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Tag: Cadmium

  • Should You Skip Dark Chocolate This Valentine’s Day?

    Should You Skip Dark Chocolate This Valentine’s Day?

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    Feb. 14, 2023 — Dark chocolate is rich. It’s intense. Some believe it’s an aphrodisiac. Plus, it has numerous proven health benefits. A box of smooth, luscious bonbons seems like just the thing to give your Valentine. But recent headlines may have you rethinking that sweet, sexy gift. Here’s what you should know.

    Towards the end of last year, Consumer Reports announced they’d tested 28 different dark chocolate bars — and found lead and cadmium in every one of them. 

    “I was devastated,” says Taryn FitzGerald. The Brooklyn-based artist and healer has been enjoying dark chocolate for years and enjoys a “tiny little square” each night. “Dark chocolate is one of my passions. It has a lot of health benefits.”

    What the Report Said

    The presence of cadmium and lead in dark chocolate isn’t news. Environmental health watchdog group As You Sow sued a group of chocolate makers over it several years ago. As part of the settlement, researchers studied how heavy metals contaminate cacao beans, dark chocolate’s main ingredient. Their report came out in August of last year. It found that cadmium enters the beans from the soil where they grow, while lead contamination occurs during chocolate processing. 

    Consumer Reports wanted to test the current in-store reality and provide new details.

    “There are always new products, or reformulation of food products,” says Jim Rogers, PhD, Consumer Reports’ director of food safety research. “We might think we know a lot about food — that may or may not be true.”

    The organization tested bars from big companies like Dove, Hershey’s, and Trader Joe’s as well as smaller ones like Tony’s Chocolonely and Mast Brothers, some grown conventionally and some organic. There are no federal limits for lead and cadmium content in food, so they set their threshold at California’s maximum allowable dose level for each. 

    “We use what we consider health protective standards,” Rogers says. “We always say no level of lead is safe, right? We want that to be as close to zero as possible in all food products.”

    Testing looked at how much of these metals would be found in a single, 1-ounce serving. Of the 28 bars tested, Consumer Reports found that 23 provide a potentially harmful dose of at least one. 

    Eight bars had more than 100% of the allowable limit for cadmium, 10 surpassed the level for lead, and another five exceeded both. Some had more than twice the maximum amount of one metal or the other. For instance, a one-ounce square of Lindt Excellence Dark Chocolate 85% Cocoa — the bar FitzGerald ate every night for years — contains 166% of the allowable limit for lead and 80% for cadmium.

    Consumer Reports’ “safer choices” list includes just five bars with levels below 100% of both metals. None were completely lead- or cadmium-free.

    The National Confectioners Association issued a statement in response to the findings: “The products cited in this study are in compliance with strict quality and safety requirements, and the levels provided to us by Consumer Reports testing are well under the limits established by our settlement.”

    The Health Risks of Heavy Metals

    Both cadmium and lead are naturally occurring elements found in soil and elsewhere in the environment. But just because they’re natural, it doesn’t mean they’re good for you.

    “Some heavy metals really don’t have a function in your body. They don’t need to be there, and some of them accumulate,” says Katarzyna Kordas, PhD, asssociate professor of epidemiology and environmental health at the University at Buffalo School of Public Health. “These metals are not a joke. We want to have as little of them as possible in our environment, which includes food.”

    Once absorbed, cadmium stays in your body for decades. It’s known to cause cancer, and it can cause kidney damage and weaken your bones. Among other things, lead targets your respiratory and gastrointestinal tracts, your nervous system, and your kidneys. 

    The accumulation of these metals in your body is what makes them so dangerous. And dark chocolate is far from the only source we eat. The FDA’s Total Diet Study monitors both nutrients and contaminants in thousands of foods. Researchers found cadmium in 61% of the samples tested, and lead in 15%. 

    Because cadmium is in soil, some of the highest food concentrations appear in plants, like spinach and root vegetables. Lead tends to enter the food chain during manufacturing, so it shows up in things like baby food and sandwich cookies. It’s virtually impossible to avoid these two metals completely.

    “I suspect all foods have this stuff,” says Marion Nestle, PhD, who studies and writes about our food systems. “When they do test, they find heavy metals in astonishing proportions. It’s like with pesticides — everyone has them.” 

    The challenge, then, is to limit your exposure. 

    One obvious solution would be to give up dark chocolate (and spinach) entirely, no matter how many other benefits it offers. But nobody’s saying you should cut out all food known to have cadmium or lead. That might backfire.

