PPP-22

 

PESTICIDES AND FOOD SAFETY

Fred Whitford, Coordinator, Purdue Pesticide Programs

Linda Mason, Post Harvest Research Entomologist

Carl Winter, Extension Food Toxicologist, University of California at Davis


Edited by Arlene Blessing, Purdue Pesticide Programs

TABLE OF CONTENTS
PAGE
 
2
PROFILE OF CONCERN
2
WHAT CONSUMERS CONSIDER IMPORTANT WHEN SELECTING FRESH PRODUCE
2
PESTICIDE USE ON THE FARM
2
EVALUATION AND REGULATION OF PESTICIDES
3
PESTICIDES, PESTS, AND PEST MANAGEMENT
3
PROCESS FOR ALLOWING NON-CANCER-CAUSING PESTICIDE USE ON FOOD
3
Evaluation Process
4
WHO REGULATES PESTICIDES?
4
PESTICIDES SHOWN TO CAUSE CANCER IN LABORATORY ANIMALS
5
HOW MUCH PESTICIDE RESIDUE IS ACTUALLY IN OUR FOOD?
5
Pesticide Residue Monitoring
5
Total Diet Study
5
Circle of Poison
6
AVERAGE RESIDUE REDUCTION DURING MARKETING AND PROCESSING
6
SUMMARY
7
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
8
NATIONAL TELEPHONE CONTACTS
10
THE FOOD GUIDE PYRAMID
12

 


PURDUE UNIVERSITY COOPERATIVE EXTENSION SERVICE WEST LAFAYETTE, IN 47907

 

PROFILE OF CONCERN

The food distribution network composed of farmers, grain handlers, shippers, food processors, and retailers is providing today's consumers year-round access to an abundant selection of vegetables, fruits, and grains never before available to the public. Encouraged by the medical and health care communities to eat a more wholesome and nutritious diet, the public has demonstrated a willingness to increase the consumption of fruits and vegetables as one method of improving personal health.

The selective use of pesticides to control pests (insects, diseases, weeds) of food crops has played a major role in increasing the availability of produce and grains to the consumer. Pesticides have allowed growers and handlers of food products to expand production into new geographical areas, increase production volume, extend shelf life, and improve the appearance of many of our commonly grown foods. The consequences of using pesticides for food production and the realization that some foods do contain pesticide residues are of paramount importance to today's health conscious consumer. Specifically, the public continues to voice its concerns by ranking pesticide residue as one of the top five food safety issues. For example, public opinion polls indicate that in selecting produce, an important consideration is that foods are certified free of pesticide residues. The public's concern that consuming foods containing pesticide residues may adversely impact their health is critical.

Nearly four out of ten individuals presently believe that the potential risks from pesticide residues outweigh the potential health benefits of eating fresh fruits and vegetables. However, nutritionists and dieticians generally agree that the issue of pesticide residues on food is not a top food issue. Rather, it is stressed that food safety issues should focus around establishing fruits, vegetables, and grains as a larger proportion of our daily diet (see Food Guide Pyramid on back cover for recommendations) and educating the public on the negative consequences (e.g., food poisoning) of improper preparation and/or storage of foods. It is hoped that this publication will educate the consumer to better evaluate the impact of minimal pesticide residues on human health and to weigh the benefits and risks associated with the consumption of foods containing trace pesticide residues.


WHAT CONSUMERS CONSIDER IMPORTANT WHEN SELECTING FRESH PRODUCE
Characteristic
Percent of People
appearance
97
taste/flavor
96
freshness
96
price
70
residue testing
68
nutritional value
66
shelf life
60
convenience
51
size
45
in-season
41
calorie content
26
organically grown
22
brand name
10
Source: The Packer's Fresh Trends Consumer Profice Study.

 


PESTICIDE USE ON THE FARM


The American public relies on two percent of its citizens to produce its food supply. Many of today's food producers are taking an Integrated Pest Management (IPM) approach to preventing, reducing or eliminating pest problems. Growers and processors must make complicated decisions prior to planting, during the growing season, and during postharvest handling. Scientific IPM strategies give the grower economic incentives for sustaining long-term crop protection with minimal disruption to the environment. The agricultural community typically will use pesticides judiciously as part of the IPM strategy whenever proven alternatives are not available for pest control.
Growers are hiring professional crop consultants with increasing frequency for advice on maintaining or increasing production through the utilization of IPM programs structured toward their specific agronomic situations. Agricultural products leaving the farm are subjected to IPM at the food processing facility. IPM practices such as plant sanitation, monitoring for insect and rodent pests, and controlled temperature strategies in the food plant environment are routinely incorporated into the food processing chain; the result is often a reduced need for pesticide application. Informed decision-making via the IPM approach ultimately effects a profitable agricultural production system and benefits the consumer by providing foods with minimal or no pesticide residue.

