Wednesday, March 03, 2010



I love it! EVERYTHING is bad for you!

Fruit juice cancer warning as scientists find harmful chemical in 16 drinks. But is it at harmful levels? Probably not -- but the report is enough to scare people

Fruit juices drunk by millions of children each day could contain a harmful chemical linked to cancer, scientists have warned. Researchers have found high levels of antimony - which can be lethal in large doses - in many popular brands. Scientists from the University of Copenhagen found that bottles of fruit juice and squash contained up to 2.5 times more of the substance as is deemed 'safe' in tap water, under EU guidelines. In some cases the levels of antimony were ten times higher.

The scientists believe that the chemical is leaching its way into the fruit juice from the plastic bottles which hold it. Previous research found traces of the chemical in bottled mineral water which experts believed was leaching in from the plastic container. The team has expressed 'concern' over their findings, published by the Royal Society of Chemistry, which they say raises fears for the health of millions of children. They have called for an investigation 'straight away'. The substance can cause cancer, heart and lung problems, according to previous studies.

Although the scientists have not specifically named any brands, the chemicals are believed to have been found in 16 of the most popular blackcurrant and strawberry squash and fruit drinks consumed by children.

Claus Hansen, a PhD student at the department of pharmacology, who took part in the research, speculated that the citric acid in the fruit juices could speed up the leaching process. He said: 'The antimony concentrations in the products tested exceed the limit of drinking water but no legalisation exists for foodstuffs so no legislation has been broken. 'However we cannot be sure that the antimony levels are harmless. 'It would be a good idea to have some more research to get a better impression of what the antimony limit should be in fruit drinks. 'You would have to drink a lot of blackcurrant juice to go beyond the recommended maximum dose which is why there's no antimony limits for drinking water or soft drinks. 'But we can't be sure the high level we found is not harmful.'

The Royal Society of Chemistry added: 'Marketing, certainly for the cordial products, is geared towards children. It's a children's drink. 'This means they are more likely to drink it and more likely to be at risk.'

The scientists looked at 42 different red fruit juice drinks from Denmark, Scotland and Greece including blackcurrant, strawberry, raspberry and sour cherry and found concentrations 17 times higher than previously studied.

The report, published in the Journal of Environmental Monitoring, said that more research was needed to find out whether it was present during the manufacturing process. Previous research in Germany in 2006 found antimony was leaching into bottled mineral waters from their plastic containers. In 2005 Volvic mineral water was at the centre of a health scare after a potentially harmful chemical was found in some of its bottles.

Danone Waters, which produces Volvic, launched an investigation after a mother of two reported a strong 'burning' chemical taste to the Food Standards Agency. It found the water, which is advertised as being filtered through volcanic rocks, contained naphthalene – a chemical which can cause liver damage in high doses.

Responding to the research, the British Soft Drinks Association today defended the industry. 'Fruit juices and juice drinks are safe,' said a spokesman. 'There is no read across between the levels of antimony permitted in drinking water and those that might be acceptable in a fruit juice or a juice drink. 'It is not uncommon that different product types should have different regulatory requirements.' He added: 'The packaging is safe. The data in the study does not confirm any conclusions about the packaging: the authors themselves conclude that "further studies are warranted".' 'All ingredients and packaging are carefully regulated to make sure that soft drinks are safe to drink.'

Source






Permitstan

Micro-regulation is tyranny with extra paperwork. With its uncanny ability to prioritize, California, land of Golden Statism for unionized bureaucrats, is cracking down on complimentary coffee. From John Stossel:

For 15 years, the B & B Do it Center, a local hardware store in the small California town of Camarillo, has been putting out coffee and doughnuts for its morning customers. Actually longer, says owner Randy Collins; the previous owner did it too. Customers liked the courtesy, but . . . well, you know where this is going.

Indeed.

Inspectors told Collins that unless he was willing to install stainless-steel sinks with hot and cold water and have a prep kitchen to handle the food, he was violating the law. . . . “What some establishments do is hire a mobile food preparation services or in some cases a coffee service,” said Huff. “Those establishments have permits.”

In California, what doesn't? Stossel adds: "It’s amazing that they still allow people to have children without permits."

Actually, in Nanny State Britain, they're almost there.

SOURCE (See the original for links)

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Actually, what the researchers did was ignore the European regulations for food packaging, which do place a limit on antimony migration. The limit is based on the latest WHO assessment for drinking water. All samples were below that limit except for the one that was past its expiration date.

Either the researchers ignored it on purpose order to get their fear mongering headlines, or they are incompetent. Take your pick.