 |
|
When we have a baby, we must do our part to ensure a healthy future. Organic agriculture minimizes children’s exposure to toxic and
persistent pesticides in the soil in which they play, the air
they breathe, the water they drink, and the foods they eat.
|
Here are reasons why minimizing exposure to toxic and
persistent pesticides is so important:
-
"Pesticides pose special concerns to children because of
their high metabolisms and low body weights. More than 1
million children between the ages of 1 and 5 ingest at least
15 pesticides every day from fruits and vegetables. More
than 600,000 of these children eat a dose of organophosphate
insecticides that the federal government considers unsafe,
and 61,000 eat doses that exceed benchmark levels by a
factor of 10 or more."
Source: Food for Thought: The Case for Reforming
Farm Programs to Preserve the Environment and Help Family
Farmers, Ranchers and Foresters, pages 12-13,
www.environmentaldefense.org/pubs/Reports.
Original source: Environmental Working Group, "Overexposed:
Organophosphate Insecticides in Children’s Food," 1998, pp.
1-3.
-
"Our children are born with a deposit of pesticides and
other foreign chemicals in their bodies, caused by a shift
of maternal pesticide ‘body burden’ through the placenta;
after birth, children ‘inherit’ further load through
breastfeeding. Pesticides have a cumulative
multigenerational destructive impact on human health,
especially behavior. Pesticides are a serious threat to the
physical, emotional and mental development of children and
future generations," according to a report from the
Environmental Illness Society of Canada. Presented to the
Canadian House of Commons Standing Committee on Environment
and Sustainable Development, the report called for a
moratorium on pesticide use for cosmetic purposes. It noted:
"Once released into the environment, the spread of
pesticides cannot be controlled. Radioactively traced
pesticides sprayed over in the United Kingdom were detected
five to seven days later in the southern USA. Traces of
insecticides used in tropical areas were detected in Arctic
trees. Global air currents, hurricanes, etc., can transport
pesticides and other chemicals even to the other
hemisphere." Als "Pesticides and other pollutants can
interfere with proper sexual differentiation; they can also
cause other birth defects and multigenerational health
problems, such as allergies, immunotoxicity, neurotoxicity
and cancer in the individual, that individual’s offspring,
and subsequent generations." In addition: "A Canadian-USA
study detected pesticides in the amniotic fluid in one-third
of human pregnancies."
Source: Pesticides: Their Multigenerational
Cumulative Destructive Impact on Health, Especially on the
Physical, Emotional and Mental Development of Children and
of Future Generations—Canadian Government Responsibilities
and Opportunities, February 2000, Environmental Illness
Society of Canada,
www.eisc.ca/pesticide_moratorium.html.
-
A National Cancer Institute researcher who matched
pesticide data and medical records in 10 California
agricultural counties reported that pregnant women living
within nine miles of farms where pesticides are sprayed on
fields may have increased risk of losing an unborn baby to
birth defects.
Source: National Coalition against the Misuse of
Pesticides Technical Report newsletter, April 2001.
-
"Exposure to pesticides can cause a range of ill effects
in humans, from relatively mild effects such as headaches,
fatigue, and nausea, to more serious effects such as cancer
and neurological disorders. In 1999, EPA estimated that
nationwide there were at least 10,000 to 20,000
physician-diagnosed pesticide illnesses and injuries per
year in farm work. Environmental effects are evident in the
findings of the U.S. Geological Survey, which reported in
1999 that more than 90 percent of water and fish samples
from streams and about 50 percent of all sampled wells
contained one or more pesticides. The concern about
pesticides in water is especially acute in agricultural
areas, where most pesticides are used."
Source: Agricultural Pesticides: Management
Improvements Needed to Further Promote Integrated Pest
Management, General Accounting Office [GAO-01-815, Page
4, August 2001].
-
A study, financed by Britain’s Economic and Social
Research Council, has concluded that the combination of soil
erosion, pollution and inadequate diet is affecting the
intelligence of millions of people in the developing world,
with effects ranging from severe intellectual disabilities
to "sub-clinical decline" in whole populations. The report
notes that Green Revolution crops produce several times as
much grain as the traditional varieties they replaced, thus
dramatically increasing food supplies. However, unlike their
predecessors, the new crops fail to take up minerals such as
iron and zinc from the soil.
Source: The Environmental Threat to Human
Intelligence, by Christopher Williams, a study funded by
Britain’s Economic and Social Research Council in its Global
Environmental Change Programme, April 24, 2000
-
U.S. consumers can experience up to 70 daily exposures
to residues from persistent organic pollutants (POPs)
through their diets, according to a report from the
Pesticide Action Network North America. The use of POPs is
not allowed in organic agriculture. The top ten
POP-contaminated food items, in alphabetical order, are
butter, cantaloupe, cucumbers/pickles, meatloaf, peanuts,
popcorn, radishes, spinach, summer squash, and winter
squash. The two most pervasive POPs in food are dieldrin and
DDE. Source: Nowhere to Hide: Persistent Toxic
Chemicals in the U.S. Food Supply, Pesticide Action
Network North America, 2000,
www.panna.org.
-
A study to assess preschool children’s organophosphorus
pesticide exposure in the Seattle Metropolitan area made an
interesting discovery: the only child whose urine contained
no measurable pesticide metabolites lives in a family that
buys exclusively organic produce and does not use any
pesticides at home. In the study conducted by the University
of Washington Department of Environmental Health, urine
samples were collected from 96 children during the spring
and fall. In the study, 83 children had at least one
measurable dialkylphosphate (DAP) metabolite in the spring
sampling, while 88 had at least one measurable DAP
metabolite in the fall sampling. Only 1 child—the one whose
parents bought exclusively organic produce--had no
metabolites in both samples. Children living in households
with a garden had significantly higher diethyl DAP
concentrations than those without a garden, and those where
garden pesticide use was reported had significantly higher
diethyl and dimethyl DAP levels. In fact, there was an
association between reported residential pesticide use and
elevated DAP metabolite concentrations.
Source: Environmental Health Perspectives,
Vol. 109, No. 3, March 2001 (pp. 299-303, C. Lu, D.E.
Knutson, J. Fisker-Andersen, and R.A. Fenske, "Biological
Monitoring Survey of Organophosphorus Pesticide Exposure
among Preschool Children in the Seattle Metropolitan area").
-
A National Academy of Sciences study suggested that one
out of four developmental and behavioral problems in
children may be linked to genetic and environmental factors,
including exposure to lead, mercury, and organophosphate
pesticides.
Source: Scientific Frontiers in Developmental Toxicology
and Risk Assessment, National Academy of Sciences,
National Academy Press, 2000.
-
"Government tests show that red raspberries,
strawberries, apples, and peaches grown in the United States
and cantaloupe from Mexico are the foods most contaminated
with pesticides. The fruits least contaminated with
pesticides were watermelon, bananas, kiwi, pineapple, and
domestically grown cantaloupe. The least contaminated
vegetables include corn, onions and peas. Organic is the
safest choice of all."
Source: Environmental Working Group press release,
Feb. 25, 1999, concerning "How ‘Bout Them Apples? Pesticides
in Children’s Food Ten Years After Alar."
Organic Trade Association, July 2002.
|
|