EVALUATION AND REGULATION OF PESTICIDES

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is mandated by federal law to evaluate the benefits of using a pesticide versus the risks its use might pose to public health and the environment. To evaluate the risks and benefits of pesticide use, the EPA requires all pesticide manufacturers to conduct extensive scientific testing prior to product registration for sale and use in the United States. The manufacturers of all pesticides must compile and document information related to chemistry, toxicology, food residues, application rates, environmental impact assessment, and human safety. Normally it takes 5-10 years and upwards of $100 million to bring a new active ingredient (pesticide) to the point of approval for use by the public—a significant investment. But such scientific evaluation and regulatory scrutiny is essential to provide today's consumers with the benefits of high quality food.

PESTICIDES, PESTS, & PEST MANAGEMENT
Pesticides are chemicals used for the prevention, elimination, or control of unwanted pests. Pesticides are usually organic chemicals, but some are inorganic compounds. They can be produced in the laboratory, or naturally by the plant.
Pests include plants and animals that vector disease, interfere with the production of food and fiber crops, or otherwise detract from our quality of life. Weeds, insects, nematodes, fungal and bacterial diseases, and rodents are examples of pests.
integrated pest management is an ecological approach to pest management in which all available control techniques are consolidated into a unified program so that pest populations can be managed in such a manner that economic damage is avoided and adverse side effects are minimized. Practices used as a part of this management philosophy include the following:
    destruction of crop debris
    having pests feed and concentrate on trap crops
    tillage and cultivation
    crop rotation
    selectivity of planting and harvest dates
    soil test analysis for crop nutrient needs
    planting crop species adapted for local conditions
    using genetically improved crop varieties with resistance to specific pests
    using biological control
    predicting pest outbreaks with computers
    pheromones for trapping pests
    scouting and monitoring for pests
    economic thresholds as guides to pest control
    better timing and application of pesticides
    use of biological insecticides
    improved pesticide application efficiency
    adapting promising technology, including the use of infrared scanners, satellite photos, gene-splicing biotechnology, and new pesticide delivery systems that incorporate farm-specific information on tractor mounted computers.

PROCESS FOR ALLOWING NON-CANCER-CAUSING PESTICIDE USE ON FOOD

The registration of a pesticide for use in our gardens or a farmer's field requires assessment of the potential negative effects of that pesticide on human health. To anticipate how a pesticide might impact human health, laboratory animals such as mice and rats are exposed to varying dosages in their foodsfrom very minimal to extremely high levels. Scientists and health experts then evaluate the observable effect(s) of consuming known quantities of that specific pesticide on reproduction, respiration, and the immune system. Information gained from such tests is evaluated by health professionals and medical experts to determine potential human effects.


EVALUATION PROCESS

1. Scientists from the Environmental Protection Agency begin the evaluation process by determining the highest pesticide dose that can be fed to laboratory animals to cause adverse health effects but not death. This dose is called the Maximum Tolerated Dose (MTD).

2. The second step in the evaluation process is the selection of the highest pesticide dose that does not cause observable harm or side effects inexperimental animals. This dose level is referred to as the No-ObservableAdverse Effect Level (NOAEL). The NOAEL value can be developed from acute (single incident) or chronic (multiple exposure) studies. The NOAEL is the first safety level.

3. The NOAEL usually is divided by a safety factor of 100 (safety factors range from 10 to 10,000) to take into account individual differences among people and the extrapolation of human health information from animal data. This second safety level is called the Reference Dose (RFD).

4. The RFD generally is expressed in terms of milligrams of a pesticide consumed per kilogram of body weight (mg/kg) per day. It is the amount of a pesticide residue that, if ingested daily over a 70-year lifetime, a human could consume without expecting any health-related problems. It is the RFD that is used as the toxicological indicator when pesticide residues are tested on foods designated for human consumption.

