By Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) — Erin O'Neal has two daughters and a fridge
stocked with organic cheese, milk, fruits and vegetables in her
Annapolis, Md., home.
She is among the increasing number of parents who buy organic
to keep their children's diets free of food grown with pesticides,
hormones, antibiotics or genetic engineering.
"The pesticide issue just scares me — it wigs me out
to think about the amount of chemicals that might be going into
my kid," said O'Neal, 36.
Sales of organic baby food have jumped nearly 18% since last
year — double the overall growth of organic food sales,
according to the marketing information company ACNielsen.
As demand has risen, organic food for children has been popping
up outside natural food stores.
For example, Earth's Best baby food, a mainstay in Whole Foods
and Wild Oats markets, just reached a national distribution deal
with Toys R Us and Babies R Us. Gerber is selling organic baby
food under its Tender Harvest label. Stonyfield Farm's YoBaby
yogurt can be found in supermarkets across the country.
The concern about children is that they are more vulnerable to
toxins in their diets, said Alan Greene, a pediatrician in northern
California. As children grow rapidly, their brains and organs
are forming and they eat more for their size than do grown-ups,
Greene said.
"Pound for pound, they get higher concentrations of pesticides
than adults do," said Greene, who promotes organic food in
his books and on his website, www.drgreene.com.
New government-funded research adds to the concern. A study of
children whose diets were changed from regular to organic found
their pesticide levels plunged almost immediately. The amount
of pesticide detected in the children remained imperceptible until
their diets were switched back to conventional food.
"We didn't expect that to drop in such dramatic fashion,"
said Emory University's Chensheng Lu, who led the Environmental
Protection Agency-funded research. Lu's findings will be published
in February in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives.
Scientists are still trying to figure out how pesticides affect
children, Lu said, but he notes that it took years to prove the
health hazards of lead.
The uncertainty is driving parents, especially new or expecting
mothers, to switch to organic food. Many are even making their
own baby food from organic ingredients.
"Maybe that has the reputation of being difficult, but it
doesn't have to be, and once you get into the habit of doing something
regularly, it gets to be easier," said Jody Villecco, a nutritionist
for Whole Foods.
In a traveling lecture series for Whole Foods and Mothering magazine,
Villecco demonstrates by shaving a peeled banana with a knife
to make mush — "There, we just made baby food,"
she said. She recommends people make baby food in big batches
and freeze it in ice cube trays.
Eating organic is definitely not cheap. But Green and Lu said
parents have options if they can't afford the food or don't want
to search for it or make it: Buy fruits and vegetables known to
have lower pesticide residues.
The Environmental Working Group, a Washington-based advocacy
group, has produced a guide to the pesticide levels in fruits
and vegetables commonly sold in grocery stores, basing the findings
on data from the Agriculture Department and Food and Drug Administration.
The guide says the lowest pesticide levels are found in asparagus,
avocados, bananas, broccoli, cauliflower, sweet corn, kiwi, mangos,
onions, papaya, pineapples and sweet peas.
The highest pesticide levels, meanwhile, are found in apples,
bell peppers, celery, cherries, imported grapes, nectarines, peaches,
pears, potatoes, red raspberries, spinach and strawberries.
Beyond baby food, dairy and produce, snacks are also a rapidly
growing segment of organic food, according to the Organic Trade
Association, an industry group.
Snacks are a priority for Susan Guegan, 44, a mother of four
boys in Boulder, Colo. Guegan made their food from scratch when
they were babies. Now she buys organic versions of the cookies
and hot dogs they ask for.
"They love Oreos," she said. "They'll say, 'Can
we get this?' I'm like, 'Can you read me the ingredients?' They'll
laugh and try to say some of them. I'll say, 'You can put that
back.'"