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Perspective on Dietary Risk Assessment of Pesticide Residues in Organic Food

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Author(s)
Charles M. Benbrook
Brian P. Baker
Keywords
organic food
pesticides
contamination
residues
fruit
vegetables
dietary risk index
Environmental effects of industries and plants
TD194-195
Renewable energy sources

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URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/3908983
Online Access
https://doaj.org/article/dc4d10481b4242958029dc13155700ae
Abstract
Previous studies have shown that organically produced food has lower risks of pesticide contamination than food that is not organically produced. However, organically produced food is not entirely free of pesticide residues. A large, high-quality U.S. Department of Agriculture database reports pesticide residues in several dozen organic and conventionally grown foods on an annual basis, and supports detailed analyses of the frequency of residues in conventional and organic food, the number of residues found in an average sample of food, residue levels, and potential dietary risk. These data are used to estimate pesticide dietary exposures and relative risk levels, and to assess the impacts of the current pesticide-related provisions of the National Organic Program (NOP) rule. Fraud appears to be rare based on the available data. Most prohibited residues found in organic produce are detected at levels far below the residues typically found in food grown with pesticides. Relatively high-risk residues are more common in imported foods—both organic and conventional—compared to domestically grown food. The authors conclude that incorporating relative dietary risk into the organic standard would be a more precautionary, risk-based approach than targeting enforcement to organic foods found to contain 5% or more of the applicable Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) tolerance.
Date
2014-05-01
Type
Article
Identifier
oai:doaj.org/article:dc4d10481b4242958029dc13155700ae
2071-1050
10.3390/su6063552
https://doaj.org/article/dc4d10481b4242958029dc13155700ae
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