5. Next, EPA scientists determine how much of a particular pesticide residue the average consumer might ingest over a life expectancy of 70 years. One measure used to calculate lifetime exposures is the Theoretical Maximum Residue Contribution (TMRC). The TMRC assumes that the foods we consume will contain maximum amounts of pesticide residues. These theoretical residue calculations assume that the maximum allowable amount of a pesticide will be applied to 100 percent of the labeled crops, that the number of pesticide applications will be in accordance with the maximum allowed by the product label, and that the food commodities will be consumed daily for a lifetime. The TMRC is calculated by multiplying the tolerance on each crop by the average daily consumption of that crop. The individual TMRCs are then added to derive a single, Theoretical Maximum Residue Contribution which serves as one of the indicators for theoretical exposure.

6. The ultimate objective is the comparison between the total theoretical amount of that specific pesticide residue which we consume daily over a lifetime (TMRC value) and the highest safety level (RFD value). The pesticide is believed harmless to public health when the TMRC value is below the RFD safety value. If the TMRC is above the RFD, the Environmental Protection Agency reviews actual residue data or requires the development of such data to ascertain more realistic exposure estimates. This second exposure estimate incorporates "real world" residues into the calculations and is termed the Anticipated Residue Contribution (ARC). The ARC allows for a realistic refinement of the TMRC. Actual pesticide use, anticipated residues as determined in controlled field studies, the effects of processing, peeling, washing, and cooking on residues, and regulatory monitoring data represent the kinds of information used to evaluate the ARC alongside the RFD (see Average Residue Reductions During Marketing and Processing, page 6).

7. Finally, EPA examines each new request for the use of the pesticide on a food crop. The residue contribution from that use is added to the TMRC or ARC; and as long as it is below the RFD, a tolerance will be assigned for that use on that specific crop. Tolerances generally will not be approved when the ARC is above the health based RFD criteria.

WHO REGULATES PESTICIDES?

 
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY

evaluates pesticide risks and benefits

is responsible for registering all pesticides at the federal level
legally mandates the setting of food tolerances
holds all authority granted under the Federal Insecticide, fungicide, and Rodenticide Act
 
FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION
monitors domestic and imported foods for levels of pesticide residues
has legal authority by the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
 
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
monitors meat, poultry, and egg products for pesticide residues
has authority under the Meat Inspection Act, the Poultry Products Inspection Act, and the Egg Products Inspection Act
 
STATE PESTICIDE REGULATORY PROGRAMS
Most states have the legal authority and statutory responsibility to register pesticides and to regulate pesticide use, storage, disposal, and certification. Programs dealing with pesticide food safety and residue monitoring vary from state to state. Contact your state Department of Agriculture for the programs in your state.

 

PESTICIDES SHOWN TO CAUSE CANCER IN LABORATORY ANIMALS


Scientific and medical evaluations continue for pesticides shown to cause cancer in laboratory animals. The evaluation process is extremely complex, uses highly sophisticated mathematical models, and assumes a daily exposure over a 70 year period. The ultimate outcome is to predict the potential increase in cancer cases, from laboratory animals exposed to high concentrations to humans exposed to low level residues in their diets. EPA will allow the use of a pesticide on a food crop if the estimated risk of its causing cancer is one in a million or less. The likelihood of any person developing cancer from a lifetime exposure range of zero to one in a million has been coined the negligible risk standard, or the de minimis interpretation. The general rule of thumb is that EPA will not grant a food tolerance for pesticides that are estimated to increase cancer rates in excess of the current one-in-a-million guideline.

HOW MUCH PESTICIDE RESIDUE IS ACTUALLY IN OUR FOOD?

Pesticide Residue Monitoring. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA), United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), and many states have in place a pesticide residue monitoring program aimed at detecting residues which exceed legal tolerances or for which there are no tolerances established; in either case, food products containing illegal residues are subject to seizure and destruction. Each year, FDA samples approximately one percent of the food supply, or about 20,000 fresh food specimens grown domestically or imported. The majority of samples are derived from produce grown in other countries. These fresh vegetables and fruits are subjected to chemical analyses that can detect upwards of 268 pesticides or their metabolites.

