Insectide risk for young children

The US consumer group has called on the US EPA to ban the use of methyl parathion. The ban is needed, say the EWG, because hundreds of thousands of young children are exceeding government-established safety limits for the pesticide every day, mostly through consumption of apples and peaches.

EWG recommended that until methyl parathion is banned, parents shift from apples and peaches to other fresh fruits for children under the age of five.

The EWG analysis follows concerns raised about pesticides in foods by Consumer Reports magazine. On Tuesday March 3 1999, EWG ran a full-page ad in The New York Times warning of pesticide risks in children’s foods, and urging consumers to once again make their voices heard.

EWG’s analysis of more than 110,000 government-tested food samples and detailed government data on children’s food consumption found that multiple pesticides known or suspected to cause brain and nervous system damage, cancer, or hormone interference are common in foods many children consume.

According to EWG’s report, ‘How ‘Bout Them Apples?’:

Government tests show that red raspberries, strawberries, apples, and peaches grown in the US and cantaloupe from Mexico are the foods most contaminated with pesticides. The fruits least contaminated with pesticides were watermelon, bananas, kiwi, pineapple, and domestically grown cantaloupe. The least contaminated vegetables include corn, onions and peas.

Ken Cook, president of EWG and an author of the report, dismissed food industry claims that banning or reducing the use of dangerous pesticides is impossible and would be costly to consumers. He cited an aggressive program by one US baby food company to eliminate pesticides from its product line.