Intro: "I first heard about a new Stanford 'study' downplaying the value of organics when this blog headline cried out from my inbox: 'Expensive organic food isn't healthier and no safer than produce grown with pesticides, finds biggest study of its kind.' ... What?"
Consumption of organic foods reduces exposure to pesticide residues and antibiotic-resistant bacteria. (photo: Kid's Life)
Stanford Scientists Shockingly Reckless on Health Risk and Organics
07 September 12
first heard about a new Stanford "study" downplaying the value of organics when this blog headline cried out from my inbox: "Expensive organic food isn't healthier and no safer than produce grown with pesticides, finds biggest study of its kind."
What?
Does the actual study say this?
No, but authors of the study - "Are Organic Foods Safer or Healthier Than Conventional Alternatives? A Systematic Review" - surely are responsible for its misinterpretation and more. Their study actually reports that ¨Consumption of organic foods may reduce exposure to pesticide residues and antibiotic-resistant bacteria."
The authors' tentative wording - "may reduce" - belies their own data: The report's opening statement says the tested organic produce carried a 30 percent lower risk of exposure to pesticide residues. And, the report itself also says that "detectable pesticide residues were found in 7% of organic produce samples...and 38% of conventional produce samples." Isn't that's a greater than 80% exposure reduction?
In any case, the Stanford report's unorthodox measure "makes little practical or clinical sense," notes Charles Benbrook - formerly Executive Director, Board on Agriculture of the National Academy of Sciences: What people "should be concerned about [is]... not just the number of [pesticide] residues they are exposed to" but the "health risk they face." Benbrook notes "a 94% reduction in health risk" from pesticides when eating organic foods.
Assessing pesticide-driven health risks weighs the toxicity of the particular pesticide. For example the widely-used pesticide atrazine, banned in Europe, is known to be "a risk factor in endocrine disruption in wildlife and reproductive cancers in laboratory rodents and humans."
"Very few studies" included by the Stanford researchers, notes Benbrook, "are designed or conducted in a way that could isolate the impact or contribution of a switch to organic food from the many other factors that influence a given individual's health." They "would be very expensive, and to date, none have been carried out in the U.S." [emphasis added].
In other words, simple prudence should have prevented these scientists from using "evidence" not designed to capture what they wanted to know.
Moreover, buried in the Stanford study is this all-critical fact: It includes no long-term studies of people consuming organic compared to chemically produced food: The studies included ranged from just two days to two years. Yet, it is well established that chemical exposure often takes decades to show up, for example, in cancer or neurological disorders.
Consider these studies not included: The New York Times notes three 2011 studies by scientists at Columbia University, the University of California, Berkeley, and Mount Sinai Hospital in Manhattan that studied pregnant women exposed to higher amounts of an organophosphate pesticide. Once their children reached elementary school they "had, on average, I.Q.'s several points lower than those of their peers."
Thus, it is reprehensible for the authors of this overview to even leave open to possible interpretation that their compilation of short-term studies can determine anything about the human-health impact of pesticides.
What also disturbs me is that neither in their journal article nor in media interviews do the Stanford authors suggest that concern about "safer and healthier" might extend beyond consumers to the people who grow our food. They have health concerns, too!
Many choose organic to decrease chemicals in food production because of the horrific consequences farm workers and farmers suffer from pesticide exposure. U.S. farming communities are shown to be afflicted with, for example, higher rates of: "leukemia, non-Hodgkin lymphoma, multiple myeloma, and soft tissue sarcoma" - in addition to skin, lip, stomach, brain and prostate cancers," reports the National Cancer Institute. And, at a global level, "an estimated 3 million acute pesticide poisonings occur worldwide each year," reports the World Health Organization. Another health hazard of pesticides, not hinted at in the report, comes from water contamination by pesticides. They have made the water supply for 4.3 million Americans unsafe for drinking.
Finally, are organic foods more nutritious?
In their report, Crystal Smith-Spangler, MD, and co-authors say only that "published literature lacks strong evidence that organic foods are significantly more nutritious than conventional foods." Yet, the most comprehensive meta-analysis comparing organic and non-organic, led by scientist Kirsten Brandt, a Scientist at the Human Nutrition Research Center at the UK's Newcastle University found organic fruits and vegetables, to have on "average 12% higher nutrient levels."
Bottom line for me? What we do know is that the rates of critical illnesses, many food-related -from allergies to Crohn's Disease - are spiking and no one knows why. What we do know is that pesticide poisoning is real and lethal - and not just for humans. In such a world is it not the height of irresponsibility to downplay the risks of exposure to known toxins?
Rachel Carson would be crying. Or, I hope, shouting until - finally - we all listen. "Simple precaution! Is that not commonsense?"
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The money for this publication comes from it's readers and I do not feel the least bit shady. The money for the Stanford study was from Cargill. definitely shady.
It is up to us to use our brains...most of us came from grandparents, parents that made us wash our hands our veggies, fruits.
I remember my aunt getting us out of the area when overhead fruit orchard sprays happened. Now we played in those orchards and on more than one occassion ate the fruit after wiping it off on shirts, but again we played in the orchard.
We are consumers, many consumers have always been manipulated as they are now by the areas where they live. Walmart doesn't not care what it sells but it has to destroy local markets. The other stores in poor neighborhoods have sold the consumers there some very bad food.
No one cared. They knew no better, they needed to feed the family and for cheap.
