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Research Reveals Which Conventional Produce Can be Safely Eaten

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Research Reveals Which Conventional Produce Can be Safely Eaten

_http://www.naturalnews.com/026484_pesticides_health_vegetables.html_

(http://www.naturalnews.com/026484_pesticides_health_vegetables.html)

 

 

The evidence is in. Eating a plant based diet is the key to health and

longevity. The only question left is how to get the best value for each dollar

you have to spend on fruits and vegetables. The Environmental Working

Group, a non-profit organization devoted to human and environmental health, has

come up with some guidelines that may help you decide. In a recently

published listing, they pointed out those fruits and vegetables with the

highest

levels of pesticides that should be avoided unless they are available from

known local growers, grown at home, or labeled as organic. They also

identified which conventionally grown fruits and vegetables have low levels of

pesticides and can be bought without too much compromise.

 

 

EWG, as the group is often known, analyzed results from 87,000 tests on 47

fruits and vegetables conducted by the USDA and FDA between 2000 and 2007.

Nearly all the studies used to create their list tested produce after it

had been rinsed or peeled. Contamination was measured in six different ways

and crops were ranked based on a composite score from all categories.

 

 

Their Dirty Dozen showed the highest levels of contamination. Fruits

topped this list, taking 7 of the 12 top slots in this dubious distinction.

Nectarines had the highest percentage of samples testing positively for

pesticides (97.3 percent), followed by peaches (96.7 percent) and apples (94.1

percent).

 

 

Peaches had the highest likelihood of multiple pesticides on a single

sample, with 87.0 percent tested having two or more pesticide residues. They

were followed by nectarines (85.3 percent) and apples (82.3 percent).

Peaches and apples had the most pesticides detected on a single sample, with

nine

residues, followed by strawberries and imported grapes in which eight

pesticides were found on a single sample of each. Peaches had the most

pesticides overall, with some combination of up to 53 pesticides found on the

samples tested, followed by apples with 50 pesticides and strawberries with 38.

 

 

Among the dishonored vegetables, sweet bell peppers, celery, kale,

lettuce, and carrots topped the list for exposing consumers to pesticides.

Celery

had the highest percentage of samples test positively for pesticides (94.1

percent), followed by sweet bell peppers (81.5 percent) and carrots (82.3

percent). Celery was also the most likely to have multiple pesticides on a

single sample (79.8 percent), followed by sweet bell peppers (62.2 percent)

and kale (53.1 percent).

 

 

Sweet bell peppers had the most pesticides detected on a single sample (11

detected), followed by kale (10 detected), and lettuce and celery which

both had nine detected. Sweet bell peppers had the most pesticides overall (a

jaw dropping 64), followed by lettuce (57) and carrots (40).

 

 

Although they escaped classification in the Dirty Dozen, note should also

be given to spinach, potatoes, and domestic grapes because of their

popularity in certain segments of the population. Spinach, which ranked number

14

in highest pesticide load, is thought of as a healthy food. Health minded

shoppers have loaded their carts and salad bar servings with spinach

thinking they were getting a vegetable that would support their health. Yet

spinach was found to have a pesticide load of 58 (with 100 being the worst).

Potatoes, one of the favorites of men and children, had a pesticide load of 56

and was ranked right behind spinach at number 15. Children love to eat

their way through the summer with a fist full of grapes. But domestic grapes

had a pesticide load of 44. By comparison, the pesticide loads for onion,

avocado and sweet corn were numbered 2 or less.

 

 

EWG also identified the Clean 15, a list of produce least likely to have

pesticide residues. Vegetables on this list were onions, sweet corn,

asparagus, sweet peas, cabbage, eggplant, broccoli, tomatoes and sweet

potatoes.

 

 

Over half of the tomatoes (53.1 percent), broccoli (65.2 percent),

eggplant (75.4 percent), sweet pea (77.1 percent), and cabbage (82.1 percent)

had

no detectable pesticides in the samples. Among onions, sweet corn and

asparagus, there were no detectable residues on 90 percent or more of the

samples.

 

 

Multiple pesticide residues were extremely rare on any of these Clean 15

vegetables. Tomatoes had the highest likelihood of having multiple pesticide

residues, with a 13.5 percent chance of having more than one pesticide.

None of the samples of onions or sweet corn contained more than one

pesticide.

 

 

The greatest number of pesticides detected on a single sample of any of

the Clean 15 was five, compared to 11 found on sweet bell peppers, the

vegetable with the most residues on a single sample.

 

 

Fruits making the Clean 15 list were avocados, pineapples, mangoes, kiwi,

papayas, watermelon and grapefruit. Fewer than 10 percent of pineapple,

mango, and avocado samples had detectable pesticides, and fewer than one

percent of samples had more than one pesticide residue. Although 54.5 percent

of

grapefruit had detectable pesticides, multiple residues were less common,

with only 17.5 percent of samples containing more than one residue.

Watermelon had residues on 28.1 percent of samples, and just 9.6 percent had

multiple residues.

