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Major Producers to Ditch BPA from Packaging

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© PA/ALAMY
BPA has been used in food tins, dentists' operating lamps and CD packages. Heinz, left, is committed to moving to alternatives
Nestlé, Heinz and General Mills among manufacturers to stop using chemical, amid growing concerns about health effects.

Some of the world's biggest food companies are removing the chemical Bisphenol A from packaging, amid growing concern it is causing a wide range of human illnesses including heart disease and breast cancer.

Nestlé, the world's biggest food manufacturer, says its will stop putting Bisphenol A (also known as BPA) into US products within three years, while tinned giant Heinz is at "an advanced stage" in removing it from UK baby food, and is funding research by one of the chemical's leading critics. General Mills, the US giant behind the Green Giant tinned brand, has already ditched BPA from its Muir Glen tomato range, while Campbell Soups says it has done "hundreds" of tests exploring alternatives. Several other firms, such as Coca-Cola, have declined to disclose a timetable for its withdrawal, saying that BPA is safe.

Comment: Corporations such as Coca Cola keeping claiming BPA safe. The following articles depict the growing health concerns associated with BPA in food containers and consumer products:

BPA Report Details Chemical's Hazards

Study: Human Exposure to BPA 'Grossly Underestimated'

Bodies of Pregnant Women Polluted with Chemicals Found in Consumer Products

Common Plastic Ingredient Linked to Birth Defects

Bisphenol-A Now Linked to Male Infertility

More States Move to Ban BPA Even While FDA Does Nothing


Attention

India: Your Diwali Sweets Could be Poison

While you savour those mouth-watering Diwali sweets, here's the bitter truth: what you are consuming is most likely substandard, adulterated and poisonous.

Raids across the country have unearthed hundreds of kg of adulterated sweets or their ingredients, but that's just the proverbial tip of the iceberg.

In Meerut, 500 kg of adulterated milk cake and 300 kg of poisoned petha were seized on Monday while around 550 kg of adulterated mawa was seized in Gonda. The mawa was being transported in a bus to avoid detection.

In Allahabad, around 900 kg of rotten peas and 100 kg of contaminated ice cream were seized.

In Jalgaon, Maharashtra, around 9,900 kg of spurious sweets were confiscated. A tip-off led the state food department to a godown where heaps of sweets made from substandard ingredients were ready for circulation.

Health

Inhaled steroids increase chances of diabetes: researchers

Montreal researchers have discovered that patients using inhaled steroids increase their chances of developing diabetes.

Patients with lung disease should ask their physicians about treatment with the synthetic hormone medication because the higher the dose, the greater the risk, said Samy Suissa, director of the Centre for Clinical Epidemiology at the Lady Davis Institute for Medical of the Jewish General Hospital.

Oral corticosteroids like prednisone have long been known to increase the risk of diabetes, but this is the first time the effect has been observed with the inhaled form, said Suissa, lead author of the study published in the American Journal of Medicine.

Inhaled steroids have become the mainstay of medical treatment of asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), the new name for emphysema and chronic bronchitis.

But they have been shown to increase the risk of cataracts and pneumonia, "and now we are finding the increase in diabetes," said Suissa, a professor of epidemiology and biostatistics at McGill University.

Dipping into Quebec's database kept by the provincial health insurance board, the Régie de l'assurance maladie du Québec, Suissa's team studied 400,000 patients over 18 years.

Cheeseburger

Everything you thought you knew about food is WRONG

We think we know what to eat: less red meat and more fibre, less saturated fat and more fruit and veg, right? Wrong, according to a controversial new book by obesity researcher and nutritionist Zoe Harcombe.

In The Obesity Epidemic: What Caused It? How Can We Stop It? Harcombe charts her meticulous journey of research into studies that underpin dietary advice - and her myth-busting conclusions are startling.

Food Myths_1
© Getty Images
Ditch conventional diet advice: Zoe Harcombe says vitamins and minerals in meat are better than those in fruit.
Myth: The rapid rise in obesity is due to modern lifestyles

According to Zoe Harcombe, the ­obesity epidemic has less to do with our lifestyles than with what we are eating.

'The key thing that people don't realise is that throughout history, right until the Seventies, obesity levels never went above 2 per cent of the population in the UK,' she says. 'Yet by the turn of the millennium, obesity levels were 25 per cent.

'What happened? In 1983, the government changed its diet advice. After that, if you look at the graphs, you can see obesity rates taking off like an aeroplane. You might feel it is coincidence, but to me it is blindingly obvious.

'The older dietary advice was simple; foods based on flour and grains were ­fattening, and sweet foods were most ­fattening of all.

'Mum and Granny told us to eat liver, eggs, sardines and to put butter on our vegetables. The new advice was "base your meals on starchy foods" - the things that we used to know made us fat (rice, pasta, potatoes and bread). That's a U-turn.'

Comment: For readers wishing to look more into diet and health issues, you may want to read the Diet and Health board on our forum.


Beer

Study: Alcohol more lethal than heroin, cocaine

wine
© Unknown
Alcohol is more dangerous than illegal drugs like heroin and crack cocaine, according to a new study.

British experts evaluated substances including alcohol, cocaine, heroin, ecstasy and marijuana, ranking them based on how destructive they are to the individual who takes them and to society as a whole.

Researchers analyzed how addictive a drug is and how it harms the human body, in addition to other criteria like environmental damage caused by the drug, its role in breaking up families and its economic costs, such as health care, social services, and prison.

Alarm Clock

Bisphenol-A Now Linked to Male Infertility

A controversial chemical used for decades in the mass production of food containers and baby bottles has been linked to male infertility for the first time.

