Iran Daily

Study: High concentrat­ions of heavy metals found in baby foods

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Two-thirds of the baby foods tested by Consumer Reports had a troubling cadmium, inorganic arsenic or lead content, a study by the review company showed.

The non-government­al organizati­on tested 50 brand name baby foods and found ‘worrisome’ levels of heavy metals in 68 percent of those tested. Ingesting the metals can, over time, impair cognitive function in babies and children, upi.com reported.

Cadmium, arsenic and lead are regarded, with mercury, as the most harmful to health.

The report said every product tested had a measurable level of at least one heavy metal, and 15 of the 50 tested could pose health risks to a child regularly eating just one serving per day.

The study also noted foods containing rice or sweet potatoes were especially likely to have high metal levels, and organic foods were as likely to contain heavy metals as convention­al foods.

Consumer Reports said most of the tested food was made by Gerber and Beech-nut, the industry’s two largest manufactur­ers.

A separate examinatio­n by another testing firm last year reported 80 percent of 530 infant formulas tested contained contaminan­ts.

Over 90 percent of parents with children three and under rely on the tested foods, at least occasional­ly, the report said. Sales of baby food top about $50 billion annually, and that amount could reach $76 billion by 2021.

The report noted the metals in question are part of the environmen­t, and humans require trace amounts to survive. However, human activities like pesticide applicatio­n, runoffs from mining and the use of leaded gasoline can pollute the environmen­t and lead to greater contaminat­ion in plants used for food.

 ??  ?? STEPHEN SHAVER/UPI
STEPHEN SHAVER/UPI

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