|
|
The New Beef: Irradiated Burgers
for School Children
By Audrey Hill of Public Citizen
|
SIDEBAR: What
can YOU do about irradiated food?
Last year, the United States Department of
Agriculture (USDA) approved irradiated food for the National School
Lunch Program despite overwhelming objections from thousands of
people who commented on the proposal. The Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) maintains that irradiation is safe, while the European Union,
family farm organizations, and some consumer groups remain critical.
Since its inception, the food industry has aggressively promoted
the technology, while consumers have generally avoided it and
some school districts have banned irradiated food. Why the divergence?
The controversy around food irradiation boils down to struggles
over acceptable health risks and the type of food system we want
to encourage.
In the United States, chemicals and other potential hazards are
allowed onto the market unless there is scientific certainty that
they are harmful. Many chemicals in our food and environment have
never been adequately studied for health effects—or studied
at all. On numerous occasions, the knowledge that these products
cause harm has been gained not through scientific tests pre-approval,
but rather through observations of negative health impacts decades
later. The pesticide DDT, for example, was widely used during
the 1950s and 1960s. Yet, we now know that it is probably carcinogenic
and likely increases premature births—and thus infant mortality.
Only after Rachel Carson’s book Silent Spring documented
its devastating effect on bird reproduction did the U.S. ban DDT
in 1972. Nevertheless, DDT is still present in food domestically,
albeit in much lower levels, three decades later because of the
persistence of such chemicals in
the environment.
Similar scenarios continue to create controversy. Recombinant
Bovine Growth Hormone (rBGH), for instance, is the focus of increased
criticisms, as evidence grows about its cancer-causing potential.
RBGH is banned in milk production throughout the European Union,
which is increasingly ahead of the curve with food safety and
environmental policies. The EU adheres to precautionary principle,
the age-old idea that it’s “better to be safe than
sorry” when there are reasonable concerns that a potential
hazard may negatively impact the environment or health, even if
it is not definitively proven yet.
Unfortunately, since the U.S. government does not adhere to the
precautionary principle, our food system is vulnerable to prematurely
or improperly approved technologies, such as the irradiation of
food. Food irradiation, designed to reduce bacteria, exposes food
to ionizing radiation through gamma rays (produced by radioactive
materials), X-rays, or electron-beams. No matter what type of
machine is used, irradiation creates potential health risks and
negative food system consequences.
When food is irradiated, molecular bonds break apart and cause
new and sometimes unique molecules to form. When the FDA deemed
irradiation safe, their approval was based on a handful of studies
and overlooked several important concerns. Recent studies show
that one class of these newly formed molecules, called 2-ACBs,
may promote cancer development and cause genetic damage. 2-ACBs
have never been found to naturally occur in food, and much is
unknown about their effects on human health. In fact, no long-term
study of humans consuming irradiated food has ever been conducted,
even though irradiation is now allowed for foods ranging from
beef to fruit to eggs. Irradiation also can increase the quantities
of known carcinogens like formaldehyde and benzene in food. Finally,
older research shows a wide range of health problems from the
consumption of irradiated food, from reproductive problems to
nutritional deficiencies.
Irradiation also depletes vitamins and nutrients in food—up
to eighty percent of vitamin A in eggs and 48 percent of beta
carotene in orange juice; it is particularly harmful to vitamins
A, B, C and E. While the food industry plays down this nutrient
loss by equating it to that from cooking or storage, irradiated
food still needs to be cooked or stored, which thereby further
decreases its nutritional value. Some vitamins experience accelerated
losses during storage and cooking after food has been irradiated,
worsening vitamin depletion.
When irradiated ground beef was approved for the National School
Lunch Program (which feeds 27 million children annually), where
it does not have to be labeled, these health risks became even
more worrisome. Proportionally, children consume two to three
times more pound for pound than adults, and thus are much more
impacted by toxins. Many poor children who rely on the NSLP for
nutrition may not have the option to bring their own lunch to
avoid irradiated food.
