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The
global scientific community has constantly acknowledged
the negative and at times long lasting effects of small
doses of pesticides and other agricultural chemicals on
people, especially during the early stages of development
as a fetus and during infancy. These pesticides and other
agricultural chemicals release toxins into our systems
whose effects are still being studied and about which the
scientific community finds little consensus due to the
lobbying activities of some of the great multinational
corporations, whose businesses might be negatively
affected in case all the scientific evidence comes to
light.
In order
not to get caught up in this debate about how negative the
toxins are, why not try to avoid them? As such, for all
members of your family, you will find below some reasons
(culled from Everything I Need to Know about Organic
Foods) why you and especially your children should join
the tide and get on the organic train.
Is organic food the best?
Yes, there is no doubt about it. Food that is grown
organically is free from all the toxins that are used
commonly in conventional farming practices. Examples of
such toxins include pesticides (some of which have been
classified by the federal authorities as carcinogenic),
solvents such as benzene and toluene, and some heavy
metals such as lead and mercury. Evidence from the
scientific community has shown that:
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Solvents damage our white blood cells and in so doing
reduce our immune system's ability to resist and fight
infections;
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Heavy
metals damage nerve function, leading to diseases like
multiple sclerosis and the lowering of one’s IQ. They
also block hemoglobin production leading to anemia.
As such,
while eliminating our exposure to these dangerous
substances, organically grown foods contain higher levels
of nutrients, vitamins, and minerals.
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How organic foods contribute to our child’s health?
In two separate reports, both the Natural Resources
Defense Council (1989) and the Environmental Working Group
(1998) found that millions of American children are
exposed to levels of pesticides through their food that
surpass limits considered to be safe. Some of these
pesticides are known to contain neurotoxins. Neurotoxins
have the ability to cause harm to the developing brain and
nervous system. Additionally, some researchers feel that
children and adolescents may be especially vulnerable to
the cancer-causing effects of certain pesticides since the
body is more sensitive to the impact of these materials
during periods of high growth rates and breast
development.
The
concern for the effects of agricultural chemicals on
children's health seems so evident that even the U.S.
government has taken steps to protect our nation's young.
In 1996, Congress passed the Food Quality Protection Act
requiring that all pesticides applied to foods be safe for
infants and children. Organic foods that are strictly
controlled for substances harmful to health can play a
major role in assuring the health of our children.
Eating organic significantly reduces our children’s
exposure to organophosphate pesticides
Eating organic foods provides children with “dramatic and
immediate” protection from exposure to two organophosphate
pesticides that have been linked to harmful neurological
effects in animals and humans, shows a study funded by the
US Environmental Protection Agency and published in the
September 2005 issue of Environmental Health Perspective.
The pesticides – malathion and chlorpyrifos – which have
been restricted or banned for home use, are widely used on
a variety of crops, and according to the annual survey by
the U.S. Department of Agriculture Pesticides Data
Program, residues of these organophosphate pesticides are
still detected in common food items usually by young
children.
Are organic foods more superior to conventionally grown
foods?
Yes, and significantly more. Proof of their superiority
has been demonstrated in numerous studies. In 1998, a
review of 34 studies comparing the nutritional content of
organic versus non-organic food was published in the
peer-reviewed, MEDLINE-indexed journal Alternative
Therapies (Volume 4, No. 1, pgs. 58-69). In this review,
organic food was found to have higher protein quality in
all comparisons, higher levels of vitamin C in 58 % of all
studies, 5 – 20% higher mineral levels for all but two
minerals. In some cases, the mineral levels were
dramatically higher in organically-grown foods – as much
as three times higher in one study involving iron content.
Organic
foods may also contain more flavonoids than conventionally
grown foods, according to Danish research published in the
August 2003 issue of the Journal of Agricultural and Food
Chemistry. Results indicated a significantly higher
content of the flavonoid quercitin in the organic produce
compared to the conventionally grown diet.
A review
of 41 studies comparing the nutritional value of
organically to conventionally grown fruits, vegetables and
grains, also indicates organic crops provide substantially
more of several nutrients, including:
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27.0 %
more vitamin C
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21.1 %
more iron
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29.3 %
more magnesium
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13.6 %
more phosphorus
What substances do we avoid by eating organic food?
Over 3,000 high-risk toxins routinely present in the U.S.
food supply are, by law, excluded from organic food,
including:
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Pesticides:
By far the largest groups of toxins to be largely
prohibited from organically grown foods are synthetic
pesticides, which are found virtually everywhere else in
the food supply. Several hundred different chemicals and
several thousand brand-name pesticide products are
legally used in commercial food production in the U.S.
Act of 1992; the Environmental Protection Agency had
classified 73 pesticides authorized for agricultural use
as potential carcinogens (cancer-causing agents). And
pesticides don't just remain where they are applied. A
1996 study by the Environmental Working Group found 96%
of all water samples taken from 748 towns across the
U.S. contained the pesticide atrazine, and at least 20
different chemical pesticides are routinely present in
municipal tap water across the U.S.
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Heavy metals:
The toxic metals cadmium, lead, and mercury enter the
food supply through industrial pollution of soil and
groundwater and through machinery used in food
processing and packaging. Cadmium, which can be
concentrated in plant tissues at levels higher than
those in soils, has been linked to lung, prostate and
testicular cancers. Despite lead's long-recognized
serious adverse impact on health, especially that of
young children, lead solder is still used to seal tin
cans, imparting the lead residues found in many canned
foods. Even low levels of lead are harmful and are
associated with decreased intelligence, impaired
neurobehavioral development, decreased stature and
growth, and impaired hearing. Mercury is toxic to brain
cells and has been linked to autism and Alzheimer's
disease.
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Solvents:
Used to dissolve food components and produce food
additives, solvents are also virtually omnipresent in
commercially processed food. Solvents, such as benzene
and toluene have been linked to numerous cancers.
Benzene, specifically, has been repeatedly associated
with rheumatoid arthritis – an auto-immune condition
involving pain and degeneration in the joints that
affects over 2 million adults in the U.S.
Not only
are these toxic substances harmful singly, but when
combined, as they are in commercially grown and processed
food, and in the human body where they accumulate, their
effects have been found to be magnified as much as a
1000-fold.
The
message is quite clear, to minimize your child’s exposure
to pesticides and other toxins, ALWAYS CHOOSE AND CONSUME
ORGANIC. |