Burgers,
fries, tacos and pastries come wrapped in grease-proof paper and boxes that
often contain non-stick chemicals that may be able to leach into food, US
researchers said ©Saul Loeb (AFP)
|
Burgers, fries, tacos and
pastries come wrapped in grease-proof paper and boxes that often contain
non-stick chemicals that may be able to leach into food, US researchers said
Wednesday.
AFP
report continues:
The
study in the journal Environmental Science and Technology Letters tested more
than 400 samples from 27 fast food chains in the United States.
Almost
half of paper wrappers and 20 percent of paperboard samples -- such as boxes
for fries and pizza -- contained fluorine, a marker for highly fluorinated
chemicals used in stain-resistant carpets, non-stick cookware and waterproof
outdoor apparel.
"Wrappers
for Tex-Mex food, desserts and breads were the most likely to contain
fluorine," said the report.
The
study did not show any specific harm to human health from exposure to these
chemicals -- known as per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) -- in food
wrappers.
But
researchers warned that exposure to some PFASs has been associated with cancer,
thyroid disease, immune suppression, low birth weight, and decreased fertility
according to prior studies.
"These
chemicals have been linked with numerous health problems, so it's concerning
that people are potentially exposed to them in food," said lead author
Laurel Schaider, an environmental chemist at the Silent Spring Institute.
"Children
are especially at risk for health effects because their developing bodies are
more vulnerable to toxic chemicals."
Six
of the samples contained a long-chain PFAS called perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA),
also known as C8, even though several major US manufacturers agreed to stopping
using C8 compounds in food packaging due to health hazards, after a 2011 US
Food and Drug Administration review.
Researchers
also detected some shorter-chain PFAS compounds, which have been increasingly
used as replacements for the longer chain PFASs.
"The
replacement compounds are equally persistent and have not been shown to be safe
for human health," said co-author Arlene Blum, founder of the Green
Science Policy Institute.
"That's
why we need to reduce the use of the entire class of highly fluorinated
compounds. The good news is there are non-fluorinated alternatives
available."
About
one in three American kids eat fast food every day.
The
United States began phasing out certain PFASs in 2000, but other countries
still produce them, and they tend to linger in the environment for long periods
after being discarded in landfills.
Prior studies have shown
that substances in food packaging can migrate into food.
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