Produce without Pesticides - Fruits & Vegetables: Consumer Reports 🍏🫑 UPF [View all]
- 'Produce Without Pesticides,' CR, May 18, 2024. Ed. Some of our favorite fruits and vegetables carry unhealthy levels of chemicals. CR's exclusive ratings reveal how to get the benefits from these foods while minimizing your risk. - Over the next year, Consumer Reports will be partnering with The Guardian to dig more deeply into how pesticides contaminate the U.S. food supply and what we can do about it.
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When it comes to healthy eating, fruits and vegetables reign supreme. But along with all their vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients can come something else: an unhealthy dose of dangerous pesticides. Though using chemicals to control bugs, fungi, and weeds helps farmers grow the food we need, its been clear since at least the 1960s that some chemicals also carry unacceptable health risks. And although certain notorious pesticides, such as DDT, have been banned in the U.S., government regulators have been slow to act on others.
Even when a dangerous chemical is removed from the market, chemical companies and growers sometimes just start using other options that may be as dangerous. Consumer Reports, which has tracked the use of pesticides on produce for decades, has seen this pattern repeat itself over and over. Its two steps forward and one step backand sometimes even two steps back, says James E. Rogers, PhD, who oversees food safety at CR.
To get a sense of the current situation, CR recently conducted our most comprehensive review ever of pesticides in food. To do it, we analyzed seven years of data from the Department of Agriculture, which each year tests a selection of conventional and organic produce grown in or imported to the U.S. for pesticide residues. We looked at 59 common fruits and vegetables, including, in some cases, not just fresh versions but also canned, dried, or frozen ones. Our new results continue to raise red flags.
Pesticides posed significant risks in 20% of the foods we examined, including popular choices such as bell peppers, blueberries, green beans, potatoes, and strawberries.
One food, green beans, had residues of a pesticide that hasnt been allowed to be used on the vegetable in the U.S. for over a decade. And imported produce, especially some from Mexico, was particularly likely to carry risky levels of pesticide residues. But there was good news, too. Pesticides presented little to worry about in nearly 2/3rds of the foods, including nearly all of the organic ones. Also encouraging: The largest risks are caused by just a few pesticides, concentrated in a handful of foods, grown on a small fraction of U.S. farmland...
https://www.consumerreports.org/health/food-contaminants/produce-without-pesticides-a5260230325/
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How to Wash Pesticide Off Fruits & Vegetables,
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/apr/18/how-wash-pesticide-off-fruits-vegetables
NIH, Pesticide Removal,
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9498324/
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UPF- Ultraprocessed Foods Are Everywhere. How Bad Are They? AP News, Aug. 26, 2024.
https://apnews.com/article/ultraprocessed-foods-healthy-diet-0501eb985016149541e6cc727e55dfea