The graphs below summarize results from pesticide residue studies of imported and domestic crops. These FDA results are very comparable to the results obtained from USDA and state pesticide residue monitoring programs. Such residue monitoring programs provide only an overview of potential exposures to pesticide residues. They do not take into account information on the effects of washing, peeling, and processing on pesticide residues, but provide only crude estimates relative to the dietary intake of pesticide residues in food. However, the monitoring programs do deliver a very important message to consumers: that pesticide label use directions are being followed strictly by the agricultural community. Pesticide residues on the majority of foods tested were within legal tolerances; and some foods were found to contain no detectable residue. This important point clearly supports the public's view that our farmers do have the prerequisite knowledge to properly and correctly manage pesticides. This single fact gives credence to federal and state regulatory decision makers who rely on the agricultural community to follow label directions and precautions to minimize potential adverse impact on human health.

 

please click here to view a larger version of image above
please click here to view a larger version of image above


Total Diet Study. FDA does conduct a Total Diet Study which is a market basket approach that analyzes pesticide residues after food has been prepared for eating. Foods are collected four times a year from four geographical areas. A total of 267 food items are selected and prepared in institutional kitchens. All of the foods are analyzed for pesticide residues after they are in table-ready or final food form. The Total Diet Study yields the best insights into actual pesticide residue exposures and takes into account the reduction of pesticide residues which occurs in the course of growing, handling, shipping, processing, washing, peeling, and cooking. Over the last four years, approximately 55 out of more than 200 pesticides have been detected in the Total Diet Study. The nine residues found frequently in the 1989,1990, and 1991 total diet studies are presented in Table 1. The total consumption of foods containing these residues can then be used to estimate daily intake over a lifetime. For example, malathion was detected in approximately twenty percent of the table-ready foods sampled. The residues found on specific food items were multiplied by the amount of the food consumed. In the malathion example, children between 6 and 11 months, young adults between 14 and 16 years, and older adults between the ages of 60 and 65 consumed an average of 0.1, 0.08, and 0.04 micrograms per kilogram of body weight per day, respectively, of this pesticide. Those exposure values were then compared to the RFD criteria established by EPA and the World Health Organization. The conclusion drawn from the total diet studies is that pesticide residues being detected represent only one percent of the RFD and generally are about 10,000 times lower than the NOEL. FDA's monitoring reveals that the "...levels of pesticide residue found in the U.S. food supply are generally below safety limits set by the Environmental Protection Agency."

Table 1. RESULTS FROM THE 1997-1999 FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION TOTAL DIET STUDIES.

                 
DETECTABLE PESTICIDE RESIDUES
WHAT WE CONSUME
SAFETY STANDARDS
                 
 
FREQUENCY OF OCCURRENCE
     
REFERENCE DOSE
 
IN THE TOTAL DIET STUDY
µG/KG BODY WT/DAY*
µG/KG BODY WT/DAY*
       
6-11
14-16
60-65
   
 
1997
1998
1999
male
female
World Health
Environmental
Active Ingredient
%
%
%
month
years
years
Organization
Protection Agency
malathion
16
15
17
0.100
0.080
0.040
20
20
DDT
24
21
22
0.080
0.030
0.010
20
0.5
chlorpyrifos (M)
16
18
18
0.020
0.020
0.010
10
3
endosulfan
14
12
15
0.030
0.010
0.020
6
0.05
chlorpyrifos
8
9
9
0.020
0.004
0.003
10
3
dieldrin
12
10
14
0.001
0.002
0.002
0.1
0.05
chlorpropham
8
5
7
0.230
0.390
0.180
-
200
                 
*Food and drug administration: Residues in Foods. 1990. Journal of the Association of Official Analytical Chemists. Volume 74.



Circle of Poison. Foods imported from foreign countries into the United States are the subject of a great amount of public debate and scrutiny from policymakers in Congress. The discussion involves what has become known as the "Circle of Poison." There are approximately 25 pesticides manufactured in the United States that are neither registered for domestic use nor have food tolerances established by EPA. These pesticides are sold for use in foreign agricultural production.

The vast majority of Circle of Poison candidate pesticides is comprised of pesticides that have not been registered in this country since profits from their sale here could not justify the expense of securing registration. As an example, U.S. manufacturers produce pesticides for export that may be used on coffee or other tropical crops not grown in this country; and since they will not be used here, U.S. registration is not required. These "unregistered" pesticides are very different from "banned" chemicals that had a history of use in this country. It is also important to realize that many pesticide bans were the result of other types of adverse effects (i. e., environmental, ecological, worker safety) rather than food safety concerns.