    “The risk of eliminating a food that’s high in nutrients,” Kordas says, “could potentially be as bad as eating something that has some contaminants.”

    Chocolatiers Can Reduce Heavy Metals

    Because cadmium and lead get into chocolate in different ways, no single solution will address the problem. Instead, experts recommend a handful of steps cacao growers and chocolate makers can take, both right away and in the future.

    To reduce cadmium, which cacao plants absorb from the soil:

    • Purchase beans with lower levels. Soil contamination varies by region and even by farm, with some Latin American countries having the highest levels and African countries the lowest. Chocolate makers can choose to buy beans from areas with less contamination.
    • Blend bean harvests. If a chocolatier combines cacao from different regions with varying levels of contamination, it moderates the overall levels. Some chocolate makers already do this. One of them, Tazo, has a bar on Consumer Reports “safer choices” list.
    • Add balancing substances to the soil. If growers change the makeup of the soil itself, that can make it harder for plants to absorb cadmium.

    For lead, which can contaminate cacao beans at several points during harvesting and manufacturing, the changes may be easier to undertake — some could show results within a year of implementation. They focus on reducing the beans’ exposure to lead along the journey from soil to store.

    How to Choose Safer Chocolate

    It should be obvious by now: You don’t have to remove dark chocolate from your life, though you may choose to. Every person’s risk is different, based on your health history and what else you eat. Experts do, however, recommend that pregnant people and children avoid dark chocolate.

    Here’s what you can do to lower your exposure:

    • Eat less chocolate. If you don’t want to give it up, just don’t make dark chocolate an everyday thing. “We think that our findings and other findings are important enough to make recommendations of reducing your consumption of dark chocolates,” Rogers says. 
    • Variety, variety, variety. Just as manufacturers can reduce risk by mixing bean harvests, you can protect yourself by eating different brands and types of chocolate. Dark chocolates with lower percentages of cacao, in the 65-70% range, seem to have lower levels of cadmium and lead. Milk chocolate uses even less cacao, which means diminished amounts of heavy metals. “Never eat the same chocolate over and over,” Nestle says. “This is true for every food — the more variation you have in what you eat, the more likely you are to get the nutrients you need and avoid what’s not good for you.”
    • Boost your iron and calcium. Your body absorbs cadmium in the same way it does iron and calcium, two metals you actually need. If your diet doesn’t provide enough of them, it can let more cadmium enter your system. “One reason the CDC recommends a diet rich in calcium and iron is that it’s one way to prevent the accumulation of lead in children,” Kordas says.
    • Become an informed consumer. If you’re concerned about your risk, Rogers suggests reaching out to your favorite chocolate makers. Ask what their own testing shows. “Good companies will know what’s going on with their product,” he says. 

    FitzGerald hasn’t eaten her favorite chocolate since Consumer Reports’ research came out. She’s glad to know she might not have to stop enjoying her nightly treat altogether. 

    “I’m going to start exploring other brands,” she says, “and also, just see how I do without chocolate.”

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  • New FDA guidelines call for reducing — but not eliminating — lead in baby food

    New FDA guidelines call for reducing — but not eliminating — lead in baby food

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    The Food and Drug Administration released draft guidelines Tuesday that detail the maximum amount of lead that can be found in baby food products, and is part of the organization’s Closer to Zero initiative aiming to reduce childhood exposure to harmful contaminants in food. 

    “The proposed action levels would result in significant reductions in exposures to lead from food while ensuring availability of nutritious foods,” said the FDA on Twitter.

    Prolonged exposure to lead may result in “learning disabilities, behavior difficulties, and lowered IQ,” as well “immunological, cardiovascular, renal, and reproductive and/or developmental effects,” said the FDA in the report, while explaining that lead is “widely present” in the environment both naturally, and in part due to human activities.

    “Because lead may be present in environments where food crops used to make food intended for babies and young children are grown, various foods may contain small amounts of lead,” said the FDA. “Potential sources of lead in food include contaminated soil where crops are grown, contaminated water, atmospheric deposition from industrial activities, and old lead-containing equipment used to process food.”

    There is no truly safe level of lead, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics.

    “Today’s announcement to set tougher standards for toxic metals in baby foods is important progress by the FDA,” Scott Faber, senior vice president of government affairs at the nonprofit Environmental Working Group, said in a statement

    The new guidance — which is not mandatory for food manufacturers — outlines the following amounts as being acceptable in baby food for children under the age of two:

    • 10 parts per billion, or ppb, for fruits, vegetables (excluding single-ingredient root vegetables), mixtures (including grain and meat-based mixtures), yogurts, custards/puddings, and single-ingredient meats;
    • 20 ppb for root vegetables (single ingredient); and
    • 20 ppb for dry infant cereals.

