Bill would limit toxic heavy metals in baby food

Bill would limit toxic heavy metals in baby food

A bill to limit the amount of heavy metals in baby food sold in the United States is slated to be submitted to Congress on Friday.

The proposed legislation was developed by a group of Democrats after a congressional investigation found that companies knowingly sold baby food with dangerous levels of lead, mercury, arsenic, and cadmium, CNN reported. As well as being linked to cancer and other diseases, these can harm a baby's developing brain.

If the bill becomes law, manufacturers would have to regularly test and verify that their foods meet new, low limits for the four heavy metals, CNN reported. Also, the U.S. secretary of health and human services would be required to further reduce the allowed levels within two years, put regulations in place within three years, and review the limits every five years to assess whether they "should be lowered further."

Child advocacy groups welcomed the change. "Right now, it's the food companies, not the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, who decide whether our food is safe. That's ridiculous," Scott Faber, for government affairs for the Environmental Working Group, a nonprofit environmental and consumer advocacy organization, said in a statement.

That organization published a report in 2019 that revealed toxic metals were found in 95 percent of the baby foods randomly pulled off supermarket shelves and tested.

More information: CNN Article

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