Pages

Organic food is a safe choice

November 2017


In the face of growing concerns that our current chemical-dependent food production systems are neither sustainable nor healthy, the European Parliament has commissioned a review of the scientific evidence of the impact of chemical-free, organic food production (see Note below).

The evidence available for review was sparse, lacking in direct human health or long-term studies, limited by reductionist data, and absent mechanistic explanations for results. In particular, the reviewers led by Swedish University of Agriculture scientists, reported that epidemiological surveys have had a very low impact on regulatory assessments despite involving real-life exposure to multiple chemicals and whole human populations.

One important, but side-lined, US population study linked pesticide levels in the mothers' body (assessed from urine levels) with impaired cognitive development in their children.



Another study found that the grey matter was thinner n the brains of children whose mothers had a high exposure to insecticides (organophosphates).

The review states "At least 100 different pesticides are known to cause adverse neurological effects in adults, and all of these substances must therefore be suspected of being capable of damaging developing brains as well ... Such adverse effects are likely to be lasting and one main outcome is cognitive deficits, often expressed in terms of losses of IQ points. The combined evidence suggests that current exposures to certain pesticides in the EU may cost at least €125 billion per year, as calculated from the loss of lifetime income due to the lower IQs associated with prenatal exposure." This calculation is described as "almost certainly" an underestimate as it does not consider the possible contribution made by pesticides to other diseases such as Parkinson's, diabetes, certain types of cancer, and others more difficult to pinpoint.

An organic diet is strongly suspected of reducing the risk of childhood allergies, obesity, chronic diseases such as type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular problems, immune system development and non-Hodgkins lymphoma (a blood cancer).

Current risk assessment is inadequate at addressing mixed exposures which could involve complex outcomes such as endocrine disruption and cancer.

On the subject of nutritional benefits of organic produce, the vary far too much for conclusions to be drawn (or perhaps we just don't yet have adequate, validated methods for measuring the vitality, healing or stress-reducing qualities of our food). People who favour organic foods tend to lead healthier life-styles, making the role of their food unclear.

However, the review singled out three key areas in which a move to organic systems could address health issues.

One is a reduction in our exposure to pesticides. The second is a reduction in exposure to cadmium, a highly toxic metal which has accumulated in conventional soils after long-term applications of mineral phosphorus fertiliser. The third is a reduction in exposure to livestock treated routinely with antibiotics to which emerging anti-biotic resistance in pathogenic microbes is directly linked.

A number of policy suggestions were put forward including:
  • Advisories aimed at pregnant women and children to prefer organic products
  • Development of our existing organic agriculture capacity as a laboratory for sustainable and healthy agricultural practise, to include new plant protection methods and animal breeds which are disease-resistant and robust while remaining productive
  • Fiscal instruments to add the cost of cadmium exposure, pesticide residues and anti-biotic resistant bacteria to the price of fertilisers, plants protection products, and anti-biotic drugs
  • Promote a shift to a healthier and more sustainable diet; for example, more plant, less meat, and organic standards for food processing which exclude artificial additives in favour of biological, mechanical and physical processing methods


OUR COMMENT


Organic food has always been the bogey-man for GM. All current commercial GM crops are hoaching with agri-chemicals and self-generated insecticides. Most of them are grown to feed those same animals which need so many anti-biotics that they're generating anti-biotic resistant bugs. GM crops are also feeding the processed junk-food industry which makes all that stuff people who favour organic food and healthy life-styles avoid.

On the subject of pesticide residues in food, even National Farmers' Union advisers on the matter agree that 

"our understanding in these areas is limited, the evidence is not conclusive, and the significance of the latest findings for public safety is unclear". 
Industry has been very adept at turning this lack of knowledge and understanding into 'no evidence of harm' and therefore 'evidence of safety'.

Industry will be as adept at sweeping the European Parliament review of "Human health implications of organic food and organic agriculture" under the carpet if you let it: keep it in the regulatory awareness.


Note.

Definitions of "conventional" and "organic" agriculture used in the review:
  • "Conventional" - generally refers to the predominant type of intensive agriculture in the European Union i.e. intensive agriculture with high inputs of synthetic pesticides and mineral fertilisers, and a high use of antibiotic drugs as well as a high proportion of conventionally produced concentrated feed in animal production.
  • "Organic" ' refers to farming that is in accordance with EU regulations or similar standards for organic production, comprising the use of organic fertilisers such as farmyard and green manure, a predominant reliance on ecosystem services and non-chemical measures for pest prevention and control, and livestock access to open air and roughage feed.
SOURCES:

  • Human health implications of organic food and organic agriculture, December 2016
  • Laura Donnelly, Organic foods backed by landmark report - warning pesticides are far more dangerous than was thought, Telegraph, 2.06.17
Photo: Creative Commons

No comments:

Post a Comment

Thanks for your comment. All comments are moderated before they are published.