Those mega boxes that are store brand, they are not the best quality, it is usually seconds or thirds. I hear less about rats in my area food stores packaging than I do in the poor part of town, I am talking cans.
We could make a difference, many are trying to....don't believe all you read or hear. Always Question Authority
Got it. Main author has deep ties to Cargill and Big Tobacco.
http://www.infowars.com/busted-co-author-of-flawed-stanford-organic-study-has-deep-ties-to-big-tobaccos-anti-science-propaganda/
What it comes down to, 1950's we proved the chemical corporations to be wrong in selling farmers, orchard growers that ddt and other toxins were necessary. They were Poison then, they are poison today.
I do not care whose report or where it came from. Chemicals are Poison, so are many natural weeds. Read, learn ....
]Study in NY when the gentleman pursued growing food in lot for people, that their doctor visit reports had improved. Schools said that children's mental aptitude had gotten better. I believe in results. I have seen what chemicals do to people. When you need ten pages of side affects and warnings that some law firm had the Corporation put on the can, bag or jar...it is time to leave it on the shelf.
You know what gets rid of bugs...birds and bats. You know what gets rid of weeds, some work. You know what makes a plant grow better...winter reading.
Buy Locally, contact Local Harvest and find farmers who care near you
We lived thru ddt sprays. Now I fight the mosquito sprays as they kill the good insect and leave residuals for birds and aquatic.
Want to see things get better...get involved
So all the manipulative, toxic and un-natural stuff that Monsanto, Cargill and their ilk are doing to crops and other entities is just hunky-dory, and Natural food stores, Farmer's Markets and growing your own are just a hobbyist's waste of energy and we should just give up any scrutiny or oversight and fatten the wallets of the Corporate Toxin-mongers without question?
I think not!
Wonder who "sponsored" these alleged studies? Now THAT would be truly illuminating!
Maybe when we start growin' gills, scales and extra limbs, like many critters that are now being discovered as "collateral damage" from corporate waste dumping, "studies will show"-----???!! !
chemical companies have been stored in archives. Students with projects look them up, perhaps someone studying for a doctorate.
Most people thought the bad spraying was over...but no one in poor neighborhoods have access to what we here do. They have to buy to feed at cheap costs. They do not see the harm. If they or their kids get sick, well what else is new.
People have been making strides for decades but with econommy at all time low, average person is not going to pay $4.50 a doze for eggs for a family of four. In fact I think it a disgrace to charge that much Most good farmers got around $2.00 The others are just rip offs. Feed costs but my chickens free range, and that helps keep price lower in spring, summer and fall. Come winter I do have to improvise.
Why do the beef, chicken have to be $7 to $14 a pound? Because they grazed on fields that were not chemicalized... that saves money. Feed does cost, oil, gas, maintenance costs however, I have seen the new Yuppies come in to do organic thing now...and are doubling prices.
Sorry but most middle class and poor cannot afford those prices.
I wonder if the local organic has one hundred customers today in a month goes to five hundred Will they drop their prices? I think not, so basic organic growers like myself let the Yuppies have their fad, but they are still feeding Chemical Corporations Who use these studies
Aunt Tom, some 20 years ago, I met someone who'd resigned from a chemical/pharma ceutical multinational after accidentally receiving a top-level memo which said:
"WE CAN'T LOSE. IF OUR PESTICIDES CAUSE CANCERS, IT WILL INCREASE DEMAND FOR OUR PHARMACEUTICALS DIVISION'S EXPENSIVE CHEMOTHERAPY DRUGS."
I just know that given the choice I normally buy organic, grow organic Now more than ever with imported from China for me and my pets..
I know people who drink, smoke, eat crap and are living to be 70 and 80
I was told as a kid Chemicals Kill. I was grabbed up and taken away when overhead spraying was done. I have a choice...I grow heirloom, I try to watch everything I eat. Soon I will again be making all my pasta and breads...
Hmmmm. One REALLY wonders who funded this study now doesn’t one…
Gardener's supply has non chemical weapons. and Rodale has excellent tips on what to use ...like good ol garlic and onion. I myself love 'food grade diamaceous earth' You pick it and can eat it with just a rinse. The DE acts like a shredder to soft bellied insects. None of the above hurts birds or aquatics. Lost of good insite on web on organic growing and tips. No fertilizers.
Bias, bias, bias all the way to the bank.
Won't be sending my kids to Stanford!
I have yet to eat beeft hat is worth $4.00 pound no less organic $10 to 14 That is shameful. We had cooperative and we got food and shared between members at just enough above cost to keep rent, gas. Now the Organic Fadists see opportunity to make money and they are getting a bit of the opposite sides disagreement.
If we are to feed the world, then we must share our seeds, share our knowledge that is how we keep Monsanto et al out. For Organic Growers to double their price...they cannot get to the middle and poor class Walmart et al are counting on it as they sell GMO Corn
We have to get organics to come to realize that their Yuppie values are that of the 1% not the 99% We are the Consumers....really.
major Food Corporations take things out...corn syrup, sugar, salt and charge more. Organic allow their animals to ;free range', they grow cover crops to maintain extra forage..both do, but you are paying double to triple for chicken, beef etc than the commercial grower Why?
Both have to have licenses, insurance, costs to maintain farm, equipment, feed, water. So if someone unemployed wants to feed their family of four kids are they going to buy $4.50 dozen eggs or $1.00? Same with beef or chicken, I know where they are going to the sale items and buy bulk.
Get involved, get more community gardens going esp at nursing homes.
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