Tuesday, January 12, 2010

APHA Issues Statement Against Use Of Hormones In Beef And Dairy Cattle

The American Public Health Association (APHA) came out against the use of exogenous hormones in general, and against one type of GMO in particular, in a recent statement:

Policy Statement: Opposition to the Use of Hormone Growth Promoters in Beef and Dairy Cattle Production, APHA, November 2009

Excerpts:
"There is clear evidence that hormones originating outside the body can interfere with our own hormone function."

"Many hormone-related chronic diseases are common or on the rise, including breast and prostate cancer, thyroid disease, obesity and diabetes, endometriosis, uterine fibroids, and infertility."

"Biological plausibility and scientific findings now suggest that exogenous hormones such as those used in our food system may be one such contributor to these negative trends."

"It is widely acknowledged that the use of these hormone growth promoters results in residues in meat."
In a 2007 study, for example, sperm concentration of male offspring was found to be inversely related to their mothers’ self-reported beef consumption while pregnant, with possible links hypothesized to the 6 steroid hormones routinely used in US beef production.1
It isn't just meat and dairy that may be problematic:
"Residues of these hormone growth promoters also persist for weeks to months in manure and feedlot runoff, raising concerns about the added exogenous hormone load to the environment."
The section on GMOs used in dairy cows (rbGH: recombinant bovine growth hormone) is particularly damning:
"Although some studies (including several funded by Monsanto) have failed to demonstrate that rbGH harms dairy cows, virtually all independent analyses of the data reached a different conclusion."
Canada, the European Union, Australia, New Zealand, and Japan have prohibited its use. Not the US:
"In 2007, nearly 43% of large herds were treated with rbGH."

Hormone Growth Promoters Just One of Many Environmental Endocrine Disruptors

The APHA Statement referenced and echoed the Endocrine Society's Statement from last summer (that I blogged about here):
"In its first scientific statement issued in June 2009, the Endocrine Society ... determined that 'Results from animal models, human clinical observations, and epidemiological studies converge to implicate EDCs [endocrine disrupting chemicals] as a significant concern to public health. ... Scientific knowledge about [EDCs’] effects on humans . . . appears sufficient to justify societal approaches to limiting population exposures.' "
Endocrine disruptors include hormones (GMO or conventional) fed to livestock as well as chemicals in plastics, pesticides, fuels, and cosmetics. EDs bioaccumulate in the food chain - they accrue in the fattier tissues of fish and other livestock. (In the future, a certification process may test animal products for ED concentrations.)

All of us have more of these chemicals in our bodies than did people just 50 years ago. Which leads me to the genetic issue...

The APHA Statement mentions epigenetic changes arising from EDs. These are changes in the activity of genes that don't require changes to the genes themselves. (Mutation is a change in a gene, the DNA itself.) Many endocrine disruptors, e.g. steroid hormones and Bisphenol A in plastics, are fat soluble and can easily diffuse through fatty cell membranes. Once inside the cell they bind to receptors and disrupt normal functioning of genes.

Epigenetic changes can cause us, a population, to experience gene-based biological outcomes - diseases such as obesity and diabetes - in a time period shorter than typical human generational cycles (100s of years). I saw that Marion Nestle is discussing Genetic Causes of Obesity on her blog. While it's true that "Obesity rates rose sharply in the early 1980s, with no possibility for so rapid a change in the genetic composition of the population," there was and is a strong possibility of epigenetic changes in this timeframe.

Maybe it's not so much the fat in our diet that's predisposing us to obesity, diabetes, heart disease, thyroid disease, breast and prostate cancer, and other hormone-related chronic diseases. Maybe it's the substances dissolved in that fat. This will be an exciting, if disturbing, area of study in the coming years.
________

1Semen Quality Of Fertile US Males In Relation To Their Mothers' Beef Consumption During Pregnancy, Human Reproduction, 2008

4 comments:

jimpurdy1943@yahoo.com said...

Bix, when I read your wonderful blog, I learn many things:

Junk food is bad.

Healthy food like milk is bad.

Water is good. Unless it comes in plastic.

At least one thing should be good for my health -- reading your very informative blog.

But your blog makes me depressed.

I need some comfort food.

Bix said...

Ha! Well, I suppose we can hope farmers and food producers will change their practices of their own volition - use fewer pesticides, hormones, and other chemicals. Maybe the market would come to demand that? That would be the less government approach. Another option is to regulate. I'm glad we have the EPA, FDA, FSIS, etc. I know there are people who prefer we do away with them. I don't think it's a good idea. (Senators Specter and Casey have heard from me a few times.)

Either way, I think the quality of food can improve if that's what people want.

Ben P. DaSalt said...

I would like to add that the milk hormone issue is often perceived as being a problem of synthetic hormone use. However, there is this perspective:

Michael Pollan: Perhaps it is the prevalence of hormones in milk — even in organic milk and from cows not treated with hormones. We’ve been breeding for high yield, and in the process we selected for cows that produce high levels of growth hormones. This is a concern to many nutritionists. Skim milk avoids the problem, since the hormones are in the milk fat, but then, skim milk often has powdered milk in it, which some people worry contains too much oxidized cholesterol. So pick your poison. I didn’t call it The Omnivore's Dilemma for nothing.

http://www.kpic.com/news/health/17020346.html

Bix said...

Hormones in regular or organic milk too, good point! I wonder if the hormone load would be such an issue if it wasn't exacerbated by environmental hormones, or hormone disruptors, like Bisphenol-A in plastics (BPA is a synthetic estrogen). I saw yesterday the FDA is finally going to "take a closer look" at BPA:

"One administration official privy to the talks said the FDA is in a quandary. "They have new evidence that makes them worried, but they don't have enough proof to justify pulling the stuff, so what do you do?" said the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. "You want to warn people, but you don't want to create panic."

"The chemical industry, which produces more than 6 billion tons of BPA annually and has been fighting restrictions on its use, said Friday's announcement was good news because the agency did not tell people to stop using products containing the chemical."


From:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/01/15/AR2010011504070.html?hpid=topnews