Considering these health issues, why has the food industry pursued
this technology so enthusiastically? Several food-borne illness
outbreaks in the last decade created negative publicity for the
industry. Indeed, food-borne illness is a serious problem. However,
the contamination that causes these illnesses is largely due to
poor sanitation practices and weak regulation. In fact, many people
are surprised to learn that the government has no power to recall
tainted food, leaving the public at risk. Rather than cleaning
up the system’s problems, such as overcrowded livestock
in confined operations and weakened inspection in slaughterhouses,
the industry wants to use the quick fix of irradiation to mask
contamination. As a 2003 Salt Lake Tribune editorial noted, irradiation
is “the dietary equivalent of painting the house when the
foundation has caved in.” Good sanitation, not irradiation,
is necessary to maintain a safe food supply.
The food industry also wants irradiation to extend shelf life
and enable certain produce to be imported. Both these attributes
mean that food can be shipped further from where it was produced,
so your food would be less likely locally-grown, or even domestically-grown.
Already, the average food item travels 1500 miles before it gets
to your grocery store. Irradiation drives us further from a sustainable,
local food system and is a tool for the major agribusiness players
to gain more market control.
Luckily, consumers have power over the food industry. Shoppers
can choose to buy organic food or locally-grown food, both of
which help create a better and more environmentally-friendly system.
As a health-conscious and conscientious customer, you can avoid
irradiated foods in stores, which are marked with a flower-like
radura symbol and “Treated with Irradiation.” As a
2002 Consumer Reports’ article notes: “There’s
no reason to [buy irradiated meat] if you cook meat thoroughly.
Irradiation actually destroys fewer bacteria than does proper
cooking.” Indeed, because of low consumer demand, dozens
of grocery stores have discontinued irradiated meat recently.
A real chance for meaningful action involves school lunch policies.
While three states ordered irradiated ground beef from the NSLP
last year, none actually received it because of the high price
and some officials’ reluctance. Some school districts in
Tennessee requested irradiated beef last year, but the state did
not get enough requests to order it. Because school nutrition
policies are largely determined on the district level, an involved
parent or resident can bring about change. Already, ten school
districts, including Iowa City and Washington DC, have banned
irradiated food. These bans are part of a widespread movement
to improve school nutrition, which has led to farm-to-school programs
and stronger nutritional guidelines. The Seattle school district
recently combined these efforts, directing against irradiated
food in their “buy local, buy organic” policy.
In sum, there are several significant health concerns about irradiated
food, and many questions that remain unanswered about how it affects
human health. The push for irradiation is also a symptom of a
broader safety failure in our food industry, as well as the increasing
dominance of agriculture by a few behemoth players. Thankfully,
we don’t have to buy irradiated food and we don’t
have to let our youngest generation eat it, if we take concerted
efforts to keep it out of our stores, homes, and schools!
Audrey Hill is the Food Organizer for Public Citizen, a non-profit
consumer advocacy organization based in Washington, DC. She has
a B.A. in Environmental Policy from Pomona College, and previously
worked at the Children’s Environmental Health Network on
policy and environmental education. To reach Audrey, call 202-454-5185
or email ahill@citizen.org
.
What can YOU do about irradiated
food?
Don’t buy it!
Avoid food marked with the radura, and tell your local grocery
store you don’t want it carried. Check out www.foodactivist.org
for more information on retail sales of irradiated food. Right
now, consumers in the Southeast are most likely to find irradiated
ground beef, spices, or perhaps poultry (in Publix stores).
Tell your school district you
don’t want it served!
Public Citizen has a sample letter you can send to your state’s
food service director, asking them not to purchase irradiated
food for schools. You can also work in your community to get your
school district to adopt a resolution banning irradiated food.
Find out more at www.safelunch.org. This effort could be a stand-alone
ban or part of a comprehensive healthy school nutrition policy.
Back
to New Life Journal..
|
| |
February/March
2005
Issue
|
| |
| |
| |
Business Listings
Your guide to health practitioners
and sustainable businesses in Asheville, NC, Atlanta and Athens,GA, Greenville,
SC and the Southeast
NATURAL HEALING
massage, acupuncturists, energy medicine, herbalists, yoga centers,
natural medicine, healers, alternative therapies, healing workshops
NATURAL FOODS
health food stores, restaurants, nutritionists, whole foods chefs,
natural foods lectures & programs, organic farmers, caterers
MIND & SPIRIT
therapists, churches, workshops, retreat centers, support groups
BUSINESSES
sustainable businesses in the Southeast |
|
| |
|