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© Journal Sentinel Inc.
Many products with toxic levels of Bisphenol-A
Bisphenol-A (BPA), known as the "gender bending" chemical because of its connection to male impotence, has now been shown to decrease sperm mobility and quality.

The findings are likely to increase pressure on governments around the world to follow Canada and ban the substance from our shelves.

BPA is used widely to make plastic harder and watertight tin cans.

It is found in most food and drink cans - including tins of infant formula milk - plastic food containers, and the casings of mobile phones, and other electronic goods.

Health

Indian veggies, fruits remain highly toxic

Rampant use of banned pesticides in fruits and vegetables continues to put at risk the life of the common man. Farmers apply pesticides such as chlordane, endrin and heptachor that can cause serious neurological problems, kidney damage and skin diseases. A study conducted by Delhi-based NGO Consumer-Voice reveals that the amount of pesticides used in eatables in India is as much as 750 times the European standards. The survey collected sample data from various wholesale and retail shops in Delhi, Bangalore and Kolkata.

"Out of five internationally-banned pesticides, four were found to be common in vegetables sold in the Indian markets. Banned pesticides were found in bitter gourd and spinach,'' said Sisir Ghosh, head of Consumer-Voice. The banned chemicals included chlordane, a potent central nervous system toxin, endrin, which can cause headache nausea and dizziness, and heptachor that can damage the liver and decrease fertility.

Officials said the tests conducted on vegetables at the government-approved and NABL-accredited laboratory, Arbro Analytical Division, revealed that the Indian ladies finger contained captan, a toxic pesticide, up to 15,000 parts per billion (ppb) whereas ladies finger in the EU has captan only up to 20 ppb. "Indian cauliflower can have malathion pesticide up to 150 times higher than the European standards,'' said an official.

Butterfly

Bowel Disease: Healing the Gut By Eliminating Food Toxins

The gut is the front line of health. The human gut houses 100 trillion bacteria from a thousand different species [1]; they weigh several pounds and make up about half the dry weight of stool. To control these bacteria 70% to 80% of the body's immune cells are normally found in and around the gut.

A healthy gut is protected by a mucosal layer that is designed to promote commensal (friendly) bacteria, while providing a barrier to pathogenic bacteria. Humans have evolved ways to "feed" commensal species of bacteria. For instance:
  • Human mucus is made of glycoproteins, or compounds made of protein and sugar. Certain probiotic bacteria, such as Bifidobacterium bifidum, are able to digest human mucus. [2] Thus, the human intestine has evolved to produce "food" for beneficial gut bacteria, assuring that they are maintained even during long fasts.
  • Mother's milk contains special sugars, called human milk oligosaccharides, which specifically feed Bifidobacterium bifidum and assure that this species successfully colonizes the baby's intestine and wards off infection. [3]
The absence of this protective barrier of mucus and friendly bacteria makes the intestine extremely vulnerable to infectious disease. Premature babies who are fed formula, not human breast milk, often contract a dangerous intestinal infection, necrotizing enterocolitis. [3]

In addition to pathogenic bacteria, the gut is confronted by a heavy load of toxins. Bruce Ames and Lois Gold have estimated that the average person eats 5,000 to 10,000 different plant toxins, amassing to 1500 mg per day, plus 2000 mg of burnt toxins generated during cooking. [4]

Today's post will focus on how those 1500 mg of natural plant toxins damage the intestinal wall and its mucosal barrier, thereby bringing about infectious bowel diseases.

Key

A healthy gut is the hidden key to weight loss

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In a previous article in this series on diabesity I briefly mentioned the role of gut health in obesity and diabetes. I'd like to go into more detail on that subject here, especially since it's not a very well known relationship.

Our gut is home to approximately 100,000,000,000,000 (100 trillion) microorganisms. That's such a big number our human brains can't really comprehend it. One trillion dollar bills laid end-to-end would stretch from the earth to the sun - and back - with a lot of miles to spare. Do that 100 times and you start to get at least a vague idea of how much 100 trillion is.

The human gut contains 10 times more bacteria than all the human cells in the entire body, with over 400 known diverse bacterial species. In fact, you could say that we're more bacterial than we are human. Think about that one for a minute.

We've only recently begun to understand the extent of the gut flora's role in human health and disease. Among other things, the gut flora promotes normal gastrointestinal function, provides protection from infection, regulates metabolism and comprises more than 75% of our immune system. Dysregulated gut flora has been linked to diseases ranging from autism and depression to autoimmune conditions like Hashimoto's, inflammatory bowel disease and type 1 diabetes.

Pumpkin

How Candy and Halloween Became Best Friends

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© Corey Ann/Flickr
Wherever you turn this October, candy beckons. Americans will spend an estimated $2 billion on candy during the Halloween season this year, and here's a fun fact from the California Milk Processors Board: "an average Jack-O-Lantern bucket carries about 250 pieces of candy amounting about 9,000 calories and about three pounds of sugar."

Phew. My molars are hurting just thinking about it. If treats are a temptation you hope to avoid, October is the cruelest month. And I can think of only one place in America where your Halloween composure is unlikely to be ruffled by endless quantities of cheap and glittering candies: the past.

Given the ubiquity of candy at this time of year, it is hard to imagine that 100 years ago, Halloween looked quite different from the candy debauch of today.

The biggest difference was trick-or-treating. This seemingly timeless custom is actually a quite recent American invention. The ritual of costumes, doorbell-ringing, and expectation of booty appeared for the first time in different locations throughout the country in the late 1930s and early 1940s. It wasn't until the late 1940s that trick-or-treating became widespread on a national scale. And even then, candy wasn't the obvious treat.