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Dyes Called "Secret Shame" of Food Industry and Regulators
6-4-08
Yellow 5, Red 40, and six other widely used artificial colorings are linked to
hyperactivity and behavior problems in children and should be prohibited from
use in foods, according to the nonprofit Center for Science in the Public
Interest. The group today formally petitioned the Food and Drug Administration
to ban the dyes, several of which are already being phased out in the United
Kingdom. The other six dyes are Blue 1, Blue 2, Green 3, Orange B, Red 3, and
Yellow 6.
Synthetic food dyes have been suspected of disrupting children's behavior since
the 1970s, when Dr. Ben Feingold, a San Francisco allergist, reported that his
patients improved when their diets were changed. Numerous controlled studies
conducted over the next three decades in the United States, Europe, and
Australia proved that some children’s behavior is worsened by artificial dyes,
but the government did nothing to discourage their use and food manufacturers
greatly increased their reliance on them.
A comprehensive 2004 meta-analysis of the medical literature concluded that
artificial dyes affect children's behavior, and two recent studies funded by the
British government found that dyes (as well as the preservative sodium benzoate)
adversely affect kids' behavior. Unlike most previous studies, those British
studies tested children in the general population, not children whose parents
suspected they were sensitive to dyes. As a result, the British government is
successfully pressuring food manufacturers to switch to safer colorings.
"We spent years trying to figure out the cause of our son's behavioral
problems," said Judy Mann, of Silver Spring, Md. "For a long time, we thought
the culprit was sugar. But when we started carefully monitoring everything he
ate we were able to see that artificial dyes and preservatives were the problem.
Since eliminating them the change has been positively stunning."
"The continued use of these unnecessary artificial dyes is the secret shame of
the food industry and the regulators who watch over it," said CSPI executive
director Michael F. Jacobson. "The purpose of these chemicals is often to mask
the absence of real food, to increase the appeal of a low-nutrition product to
children, or both. Who can tell the parents of kids with behavioral problems
that this is truly worth the risk?"
Americans' exposure to artificial food dyes has risen sharply. According to the
FDA, the amount of food dye certified for use was 12 milligrams per capita per
day in 1955. In 2007, 59 mg per capita per day, or nearly five times as much,
was certified for use. Dyes are used in countless foods and are sometimes used
to simulate the color of fruits or vegetables. Kraft's Guacamole Dip gets its
greenish color not from avocados (there are almost none) but from Yellow 5,
Yellow 6, and Blue 1. The blue bits in Aunt Jemima Blueberry Waffles are blue
thanks to Red 40 and Blue 2, not real blueberries.
Artificial dyes are particularly prevalent in the sugary cereals, candies,
sodas, and snack foods pitched to kids. For instance, General Mills' Fruit
Roll-ups and Fruit-by-the-Foot flavored snacks get their fruity colors from
Yellow 5, Yellow 6, Red 40, and Blue 1. General Mills' Fruity Cheerios, Lucky
Charms, and Trix also contain several of the problematic dyes, as do Kellogg's
Froot Loops and Apple Jacks and Post's Fruity Pebbles.
More than a dozen American varieties of Kraft's Oscar Meyer Lunchables kids'
meals contain artificial food dyes, but not so the British versions. Starburst
Chews, Skittles, and M&M candies—all Mars products—contain the full spectrum of
artificial colors in the U.S., but not in the U.K., where the company uses
natural colorings. Even foods that aren't particularly brightly colored can
contain dyes, including several varieties of macaroni and cheese and mashed
potatoes. Betty Crocker's Au Gratin "100% Real" Potatoes are partly not real,
colored as they are with Yellow 5 and Yellow 6, both derived from coal tar.
Remarkably, in Britain, the color in McDonald's strawberry sauce for sundaes
actually comes from strawberries; in the U.S. it comes from Red 40.
"The science shows that kids' behavior improves when these artificial colorings
are removed from their diets and worsens when they’re added to the their diets,"
said Dr. David Schab, a psychiatrist at Columbia University Medical Center, who
conducted the 2004 meta-analysis with his colleague Dr. Nhi-Ha T. Trinh. "While
not all children seem to be sensitive to these chemicals, it's hard to justify
their continued use in foods—especially those foods heavily marketed to young
children."
Americans need not travel to Britain to find kid-friendly food without
artificial food dyes, though. Everything sold at the Whole Foods and Trader
Joe's supermarket chains is free of the controversial chemicals.
"I can't imagine why the Food and Drug Administration still allows these
artificial colors in food, knowing what we know," said Beth Tribble, a Fairfax
County, VA parent of two boys, whose youngest is sensitive to food dyes. "It's
almost impossible for parents to eliminate these chemicals from their kids'
diets on their own. The FDA could make life a lot easier for parents and
children by just getting rid of them."
"Banning these synthetic chemicals is certainly a far less drastic step than
putting so many children on Ritalin or other potentially dangerous and
sometimes-abused prescription stimulants," said Jacobson. "The food industry has
known about this problem for 30 years, yet few companies have switched to safer
colorings. We hope today is the beginning of the end for Yellow 5, Red 40, and
these other dubious dyes."
CSPI's petition asks the FDA to require a warning label on foods with artificial
dyes while it mulls CSPI's request to ban the dyes outright. CSPI also wants the
FDA to correct the information it presents to parents on its web site about the
impact of artificial food dyes on behavior. Joining CSPI's call are 19 prominent
psychiatrists, toxicologists, and pediatricians who today co-signed letter
urging members of Congress to hold hearings on artificial food dyes and
behavior, and to fund an Institute of Medicine research project on the issue.
Those doctors include L. Eugene Arnold, professor emeritus of psychiatry at Ohio
State University; Bernard Weiss, professor of environmental medicine at the
University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry; and Stanley Greenspan,
Clinical Professor of Psychiatry and Pediatrics at George Washington University
Medical School.
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