38 research outputs found

    Food additives and children's behaviour: evidence‐based policy at the margins of certainty

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    The possible effects of food additives (specifically artificial colours) have been debated for over 30 years. The evidence accumulated suggests that for some children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) food colours exacerbate their condition. Two studies undertaken by a research group at the University of Southampton have extended these findings to the effects on hyperactivity in children from the general population who do not show ADHD. This article reviews the response from policy-makers to these findings and concludes that the failure to impose a mandatory ban on the six food colours in the Southampton study is inadequate and that such a ban would be an appropriate application of the precautionary principle when the evidence is considered to be at the margins of certaint

    Mixture-risk-assessment of pesticide residues in retail polyfloral honey

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    [EN] The presence of even tiny quantities of pesticide residues in honey, a traditional healthy product, is a matter of concern for producers, packers and consumers. This paper aims to quantify pesticides in retail brands of polyfloral honey, and to calculate the mixture risk assessment of honey for consumers according to the results obtained from the analyzed samples. A LC-MS/MS multi-residue method was developed and validated for 13 compounds: 11 pesticides (chlorfenvinphos, coumaphos, tau-fluvalinate, amitraz, which are very common in veterinary treatments, and imidacloprid, acetamiprid, simazine, cyproconazole, tebuconazole, chlorpiryphos-methyl, chlorpiryphos, widely used in agricultural practices), and 2 metabolites of amitraz (2,4-DMA and 2,4-DMF). Results showed that the samples contained pesticide residues at different concentrations; however, the MRL in honey for each of the 11 pesticides was never exceeded. The most common were amitraz (from 1 to 50 ¿Ýg/kg) present in 100% of the samples, and coumaphos (up to 14 ¿Ýg/kg) in 63%. The hazard index (HI) for adults was less than 0.002 in all cases, a long way from 1, the value established as the limit of acceptability. Therefore, commercial honey does not represent any significant risk to health. However, considering that residue levels should be present ¡§as low as reasonably achievable¡¿ it is deemed necessary to make an effort to reduce their presence by appropriate agricultural and, above all, beekeeping practices due to acaridae treatments.This study forms part of a project funded by the Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad of Spain (Programa Estatal de Investigacion Desarrollo e Innovacion Orientada a los retos de la sociedad; Project number AGL2013-48646-R), for which the authors are grateful.Juan Borrás, MDS.; Doménech Antich, EM.; Escriche Roberto, MI. (2016). Mixture-risk-assessment of pesticide residues in retail polyfloral honey. Food Control. 67:127-134. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodcont.2016.02.051S1271346
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