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Is Eating Rice (With High Arsenic Levels) Safe?
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I have stopped eating rice (and its products like rice noodles, rice flour, etc) for nearly a year now. I do no feel good and healthy after eating rice, as rice contains more arsenic that any other crops grown for food.
http:// www.ind ependen t.co.uk /life-s tyle/he alth-an d-famil ies/fea tures/h igh-lev els-of- arsenic -in-ric e-why-i snt-it- regulat ed-in-o ur-food -983690 0.html reported, “Rice has, typically, ten times more inorganic arsenic than other foods and, as the European Food Standards Authority have reported, people who eat a lot of rice are exposed to worrying concentrations. What sets rice apart is that it is the only major crop that is grown under flooded conditions. It is this flooding that releases inorganic arsenic, normally locked up in soil minerals, which makes it available for the plant to uptake. Chronic exposure can cause a range of health problems including developmental problems, heart disease, diabetes and nervous system damage. However, most worrying are lung and bladder cancers. Bottled water in the EU is around 50 times lower in inorganic arsenic water concentrations than rice. Therefore, you would need to drink five litres of water to get the equivalent arsenic dose of eating a small 100g (dry weight packet) portion of rice. Brown rice is higher in inorganic arsenic than white as arsenic is concentrated in the bran that is removed by milling to produce white rice. Sourcing rice from regions with lower grain inorganic arsenic concentrations – for example, basmati rice is two to three-fold lower in inorganic arsenic than rice from the European Union or from the US. Cooking rice in a large excess of water also helps to remove inorganic arsenic”.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Don't know the dates but here's one though I think it's from America - I wasn't implying it was yours Wil.
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As Paracelsus said there's really no such thing a "poison" .
"The dose makes the poison" (Latin: ''sola dosis facit venenum'') is an adage intended to indicate a basic principle of toxicology. It is credited to Paracelsus who expressed the classic toxicology maxim "All things are poison and nothing is without poison; only the dose makes a thing not a poison."
Wise words.
"The dose makes the poison" (Latin: ''sola dosis facit venenum'') is an adage intended to indicate a basic principle of toxicology. It is credited to Paracelsus who expressed the classic toxicology maxim "All things are poison and nothing is without poison; only the dose makes a thing not a poison."
Wise words.
Khandro: "All things are poison and nothing is without poison; only the dose makes a thing not a poison."
The proposed new EU recommendations will limit 200 parts of arsenic per billion for adults and just 100 ppb for children and babies. Most food have arsenic levels than this recommended level.
http:// www.dai lymail. co.uk/n ews/art icle-28 17542/M ore-hal f-rice- product s-excee d-new-E U-limit s-ARSEN IC.html reported, “The proposed new EU recommendations will limit 200 parts of arsenic per billion for adults and just 100 ppb for children and babies. During the research products including Kelloggs' Rice Krispies and Kallo organic puffed rice cereal were tested multiple times - and some showed high levels of inorganic arsenic, far above the proposed limits. Organic original puffed rice cereal by Kallo Foods was found to have 323 parts of arsenic per billion (ppb) while Organic wholegrain baby rice by Organix was found to have 268 ppb – 168 per cent above recommended levels for babies and children. Smooth Baby Rice by Heinz was found to be 129 ppb– 28.9 per cent above recommended levels for babies and children”.
http:// www.dai lymail. co.uk/n ews/art icle-28 17542/M ore-hal f-rice- product s-excee d-new-E U-limit s-ARSEN IC.html continues, “While not harmful in small quantities to humans, scientists say exposure to high levels of inorganic arsenic over a prolonged period can lead to cancer or heart disease. Professor Andrew Meharg, Professor of Biological Sciences at Queen's University Belfast, told Dispatches: 'The European Union is going to set standards for arsenic levels in baby rice at 100 parts per billion. To my estimation that is far too high. It should be at least half that. The levels of arsenic in rice vary by type. Italian brown rice has 160ppb, red rice from France 310ppb and basmati rice from India has just 40ppb”.
The proposed new EU recommendations will limit 200 parts of arsenic per billion for adults and just 100 ppb for children and babies. Most food have arsenic levels than this recommended level.
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