The debate centers on allowing foreign commodities from crops treated with these pesticides to enter the United States on an import basis. Hence, the term "Circle of Poison." FDA's monitoring efforts, although limited, indicate that only a small number of imported commodities contained pesticide residues which exceeded established tolerances; likewise, only a small number of foods were found to contain pesticide residues for which there were no established tolerances.


Exposures to most illegal or violative residues are of no apparent toxicological significance. The logical and widely held perceptions of legal residues as safe residues and illegal residues as unsafe residues are not supported by scientific evidence. The purpose of tolerances is to function as economic disincentives to pesticide misuse, regulate international trade, and emphasize compliance with regulations. Therefore, in exploring the "Circle of Poison" issue it is important not to focus on the presence of illegal residues but, instead, to identify specific pesticide residues, examine toxicological information, and determine the quantity of residue actually consumed in the human diet. Such information is essential to the logical assessment of potential risk associated with consumption of foods containing trace residues.

Average Residue Reductions During
Marketing and Processing
The following examples are approximate reductions. The actual values may vary dramtically, depending on the crop and also on the amount of residue.
Percent Reduction
Shipping to Supermarket
    Peppers
14
    Celery
86
    Cabbage
86
    Lettuce
87
    Cucumbers
100
    Tomatoes
100
Washing
    Apples
14
    Grapes
36
    Peaches
73
    Tomatoes
83
Trimming
    Lettuce
89
    Cabbage
93
Heating
    Potatoes
      Baked
61
      Boiled
68
      Chipped
86
    Beans
      Canned
72
      Frozen
92
SOURCES: Food Safety, 1992.J.M. Jones; Pesticide Residues and Fod Safety. 1991. B. G. Tweedy, ed.

 

"...in the case of pesticides, it is our belief, as well as that of the larger medical and scientific community, that the benefits of eating fruits and vegetables far outweigh any potential risks that may be involved in digesting foods correctly treated with pesticides..."

-- Dr. Vernon N. Houk, United States Centers for Disease Control


Summary

The key points made in Pesticides and Food Safety are that pesticides may improve variety, availability, and quality of foods. IPM programs are decreasing actual pesticide use, regulatory and monitoring programs are in place, and the human health risks from consuming pesticide residues on our foods appear low.

This issue is very complicated and subject to different interpretations due to trust, credibility, values, and familiarity with the scientific process. Thus, we will read and hear various accounts of the supposed contamination of our food supply by pesticide residues. It is important to realize that we must be informed consumers, basing related decisions on information from several sources such as universities, industry, the media, and public and private organizations. Reviewing information from a wide array of origins will allow better understanding of how each group interprets, presents, and answers important questions relative to pesticide residues and food safety.

