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Say ‘no’ to chemicals and lead a healthy life

Eat­ing organ­ic food and choos­ing clean­ing and beau­ty prod­ucts based on how few chem­i­cals they con­tain may make us feel bet­ter, but are they actu­al­ly health­i­er?

“Absolute­ly,” says Cather­ine Fookes, cam­paign man­ag­er for the Organ­ic Trade Board. “New research released in Feb­ru­ary 2016 found clear nutri­tion­al dif­fer­ences between organ­ic and non-organ­ic milk and meat. Organ­ic meat and dairy pro­duce was found to have a health­i­er fat pro­file with about 50 per cent more ben­e­fi­cial omega‑3 fat­ty acids.”

Her con­fi­dence is endorsed by Mar­i­lyn Glenville, a spe­cial­ist in women’s health and author of Nat­ur­al Alter­na­tives to Sug­ar.

Organ­ic food has more of the antiox­i­dant com­pounds linked to bet­ter health than reg­u­lar food, and low­er lev­els of tox­ic met­als and pes­ti­cides

Dr Glenville says: “It is impor­tant for us to eat food in its most nat­ur­al state as this makes it eas­i­er for our bod­ies to absorb and digest the nutri­ents con­tained with­in those foods.

“Peo­ple say to me that some research shows that they may not con­tain more nutri­ents than non-organ­ic food; oth­er research says they do. But the main rea­son I choose to buy organ­ic food is that it is not exposed to chem­i­cals in the form of pes­ti­cides and her­bi­cides. It is thought that some fruits and veg­eta­bles, and espe­cial­ly frag­ile foods like let­tuce and berries, can be sprayed with pes­ti­cides up to ten times before they reach the shops.”

Effects on health

Research in 2014, led by Pro­fes­sor Car­lo Leifert at New­cas­tle Uni­ver­si­ty, found that organ­ic food has more of the antiox­i­dant com­pounds linked to bet­ter health than reg­u­lar food, and low­er lev­els of tox­ic met­als and pes­ti­cides.

How­ev­er, the sci­ence com­mu­ni­ty is divid­ed on how that trans­lates into improved health.
“Although there are healthy sub­stances in organ­ic foods, it’s dif­fi­cult to doc­u­ment the health ben­e­fits, because peo­ple also smoke, drink and take exer­cise,” says research asso­ciate Lizzie Mel­by Jes­persen, from the Inter­na­tion­al Cen­tre for Research in Organ­ic Food Sys­tems at Aarhus Uni­ver­si­ty, Den­mark, in a Jan­u­ary 2016 report. Con­sumers who stick to organ­ic prod­ucts are gen­er­al­ly healthy indi­vid­u­als, she adds, but it is dif­fi­cult to assess whether this is entire­ly down to organ­ic foods.

Cer­tain­ly there is alarm over how cer­tain chem­i­cals used in non-organ­ic farm­ing affect our bod­ies. Dr Glenville is con­cerned by envi­ron­men­tal hor­mone dis­rup­tors, endocrine dis­rup­tor chem­i­cals (EDCs), xenoe­stro­gens (also known as “for­eign” oestro­gens) and hor­mone mim­ics or block­ers. “These chem­i­cals can have effects on every sys­tem in our bod­ies,” she cau­tions.

top 5 reasons why people buy organic food

“They can affect ovu­la­tion and increase our risk of hor­mon­al­ly dri­ven prob­lems, such as poly­cys­tic ovary syn­drome, fibroids, endometrio­sis and breast can­cer, and they also cause infer­til­i­ty by reduc­ing qual­i­ty and quan­ti­ty of sperm in men, push young girls through puber­ty ear­li­er and cre­ate mal­for­ma­tions in male babies, such as hypospa­dias where the open­ing of the ure­thra is down the shaft of the penis instead of at the top, and unde­scend­ed testes.”

