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Have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness, but rather reprove them - Ephesians 5-11
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Friday, March 22, 2019
Pesticide Residue Found In 70% Of US Produce & 92% Of Kale
Roughly 70% of all produce sold in the U.S. has pesticide residue in it, even after it is washed, according to a new report
from the Guardian. According to data from the US Department of
Agriculture and analyzed by the Environmental Working
Group, strawberries, spinach and kale have the heaviest pesticide
presence, while sweetcorn, avocados and pineapples had the lowest
presence.
In news likely to send anxiety attacks across vegan circles, more than 92% of kale that was tested had two or more pesticide residues in it. A sample of any conventionally farmed kale could contain "up to 18 different pesticides", according to the report. Dacthal was the most common pesticide found. It was detected
in about 60% of kale samples and is banned in Europe and classified as a
possible carcinogen in the U.S.
Alexis Temkin, a toxicologist working with the EWG, said:
“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. 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 that the group warns about include grapes, cherries,
apples, tomatoes and potatoes. Foods like avocados, onions and
cauliflower were found to be "clean".
Leonardo Trasande, an environmental medicine specialist at the New
York University medical school, told the Guardian that the report was
"widely respected" and that "it can inform shoppers who want to buy some
organic fruits and vegetables, but would like to know which ones they
could prioritize."
A recent French study showed that people who ate organic foods were
at a significantly lower risk of developing cancer, although it also
said that underlying factors needed additional research. Experts at
Harvard cautioned that the study did not "analyze residue levels in
participants’ bodies to confirm exposure levels."
The study said: “...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.”
Another Harvard study showed that for women undergoing fertility
treatment, higher pesticide levels meant a lower chance of a live
birth.
The CDC has said that “a wide range of health effects, acute and chronic, are associated with exposures to some pesticides.” 90% of Americans have detectable pesticide levels in their urine and blood.