SOURCES OF INFORMATION


Agricultural Benefits Derived From Pesticide Use: A Study Of The Assessment Process. 1988. The Ohio State University.
Agricultural Biotechnology, Food Safety and Nutritional Quality for the Consumer. 1990. National Agricultural Biotechnology Council.
Agricultural Biotechnology: Issues and Choices. 1991. Purdue University Agricultural Experiment Station.
Agriculture and the Environment. 1991. Yearbook of Agriculture. United States Department of Agriculture.
America's Growing Dilemma: Pesticides in Food and Water. 1989. League of Women Voters.
A Profile of Fresh Produce Consumers. 1992 Edition. The Packer.
Dietary Pesticide Risk Assessment. 1992. Reviews of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology. Volume 127: 23-67.
Eating Fruits and Vegetables Reduces Cancer Risk. 1992. Minnesota Extension Service.
Fading Scares and Future Concerns: Trends in Consumer Attitudes Toward Food Safety. 1992. The Center For Produce Quality.
FDA Pesticide Program Residues in Foods. Journal of the Association Officials of Analytical Chemists. Vols. 71, 72, and 73.
Food Insight: Current Topics in Food Safety and Nutrition. International Food Information Council.
Food News For Consumers. Food Safety and Inspection Service. United States Department of Agriculture.
Food Safety and Pesticides. 1990. University of Arizona Cooperative Extension Service.
Global Food Progress. 1991. Chapter 3: Food Safety. A Report from Hudson Institute's Center for Global Food Issues.
Issues in Food Safety. Fresh Produce Council and the Alliance for Food and Fiber.
Meat and Poultry Safety. Questions and Answers About Chemical Residues. 1990. Food Safety and Inspection Service. United States Department of Agriculture.
National Research Council. Harvest of Hope: The Potential of Alternative Agriculture to Reduce Pesticide Use. 1991. National Research Council.
Nutrition and Your Health: Dietary Guidelines for Americans. 1990. United States Department of Agriculture.
Pesticide Data Programs. 1991. Agricultural Marketing Service. United States Department of Agriculture.
Pesticide Residues and Food Safety: A Harvest of Viewpoints. 1991. American Chemical Society.
Pesticide Residues and Food Safety: Aspects of a Changing Structure. 1991. Economic Research Service. United States Department of Agriculture.
Pesticide Residues in Food: Technologies for Detection. 1988. Office of Technology Assessment. Congress of the United States.
Pesticides and Food Safety. 1990. EPA Journal. Volume 16. Environmental Protection Agency.
Pesticides and Personal Safety. 1992. Purdue Cooperative Extension Service.
Pesticides & Your Fruits and Vegetables. National Coalition Against the Misuse of Pesticides.
Pesticides: Better Data Can Improve the Usefulness of EPA's Benefit Assessments. 1991. United States General Accounting Office.
Pesticides in Food: A Guide for Professionals. 1991. American Dietetic Association.
Pesticides in Food: Assessing the Risks. 1989. University of California Agricultural Issues Center.
Pesticide Tolerances. 1991. EPA For Your Information. Environmental Protection Agency.
Pesticide Tolerances and their Relevance as Safety Standards. 1992. Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology. Volume 15.
Preventing Foodborne Illness. A Guide to Safe Food Handling. 1990. Food Safety and Inspection Service. United States Department of Agriculture.
Producer Through Consumer: Partners to a Safe Food Supply. 1992. Purdue Cooperative Extension Service.
Protecting Consumers Through Improved Food Quality and Safety. International Conference on Nutrition, Food and Agriculture Organization.
Regulating Pesticides in Food. The Delaney Paradox. 1987. National Research Council.
Safety First: Protecting America's Food Supply. FDA Consumer Special Report. 1988. Food and Drug Administration.
State Departments of Agriculture: Pesticide and Environmental Specialists of the 1990s. 1991. American Entomologist. Volume 37.

National Telephone Contacts

Alliance for Food and Fiber, (800) 266-0200. This is a coalition of organizations active in California's food production and distribution industry. The purpose is to serve as an information clearing house for the media and consumers on issues relating to food.
Consumer Nutrition Hotline, (800) 366-1655. National Center for Nutrition and Dietetics. Registered dietitians answer food and nutrition-related questions.
Cooperative Extension System, United States Department of Agriculture. Consult county government listing in telephone directory for your local Cooperative Extension office. Cooperative Extension provides research-based information and education programs on all aspects of food and agriculture -- from production through consumption.
Food Safety and Inspection Service, (800) 535-4555. United States Department of Agriculture. Meat and Poultry Hotline. Home economists answer questions on the safe handling and storage of meat and poultry. They can also assist you with basic nutrition questions on meat and poultry products and the nutrition labeling on these items.
FoodWatch, (800) 676-3608. A nationwide public education and referral program for agricultural, environmental, and food safety issues.
National Cancer Institute, (800) 4-CANCER. Information on diet, nutrition, and cancer.
National Coalition Against the Misuse of Pesticides, (202) 543-5450. The purpose of this organization is to act as a clearinghouse for information on pesticides and the available alternatives.
National Pesticide Telecommunications Network. (800) 858-PEST. Provides impartial information about pesticides, including product information, recognition and management of pesticide poisonings, safety information, clean-up and disposal procedures, and lab analysis referrals. Operates 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.
Public Voice for Food and Health Policy, (202) 659-5930. National research, education, and advocacy organization that promotes a safer, healthier, and more affordable food supply.
U. S. Food & Drug Administration, U. S. Dept. of Health and Human Services, Consumer Affairs & Information Staff. (301) 443-4166. Inspects food other than meat and poultry and enforces EPA regulations for pesticide residues.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

The authors would like to thank Jenifer Ingraham and Tammy Luck for their contributions to the development and design of the manuscript. The black and white drawings were obtained from River Road Recipes II from the League of Baton Rouge, and Understanding Pesticides in Food by the American Dietetic Association.

 


REVIEWED: 5/01

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