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Author Topic:   No evidence organic foods benefit health: study
AcousticGod
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From: acousticgod@sbcglobal.net
Registered: Apr 2009

posted August 20, 2010 11:11 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for AcousticGod     Edit/Delete Message
Consumers who opt for organic foods often believe they are improving their health, but there is currently no strong evidence that organics bring nutrition-related health benefits, a new research review finds.

A "disappointingly small" number of well-designed studies have looked at whether organic foods may have health benefits beyond their conventional counterparts', according to the review, by researchers with the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Health in the UK.

Moreover, they found, what studies have been done have largely focused on short-term effects of organic eating -- mainly antioxidant activity in the body -- rather than longer-term health outcomes. And most of the antioxidant studies failed to find differences between organic and conventional diets.

The review, published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, adds to findings reported last year by the same research team.

In that study, the researchers combed through 162 articles published in the scientific literature over the last 50 years, and found no evidence that organic and conventional foods differ significantly in their nutrient content.

For the current review, the researchers were able to find only 12 published studies that met their criteria for evaluating the health effects of organic foods.

"A surprising and important finding of this review is the extremely limited nature of the evidence base on this subject, both in terms of the number and quality of studies," write Dr. Alan D. Dangour and his colleagues.

Research in the area does appear to be increasing, Dangour's team notes; 4 of the 12 studies they reviewed were published in 2008 or 2009.

But in the future, the researchers add, studies -- both in humans and animals -- need to be better-designed.

Of the 12 studies the researchers identified, 6 were short-term clinical trials that looked at whether specific organic foods changed markers of antioxidant activity in participants' blood.

Those trials showed no strong evidence that organic eating boosted antioxidant activity, but the studies were also very limited in scope: they were small -- with the largest including 43 men -- and lasted no longer than a few weeks.

Out of the other 6 studies, one found an association between organic foods and a lower risk of the allergic skin condition eczema among nearly 2,800 Dutch children age 2 or younger.

In that study, parents were surveyed several times about their children's diet and any episodes of eczema over the first two years of life. Researchers found that children who consumed strictly organic dairy products showed a lower risk of eczema than those consumed conventional dairy foods.

However, the study had several key limitations, including its reliance on parents' reports of eczema. And the basic design of the study does not allow for any conclusions about whether children's consumption of organic dairy was the reason for the lower eczema risk.

While questions remain as to whether organic foods have any extra nutritional value, people buy organic for a number of other reasons as well.

Organic foods are made without the use of conventional pesticides, synthetic fertilizers, antibiotics or hormones -- which could potentially reap benefits for people's health and the environment.

The current review, Dangour and his colleagues point out, did not look for studies on the possible health benefits of reduced exposure to those substances. Nor did it address the environmental impact of organic food production.

SOURCE: http://www.ajcn.org/ American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, online May 12, 2010. http://health.yahoo.net/news/s/nm/us_organic_foods

Interesting

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katatonic
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posted August 20, 2010 12:05 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for katatonic     Edit/Delete Message
yes i eat organic as much as possible because i believe it contains fewer poisons...and adds fewer poisons to the environment. whether it has more vitamins or minerals is dubious but the availability of those nutrients in the longterm has to be upped by lack of competition in the body with poisonous substances. including - in prepared foods including drinks - the presence of a lot of nutritionally empty fillers like high fructose cornsyrup and hydrogenated fats etc.

i think its also very pertinent that NOT MANY STUDIES have been made and certainly not many LONGTERM studies, since the mainstream trend toward organics has only recently taken hold...

but i also believe that a certain percentage of the population will thrive on modern food substances breeding new generations who also do so...there is little point in breaking your bank balance or stressing your system by being paranoid about your food!

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SunChild
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From: Melbourne. Victoria. Australia
Registered: Apr 2009

posted August 20, 2010 07:09 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for SunChild     Edit/Delete Message
What an odd article. lol

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starfox
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Posts: 5
From: london
Registered: Aug 2010

posted August 24, 2010 06:28 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for starfox     Edit/Delete Message
I grow my own veg in my garden in the summertime.

Whether it is any 'better' for me I can't say?

But it is a good thing to do for me spiritually and physically.

It costs little to do, I do not have to have runner beans flown in 5000 miles by a plane.
I can just go and pick them & its almost Eden for a few weeks.

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Valus
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posted August 25, 2010 02:32 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Valus     Edit/Delete Message

I've grown very skeptical of "studies" like this one. Unless you have a degree in science, and all the relevant information about every stage of the experiments, it's very difficult, if not impossible, to distinguish between a well-conducted study and a sham.

It should be common knowledge by now that large corporations commission "studies" with the purpose of obtaining results which will support the claims they make for their own products. If the study does not produce those claims, they will often either bury the study or distort the findings. Rarely will they publish something which makes them look bad and poses a threat to their earnings. Unfortunately, large corporations are one of the only sources of funding for studies, so, most studies we see are linked to these vested interests. Even so-called independent research firms are often mere fronts for these corporations.

I have a friend who took a course on statistics and she's told me how easy and how common it is to distort statistics such as the ones produced by these studies. I've also spent time on skeptic message boards, and you should see how rigorous scientifically-minded people are in ferreting out the truth. There are so many ways to tamper with experiments in order to produce biased findings. The best evidence, in my experience, is to look around at the people who are eating organic and the people who are not. The evidence there is pretty undeniable.

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katatonic
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posted August 25, 2010 03:08 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for katatonic     Edit/Delete Message
i agree valus in fact i think when you are talking about humans as a species it is well nigh impossible to do a valid study. too many variables and thus no way of creating a "control" group... considering the length of our generations/reproductive habits it is a VERY long process to see what effects are being created by isolated factors.

and as one friend likes to point out if she always ate organic she would not be eating enough to keep going! but she does as much as she can...

to me it just makes sense that if my food does NOT have 60 pesticides IN it it is more likely to deliver the "goods" i am eating it for!! or at least i will be in a position to absorb those goods better if my liver etc are not overworked filtering out poisons.

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