| More
Home / Letters To The Editor


Posted On November 20, 2008
printable version email to a friend join our e-mail list


ACRYLAMIDE: Takes huge amount to cause health risk

By: David Martosko
Newspaper: The Daily Herald

Dr. Elizabeth Smoots failed to ask an obvious question regarding the supposed cancer risks from eating acrylamide, a common chemical found in starchy foods (Tuesday column, "Something else to watch out for: acrylamides"). How much is too much?

Consider french fries, for instance. A person of average size would have to eat 182 pounds -- every day, for a lifetime -- to have the same cancer risk suffered by lab rats in published studies. That hardly seems worth fretting over.

It's no surprise, then, that thorough studies published in the British Journal of Cancer and the International Journal of Cancer found no realistic added cancer risk from the tiny amount of acrylamide in food.

Scaring people about acrylamide will have the paradoxical effect of making people less healthy by turning them away from olives, almonds, asparagus, spinach, beets and prune juice -- all acrylamide-rich foods. And if you really want to banish acrylamide from your diet, you'd better start with coffee. It's a biggee.

Have we really run out of worthwhile things to worry about?



printable version email to a friend join our e-mail list

Letters

FARM activists getting lazy
The recent H1N1 outbreak was a field day for all kinds of Chicken Little opportunists. But animal rights activists continue to act as the pacesetters. read more here »

ACRYLAMIDE: Takes huge amount to cause health risk
Scaring people about acrylamide will have the paradoxical effect of making people less healthy by turning them away from olives, almonds, asparagus, spinach, beets and prune juice -- all acrylamide-rich foods. read more here »

Scare tactics don't leave room for adequate science
There's a reason that Dr. David Ludwig wants politicians to hurry and regulate our diets before they get all the facts. The evidence doesn't support him. read more here »

OpEds

‘Tis not the season to be annoyingly wary
This time of year, people watching their weight while facing down holiday happy hours and open houses can be particularly susceptible to scaremongering by the fat police. read more here »

Food activists are all jeer, no cheer
Don't let the holiday season magic be tainted by activists' food curses. One thing we can be thankful for is our ability to ignore them. read more here »


Copyright © 1997-2010 Center for Consumer Freedom. Tel: 202-463-7112.