 

 

Pesticides are designed to kill

 

 

There is an endless parade of research demonstrating the toxicity of

pesticides to human health and to the environment, even at doses considered

" safe " by the industry and government. This research has linked pesticides to

many toxic effects including nervous system disorders, cancer, hormone

disruption, liver and thyroid dysfunction, and skin, eye and lung irritation.

 

 

According to EWG, **Even in the face of a growing body of evidence,

pesticide manufacturers continue to defend their products, claiming that the

amounts of pesticides on produce are not sufficient to elicit safety concerns.

Yet, such statements are often made in the absence of actual data, since

most safety tests done for regulatory agencies are not designed to discover

whether low dose exposures to mixtures of pesticides and other toxic

chemicals are safe, particularly during critical periods of development.** Most

studies are done using high doses and are designed to find only the gross,

obvious toxic effects. In the absence of low dose studies, pesticide and

chemical manufacturers claim safety where none has been demonstrated or proven.

 

 

Children bear the highest risk

 

 

Pesticides pose a risk to vital organ systems from conception to maturity.

Exposure to pesticides during critical periods of development often has

lasting negative effects that manifest throughout the lifetime. Because the

metabolism, physiology and biochemistry of a child differ from those of

adults, a child is often less able to metabolize and inactivate toxic chemicals

and can be particularly vulnerable to the harmful effects. Pesticides that

may have no harmful effect on the mother can damage the nervous system,

brain, reproductive organs, and endocrine system of a fetus.

 

 

Without public outcry, the government will continue to cave to big

agribusiness

 

 

The fact that the government is allowing the use of pesticides on produce

does not mean it is safe to eat that produce. A look back in history shows

that the government once approved the use of such damaging and deadly

pesticides as DDT, chordane, dursban and others. Without public outcry these

chemicals might still be in use. Despite this threat to the population, the

government moves very slowly, and only when the mountain of evidence against

a pesticide can no longer be ignored. Pesticide manufacturers and

agribusiness groups are some of the most powerful people. They have fought the

government every step of the way to overrule the pesticide laws now in place.

 

 

However, the U.S. has stringent governance of pesticides and their use

compared to many other countries likely to export produce. Produce from other

countries often contains higher levels of pesticides, and these pesticides

are more deadly. The EWG study tested only grapes from both domestic and

foreign sources. Yet, the results of that testing revealed the glaring

difference in magnitude. Grapes from foreign countries carried a pesticide load

of 66, compared with grapes grown in the U.S. with a pesticide load of 44.

This difference exists across the range of fruits and vegetables grown in

foreign countries compared to those grown domestically. Included in this

difference is produce that is canned and frozen as well as produce sold fresh.

It also includes produce used in processed or prepared foods from foreign

countries.

 

 

Pesticide is systemic

 

 

Many people are still operating under the myth that pesticide can be

washed off. It is a myth that even health oriented grocers like to exploit by

selling special vegetable washes for the uninformed. This research is a clear

revelation that is not the case, as the studies were done after the

produce was washed and in many cases peeled.

 

 

Pesticide is taken into the plant as it photosynthesizes, and it becomes

contained in every cell of the plant. No amount of soaking, scrubbing, or

washing with special compounds can get it out. Once pesticide is applied, the

plant and the pesticide become one.

 

 

Corporate farming methods have increased the need for pesticides

 

 

Pesticide is expensive. Growers only use pesticide when they absolutely

must. The need for pesticide is so great because crops produced by the large

corporate farms are grown with very little regard for soil conditions,

although it is the quality of the soil that determines the quality of the

plant. Poor quality plants are weak and unable to fend off pests. When one pest

has attacked a crop, it is weakened even further and is less able to fight

off the next pest assault. This snowball effect is why some crops have so

many different pesticides used on them.

 

 

A weakened plant riddled with pests is only able to produce a poor quality

fruit or vegetable. This is why most conventionally grown produce is so

lacking in taste and appeal compared to organically grown produce. The hidden

factor is that most conventionally grown produce is lacking in nutritional

quality as well.

 

 

The best choice: Say **no** to conventionally grown produce

 

 

There is much value in this research. People on budgets can look at it and

tell instantly what conventional produce can be bought without taking a

big chance with their health, and they can also see which produce should be

bought only when it has been grown organically, by a local grower who can be

trusted or grown in one*s own garden. It also underscores the need to buy

only domestically grown produce or to grow your own. And it is a reminder

that the consumer is ultimately king, because produce will only be grown

conventionally as long as people are willing to buy it.

 

 

Yet this research is also a sad commentary on the state of the food

supply. All that conventionally grown produce sitting in the stores will be

eaten

by someone. Out of all the produce tested, only onions and avocado showed

to be truly safe. Buying any of the others when grown conventionally

involves some kind of trade off between money and health, a trade off that

should

not have to be made.

 

 

For more information and complete list of pesticides on produce:

 

-- _http://www.foodnews.org/_ (http://www.foodnews.org/)

-- _http://www.seattlepi.com/local/349263_pesticide30.html_

(http://www.seattlepi.com/local/349263_pesticide30.html)

-- _http://www.healingdaily.com/detoxification-diet/pesticides.htm_

(http://www.healingdaily.com/detoxification-diet/pesticides.htm)

(http://www.papercut.biz/emailStripper.htm)

 

 

 

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