These hor­mon­al con­sid­er­a­tions are also a con­cern when choos­ing dairy prod­ucts, she says. “A cow only pro­duces milk after giv­ing birth,” says Dr Glenville, “so in order to get a con­stant sup­ply of milk, two months after giv­ing birth, the cow is arti­fi­cial­ly insem­i­nat­ed again in order to keep the cycle going. So the cow is being milked while it is preg­nant. But preg­nan­cy comes with high lev­els of hor­mones, espe­cial­ly oestro­gen, and these go into the milk sup­ply and oth­er dairy prod­ucts.”

Last year the Inter­na­tion­al Fed­er­a­tion of Gynae­col­o­gy and Obstet­rics issued a warn­ing on the impact of expo­sure to tox­ic envi­ron­men­tal chem­i­cals to healthy human repro­duc­tion. It said: “There are tens of thou­sands of chem­i­cals in glob­al com­merce and even small expo­sures to tox­ic chem­i­cals dur­ing preg­nan­cy can trig­ger adverse health con­se­quences. Doc­u­ment­ed links between pre­na­tal expo­sure to envi­ron­men­tal chem­i­cals and adverse health out­comes span the life course and include impacts on fer­til­i­ty and preg­nan­cy, neu­rode­vel­op­ment and can­cer.”

Organic optimism

For Gee­ta Sid­hu-Robb, a moth­er of three, con­cerns over severe food aller­gies, eczema and asth­ma, when her son Annan was born, drove her to give up her job as a lawyer. She retrained as a food tech­ni­cian, nutri­tion­ist and raw-food chef, and nursed him back to health with a dairy and gluten-free diet.

In 2008 she set up Nosh Detox, a home detox­i­fi­ca­tion and weight-loss meal and juice deliv­ery ser­vice, tak­ing organ­ic and nat­ur­al foods to con­sumers.

Ms Sid­hu-Robb is pas­sion­ate about the val­ue of eat­ing and liv­ing well. “When I see peo­ple who are not get­ting the right bal­ance of nutri­ents from their food, they often say they feel ter­ri­ble, that they strug­gle with depres­sion and insom­nia. But after four weeks of eat­ing whole­some foods, they are filled with renewed opti­mism and able to oper­ate at the top of their game,” she says.

organic health

It isn’t just food that needs to be healthy. Using chem­i­cal-free home and beau­ty prod­ucts can play a part. Mar­go Mar­rone set up the Organ­ic Phar­ma­cy in 2002 after her train­ing as a phar­ma­cist left her shocked at the ques­tion­able ingre­di­ents used in cos­met­ics. She says the mar­ket for organ­ic and nat­ur­al prod­ucts is at a high. “The glob­al organ­ic per­son­al care mar­ket was worth $7.6 bil­lion in 2012, accord­ing to Trans­paren­cy Mar­ket Research; by 2018, it is expect­ed to reach $13 bil­lion. It’s grow­ing at a rate of 9.6 per cent a year,” Ms Mar­rone points out.

Her expe­ri­ence is that nat­ur­al prod­ucts offer results. “Over the past 14 years, we have treat­ed hun­dreds of clients and learnt when they changed their lifestyle, stopped eat­ing processed food, and took nat­ur­al or organ­ic sup­ple­ments includ­ing antiox­i­dants, they had more ener­gy, slept bet­ter and could han­dle stress,” she says.

“The fact is the more tox­ins you put inside your body, the more your body has to deal with it. Of course, our bod­ies are designed to do this, but not to the degree demand­ed by mod­ern life. Chem­i­cals come at us from every direc­tion, in food, in the atmos­phere and absorbed through our skin from clean­ing flu­ids, and our bod­ies are over­whelmed.”

Ms Mar­rone has noticed a trend towards well­ness. “Peo­ple are begin­ning to under­stand what you do to the inside is as impor­tant as what you do on the out­side,” she says. “No one asks about the ben­e­fits of going organ­ic or choos­ing nat­ur­al prod­ucts any more – they already know.”