The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Families urged to avoid chemicals in food, plastic

Limit container use, eat more veggies and fruit, docs say.

- Roni Caryn Rabin ©2018 The New York Times

A major pediatrici­ans’ group is urging families to limit the use of plastic food containers, cut down on processed meat during pregnancy and consume more whole fruits and vegetables rather than processed food. Such measures would lower children’s exposures to chemicals in food and food packaging that are tied to health problems such as obesity, the group says.

The American Academy of Pediatrics issued the guidelines in a statement and scientific technical report Monday. The group joins other medical and advocacy groups that have expressed concern about the growing body of scientific evidence indicating that certain chemicals that enter foods may interfere with the body’s natural hormones in ways that may affect long-term growth and developmen­t.

The pediatrici­ans’ group, which represents some 67,000 children’s doctors in the country, is also calling for more rigorous testing and regulation of thousands of chemicals used as food additives or indirectly added to foods when they are used in manufactur­ing or leach from packaging and plastics.

Among the chemicals that raised particular concern are nitrates and nitrites, which are used as preservati­ves, primarily in meat products; phthalates, which are used to make plastic packaging; and bisphenols, used in the lin- ing of metal cans for canned food products. Also of con- cern to the pediatrici­ans are perfluoroa­lkyl chemicals, or PFCs, used in grease-proof paper and packaging, and perchlorat­es, an anti-static agent used in plastic packaging.

“The good news is there are safe and simple steps peo- ple can take right now to limit exposures, and they don’t have to break the bank,” said Dr. Leonardo Trasande, the lead author of the state- ment and chief of the divi- sion of environmen­tal pediatrics at New York Univer- sity’s School of Medicine.

“Avoiding canned food is a great way to reduce your bisphenol exposure in general, and avoiding packaged and processed food is a good way to avoid phthalates expo- sures,” Trasande said. He also suggested wrapping foods in wax paper in lieu of plastic wrap.

Jonathan Corley, a spokesman for the American Chemistry Council, a trade associatio­n, said: “Chemicals are critical to protecting the quality and integrity of food, help in the safe transporta- tion and storage of food.” He said that many of the chemicals referred to in the AAP statement did not act as endocrine disrupters “in typical uses and at typical exposure levels,” but did not provide scientific references to support that contention.

In a separate developmen­t Monday, scientists at th e University of California, San Francisco, who used a novel method for scanning blood said they had found dozens of chemicals called envi- ronmental organic acids, or EOAs, in pregnant women.

EOAs, which include bisphenol-A, have chemi- cal structures similar to hormones, meaning they may disrupt the endocrine system of the fetus and interfere with developmen­t. Researcher­s involved in the study, published in the journal Envi- ronmental Health Perspectiv­es, said some of the chemicals had never before been documented in the blood of pregnant women, including two chemicals that are linked to genetic defects, fetal dam- age and cancer.

Among the other chemicals detected in the pregnant women were an estrogenic compound used in food-related plastic products, plastic pipes and water bottles, as well as a compound banned for use as a diet drug by the Food and Drug Administra­tion decades agos but still used in cosmetics and pesti- cides, said Aolin Wang, one of the study’s authors.

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? Diets should have less processed food and more natural items like fruits and vegetables, report says.
DREAMSTIME Diets should have less processed food and more natural items like fruits and vegetables, report says.

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