a live
birth.
The CDC explains
that “a wide range of health effects, acute and chronic, are associated
with exposures to some pesticides,” including nervous system impacts,
skin and eye irritation, cancer and endocrine disorders.
“The health risks from pesticide exposure depend on
the toxicity of the pesticides, the amount a person is exposed to, and
the duration and the route of exposure,” the CDC says, noting evidence
suggests children are at higher risk.
The Environmental Protection Agency sets rules for how
pesticides are used, but those rules do not necessarily prevent
cumulative exposure in a person’s diet.
The agency is fighting a court order to ban chlorpyrifos, a pesticide that is associated with development disabilities in children.
EPA has also scaled back
what types of exposure it will consider when evaluating human health
risks. And President Trump has appointed a former executive from the
industry lobbying group the American Chemistry Council, Nancy Beck, as
the head of its toxic chemical unit.
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