    “The purpose of this guidance is to provide information to industry on the action levels for lead in food intended for babies and young children,” said the FDA in the guidance.

    “…our Closer to Zero action plan outlines other actions we will take to further reduce lead (as well as other toxic elements) in food and our expectation is that industry will strive for continual reductions over time.”

    The plan does not enumerate new guidelines or plans of reduction for other toxic chemicals found in baby food, such as cadmium, arsenic or mercury. 

    “The action levels released today for lead, the first toxic heavy metal the agency is addressing, are not enough to protect the next generation of babies from harmful heavy metals in their food,” read a statement from advocacy organization Healthy Babies Bright Futures.

    The group also pointed out that the FDA’s new regulations do not apply to teething biscuits, which its studies have shown account for seven of the 10 highest lead levels in the more than 1,000 food tests the organization has conducted.

    Young mother grocery shopping
    Young mother grocery shopping

    d3sign / Getty Images


    “These proposed action levels don’t do enough to get us closer to zero,” said Charlotte Brody, the organization’s national director.

    “The action levels released by the FDA today for the most part put a rubber stamp on the status quo — signifying that the current levels of lead in baby food are ‘close enough.’ Why has the FDA’s Closer to Zero program spent years to create proposed guidance that won’t do enough to make baby food safer?”

    Jane Houlihan, the group’s research director, told CBS News, “As it stands, it appears that FDA is choosing round numbers it thinks the industry can easily meet. But there are plenty of actions companies can take to lower levels, from testing and choosing fields with lower soil lead levels, to adjusting soil additives and choosing crop varieties that accumulate less lead.”

    “We’ve seen with infant rice cereal and apple juice (two foods with arsenic and/or lead limits in place already) that when FDA issues action levels, industry can significantly reduce the amounts of these toxic metals in their products,” Houlihan said.

    According to an analysis commissioned by the group, children under two years of age in the U.S. lose over 11 million IQ points from exposure to heavy metals in food.

    Last year, an HBBF study found that 94% of manufactured baby foods, family foods and homemade purees made from purchased raw foods contained detectable amounts of one or more heavy metals — lead, arsenic, mercury and cadmium.

    Lead was also found in 90% of manufactured baby food, 80% of store-bought family food and homemade purees. 

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  • Heavy metals found in dark chocolate including Trader Joe’s and Hershey’s

    Heavy metals found in dark chocolate including Trader Joe’s and Hershey’s

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    Long viewed as healthier than other sweet treats, some brands of dark chocolate contain potentially dangerous amounts of heavy metals, according to research released on Thursday by Consumer Reports.

    Scientists at the nonprofit advocacy organization recently measured the amount of heavy metals in 28 popular brands of dark chocolate bars and found cadmium and lead in all of them. For 23 of the bars, consuming just an ounce a day would put an adult over a level for at least one of the metals that could be harmful, CR said. Five of the bars were above those levels for both cadmium and lead.

    Long-term exposure to even small amounts of heavy metals can lead to a slew of health issues, including developmental problems and brain development in young children, experts say.

    “But there are risks for people of any age,” Tunde Akinleye, the CR food safety researcher who led the testing, said in a statement. Frequent exposure to lead in adults can lead to nervous system problems, hypertension, immune system suppression, kidney damage and reproductive issues, he noted.


    Children’s clothes from popular retailers recalled over lead poisoning risk

    00:19

    While most of the chocolate bars tested contained concerning levels of lead, cadmium or both, five had relatively low levels of both metals, CR found. 

    “That shows it’s possible for companies to make products with lower amounts of heavy metals — and for consumers to find safer products that they enjoy,” Akinleye said.

    In determining the risks for the chocolate it tested, CR used California’s maximum allowable dose level of 0.5 micrograms for lead and 4.1 micrograms for cadmium, as there are no federal limits. 

    CR found that an ounce of Hershey’s Special Dark Mildly Sweet Chocolate contained lead 265% above what California allows, and Trader Joe’s Dark Chocolate 72% Cacao holding 192% more.

    Trader Joe’s didn’t respond to a request for comment. 

    A spokesperson for Hershey’s deferred to the National Confectioners Association for comment. In an emailed statement, the trade group objected to CR’s use of levels set by California, noting that the state does not set federal food safety standards.

