The synthetic chemicals used in the packaging,
storage, and processing of foodstuffs might be harmful to human health over the
long term, warn environmental scientists in a commentary in the Journal of
Epidemiology and Community Health.
This is because most of these substances are not
inert and can leach into the foods we eat, they say.
Despite the fact that some of these chemicals are
regulated, people who eat packaged or processed foods are likely to be
chronically exposed to low levels of these substances throughout their lives,
say the authors.
And far too little is known about their long term
impact, including at crucial stages of human development, such as in the womb,
which is "surely not justified on scientific grounds," the authors
claim.
They point out that lifelong exposure to food
contact materials or FCMs -- substances used in packaging, storage, processing,
or preparation equipment -- "is a cause for concern for several
reasons."
These include the fact that known toxicants, such as
formaldehyde, a cancer causing substance, are legally used in these materials.
Formaldehyde is widely present, albeit at low levels, in plastic bottles used
for fizzy drinks and melamine tableware.
Secondly, other chemicals known to disrupt hormone production
also crop up in FCMs, including bisphenol A, tributyltin, triclosan, and
phthalates.
"Whereas the science for some of these
substances is being debated and policy makers struggle to satisfy the needs of
stakeholders, consumers remain exposed to these chemicals daily, mostly
unknowingly," the authors point out.
And, thirdly, the total number of known chemical
substances used intentionally in FCMs exceeds 4000.
Furthermore, potential cellular changes caused by
FCMs, and in particular, those with the capacity to disrupt hormones, are not
even being considered in routine toxicology analysis, which prompts the authors
to suggest that this "casts serious doubts on the adequacy of chemical
regulatory procedures."
They admit that establishing potential cause and
effect as a result of lifelong and largely invisible exposure to FCMs will be
no easy task, largely because there are no unexposed populations to compare
with, and there are likely to be wide differences in exposure levels among
individuals and across certain population groups.
But some sort of population-based assessment and
biomonitoring are urgently needed to tease out any potential links between food
contact chemicals and chronic conditions like cancer, obesity, diabetes,
neurological and inflammatory disorders, particularly given the known role of
environmental pollutants, they argue.
"Since most foods are packaged, and the entire
population is likely to be exposed, it is of utmost importance that gaps in
knowledge are reliably and rapidly filled," they urge.
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