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80 percent of US packaged foods may contain dangerous chemicals

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Roughly 80 percent of all the packaged foods sold within the United States contain chemicals outlawed in other parts of the world, Britain’s Daily Mail reports.

Six common food additives found in an estimated 8-out-of-10  products sold in American stores are banned outside of the US,  the Mail claims, putting millions of Americans at risk of  consuming chemicals considered too dangerous for humans in other  countries.

Grocery shop items including best-selling soft-drinks and cereal  sold in the US contain additives such as brominated vegetable  oil, olestra and others that have been banned in the European  Union and elsewhere.

The Daily Mail cites ‘Rich Food, Poor Food,’ a recently published  book by Jayson Calton and Mira Calton, as the source for their  claim that the majority of American groceries contain the  additives.

Among the common items containing the chemicals are Mountain Dew,  Chex Mix and Hungry Man frozen dinners, which are made with  additives outlawed overseas due to health risks. The Caltons say  these products are filled with some of the six “Banned Bad Boys”   that are used in America but absent in supermarkets overseas.

One of the most common ‘Bad Boys’ is different variations of  food coloring, which actually is made from petroleum and is found  in everyday items like soda, sports drinks, mac and cheese, cake,  candy and several other common, American products,” reports  the Daily Mail. One of the chemicals in that food coloring, they  add, has been proven to cause various different cancers. Those  artificial dyes have been outlawed in Norway, Finland, Austria,  France and the United Kingdom

Another additive, brominated vegetable oil, has been banned in  over 100 countries because it’s been linked to causing major  organ damage, birth defects and hearing loss, among other side  effects. Brominated vegetable oil, or BVO, is used in Mountain  Dew, Gatorade, Powerade and Squirt — and around 10 percent of all  drinks sold in the US.

A petition started earlier this year to get BVOs out of beverages  sold in the US received over 206,000 signatures on the website  Change.org.

BVO is banned other places in the world, so these companies  already have a replacement for it,” the petition’s author,  Sarah Kavanagh, told The New York Times. “I don’t see why they  don’t just make the switch.”

Another additive, potassium bromate, is used in American bakeries  to speed up the process of preparing wraps, rolls and other bread  products. It’s derived from the same chemical as BVO, though, and  has been tied to causing kidney damage and cancer. That’s why  it’s been outlawed in Europe, Canada and China, but not in the  US.

Also on the Calton’s list is azodicarbonamide, a chemical the  Daily Mail notes is used to make things like bleach and rubber  yoga mats.

Azodicarbonamide is “approved to be a bleaching agent in  cereal flour” and is “permitted for direct addition to  food for human consumption,” according to the Food and Drug  Administration. Along with waxy preservatives called butylated  hydroxyanisole (BHA) and butylated hydroxytoluene (BHT) used in  bubble gums, though, the additive has been banned in parts of  Europe for potential health risks.

Rounding out the authors’ ‘Bad Boys’ list are Synthetic growth  hormones rBGH and rBST and the chemical arsenic. They’ve both  been banned in the EU for a variety of reasons, and perhaps for  good reason: the arsenic put in American poultry can kill a human  being if consumed in a high enough dosage.

 

original story here

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