    “The products cited in this study are in compliance with strict quality and safety requirements,” a spokesperson for the group stated in an email to CBS MoneyWatch. “Food safety and product quality remain our highest priorities and we remain dedicated to being transparent and socially responsible.”

    The confectioners association in August released research showing ways that lead and cadmium in chocolate could be reduced, including having cocoa farmers plant new tree stock.

    The study was conducted in partnership with As You Sow as part of a settlement reached in 2018 between the shareholder advocacy nonprofit and 32 members of the trade group over a California law requiring businesses warn people about significant exposure to chemicals that cause cancer, birth defects or other reproductive harm.

    According to CR’s findings, the safer choices are: 

    • Mast Organic Dark Chocolate 80% Cocoa. CR found an ounce contained 14% less lead and 40% less cadmium than California’s allowable limits.  
    • Taza Chocolate Organic Deliciously Dark Chocolate 70% Cacao held 33% less lead and 74% less cadmium.
    • Ghirardelli Intense Dark Chocolate 86% Cacao contained 36% less lead and 39% less cadmium.
    • Ghirardelli Intense Dark Chocolate Twilight Delight. Lead contained was 61% below the allowable level and cadmium 96% below its allowable limit.
    • Valrhona Abinao Dark Chocolate 85% Cacao. Lead 63% and cadmium 73% below.

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  • Heavy metals found in dark chocolate including Hershey’s and Trader Joe’s

    Heavy metals found in dark chocolate including Hershey’s and Trader Joe’s

    [ad_1]

    Long viewed as healthier than other sweet treats, some kinds of dark chocolate contain potentially dangerous amounts of heavy metals, according to research released on Thursday by Consumer Reports.

    Scientists at the nonprofit advocacy organization recently measured the amount of heavy metals in 28 popular brands of dark chocolate bars and found cadmium and lead in all of them. For 23 of the bars, consuming just an ounce a day would put an adult over a level for at least one of the metals that could be harmful, CR said. Five of the bars were above those levels for both cadmium and lead.

    Long-term exposure to even small amounts of heavy metals can lead to a slew of health issues, including developmental problems and brain development in young children, experts say.

    “But there are risks for people of any age,” Tunde Akinleye, the CR food safety researcher who led the testing, said in a statement. Frequent exposure to lead in adults can lead to nervous system problems, hypertension, immune system suppression, kidney damage and reproductive issues, he noted.


    Children’s clothes from popular retailers recalled over lead poisoning risk

    00:19

    While most of the chocolate bars tested contained concerning levels of lead, cadmium or both, five had relatively low levels of both metals, CR found. 

    “That shows it’s possible for companies to make products with lower amounts of heavy metals — and for consumers to find safer products that they enjoy,” Akinleye said.

    In determining the risks for the chocolate it tested, CR used California’s maximum allowable dose level of 0.5 micrograms for lead and 4.1 micrograms for cadmium, as there are no federal limits. 

    CR found that an ounce of Hershey’s Special Dark Mildly Sweet Chocolate contained lead 265% above what California allows, and Trader Joe’s Dark Chocolate 72% Cacao holding 192% more.

    Trader Joe’s didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. 

    A spokesperson for Hershey’s deferred to the National Confectioners Association for comment. In an emailed statement, the trade group objected to CR’s use of levels set by California, noting that the state does not set federal food safety standards.

    “The products cited in this study are in compliance with strict quality and safety requirements,” a spokesperson for the group stated in an email to CBS MoneyWatch. “Food safety and product quality remain our highest priorities and we remain dedicated to being transparent and socially responsible.”

    The confectioners association in August released research showing ways that lead and cadmium in chocolate could be reduced, including having cocoa farmers plant new tree stock.

    According to CR’s findings, the safer choices are: 

    • Mast Organic Dark Chocolate 80% Cocoa. CR found an ounce contained 14% less lead and 40% less cadmium than California’s allowable limits.  
    • Taza Chocolate Organic Deliciously Dark Chocolate 70% Cacao held 33% less lead and 74% less cadmium.
    • Ghirardelli Intense Dark Chocolate 86% Cacao contained 36% less lead and 39% less cadmium.
    • Ghirardelli Intense Dark Chocolate Twilight Delight. Lead contained was 61% below the allowable level and cadmium 96% beneath its allowable limit.
    • Valrhona Abinao Dark Chocolate 85% Cacao. Lead 63% and cadmium 73% below.

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