Many of these ingredients are banned in Europe, but here in the good old USA you'll find them on your dinner plate.
February 12, 2014
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Soon after the hoopla began, the main supplier of pink slime, Beef Products, Inc., announced it
was closing its production facilities. But since then, other products the public doesn't know it's consuming or
want to consume have
surfaced, and the manufacturers have not necessarily been as
forthcoming. There's a good chance you are eating some of the following
products and byproducts.
1. Azodicarbonamide in Bread
Until a month ago, few had heard of this "dough conditioner,"
intended to provide strength and improve elasticity. Like pink slime, it
was azodicarbonamide's industrial overtones that drove indignation—it's
"the same chemical used to make yoga mats, shoe soles, and other
rubbery objects," wrote food
blogger Vani Hari in a successful petition to get Subway to remove the substance from its baked products.
While World Health Organization tests found azodicarbonamide risks
"uncertain," it has been linked to deaths in animals and allergic
reactions in humans. Azodicarbonamide is banned in Europe and Australia
and its use carries a prison sentence in Singapore, writes Hari. The
Center for Science in
the Public Interest warns that when azodicarbonamide is baked in bread,
it produces the carcinogen urethane. While Subway announced it is "in
the process of removing azodicarbonamide as part of our bread
improvement efforts," the dough conditioner is also used in food at
McDonald's, Burger King, Starbucks, Arby's, Wendy's, Jack in the Box and
Chick-fil-A. It is also in grocery store and restaurant breads, CNN
says.
2. Plastic Microbeads in Fish and Waterways
For years, the consumer products industry has given us plastic
microbeads in toothpaste, liquid hand soaps, skin exfoliators, other
personal care products and industrial cleaners. Products like
Olay's body wash, Dove
Gentle Exfoliating Foaming Facial Cleanser and Clean & Clear Daily
Pore Cleanser increase the plastic clogging the planet's seas, "killing
millions of sea creatures every year when they swallow it, choke on it,
or get tangled in it and drown," according to Slate. It was widely
believed, however, that human health was spared. "Our assessment is that
they will largely be removed during sewage treatment," Jay Gooch,
associate director of external relations in beauty care at Procter &
Gamble, reassured Slate.
But last year the microbeads were found in water samples in three
of the Great Lakes, implying that wastewater treatment is not removing
them. The remaining Great Lakes have yet to be tested. The beads, which
work their way up the marine food chain, "absorb and retain chemical
contaminants," says the
Chicago Tribune. Some manufacturers are phasing out the beads but consumers should avoid any products that list the ingredient polyethylene.
3. Brominated Vegetable Oil in Soft Drinks and Beverages
Like pink slime and azodicarbonamide, few had heard of brominated
vegetable oil (BVO) or believed they were consuming it until recently.
And like pink slime and azodicarbonamide, it is brominated vegetable
oil's (BVO) connection to industrial products that sparked outrage—the
oil, from corn or soy, is bonded with the element bromine which is used
in couches and carpets as a
flame retardant.
Bromide is an endocrine disruptor and part of the halide family which
includes fluorine, chlorine and iodine. It competes for the same
receptors in the body as iodine and can cause iodine deficiency.
Brominated flame retardants build up in people's bodies, including
breast milk and animal and human research have linked them to early
puberty and hormone and neurological problems. Excess consumption of
drinks with BVO, used to keep flavoring dispersed in a beverage, have
been
linked to headaches, fatigue, ataxia (loss of muscle coordination), memory loss and swollen hands with ulcers.
In late 2012, 15-year-old
Sarah Kavanagh of Hattiesburg, MS began a petition on Change.org for PepsiCo to remove BVO from Gatorade. Within a month, PepsiCo announced it planned to
remove BVO from Gatorade and replace it with sucrose acetate isobutyrate, but six months later,
PepsiCo said it would
keep BVO
in Mountain Dew sold in the Americas. BVO is still reportedly in
Squirt, Fanta Orange, Sunkist Pineapple and some flavors of Fresca and
Poweraide.
4. High Fructose Corn Syrup and Artificial Sweeteners in Soft Drinks
Scientists and health professionals cannot decide which is
worse—high fructose corn syrup (HFCS) or artificial sweeteners in soft
drinks. HFCS, which is cheaper for soft drink makers to use and store
than "real sugar," has been linked to liver damage, diabetes, heart
problems, obesity and
even mercury consumption. Yet, aspartame, saccharin and acesulfame potassium, three leading artificial sweeteners, have all been linked to cancer.
A
2011 study by
the University of Miami’s Miller School of Medicine found that people
who drank one diet soda every day had a 61 percent higher chance of
having a heart attack or stroke. Questions also persist about artificial
sweeteners’ links to Alzheimer’s disease, autism, chronic fatigue
syndrome, lupus, multiple sclerosis and Parkinson’s disease. (Nor do
artificial sweeteners necessarily help people lose weight, some studies
suggest.)
The plot thickened in 2012, when a Harvard study
indicted both sugar and HFCS-sweetened beverages. Men who drank one soft
drink a day had a 20 percent increased risk of heart disease regardless
of their age, diet, family history or alcohol/tobacco use. The Harvard
study was announced one month after doctors published an editorial in
the journal Nature calling for all types of sugar and HFCS to be regulated the way alcohol or tobacco are.
5. Transglutaminase Also Known as "Meat Glue"
Around the same time rumors of pink slime and BVO in the US food
supply began to surface, the term "meat glue" also debuted. Meat glue is
transglutaminase, an adhesive powder originally obtained from animal
blood, but lately more likely to come from fermented bacteria which is
cheaper. Meat glue lets chefs cobble together disparate and low-quality
scraps of meat, put it in the refrigerator overnight and produce "filet
mignon," a deception that is the basis of many consumers' objections.
Up to
35 percent of food products contain meat glue, including
tofu, milk,
yogurt and even cereal according to industry accounts. Animal versions
of meat glue in which the coagulation animal protein thrombin is
combined with fibrin have affected blood clotting time in humans because
bovine thrombin can
cross-react with
human factors. Studies showed that repeat clinical applications of
topical bovine thrombin increase human risk. Another risk of meat glue
is bacterial growth: scraps that were outside pieces but are now glued
together inside a "formed meat" are hard to cook, says microbiologist
Glenn Pener. “The amount of bacteria on a steak that’s been put together with meat glue is
hundreds of times higher.”
Martha Rosenberg is an investigative health reporter and the author of
"Born With a Junk Food Deficiency: How Flaks, Quacks and Hacks Pimp The Public Health (Random House)."
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