What fascinating comments on a little read much quoted study? This is an
excellent example of how a well designed study sponsored by a radical
environmental group can be publicly submitted and published so as to be
completely misrepresented in the popular press and further misquoted by
others to justify their agendas.
The maximum amount of PCB's here is 3/100th of the FDA's allowable limit.
Here are the conclusions taken directly from the actual paper.
The paragraphs have been broken into individual sentences.
The emphasis (in bold and italicized text) are mine.
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Link: "Global Assessment of Organic Contaminants in Farmed Salmon" ___________________________________________________________________
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The human health effects of exposure to PCBs, toxaphene, and dieldrin in
salmon tissues are a function of contaminant toxicity, concentration in
fish tissues, and fish consumption rates.
We used the approach of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to
assess the comparative health risks of consuming farmed and wild salmon.
Individual contaminant concentrations in farmed and wild salmon do not
exceed U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) action or tolerance levels
for PCBs and dieldrin. However,
FDA action and tolerance levels are not strictly health-based,
do not address the health risks of concurrent exposure to more than
one contaminant, and do not provide guidance for acceptable levels of
toxaphene and dioxins in fish tissue.
The U.S. EPA approach is designed to manage health risks by providing
risk-based consumption advice regarding contaminated fish (for example,
one should limit consumption of a particular species to a specified number
of meals per month or week).
The combined concentrations of PCBs, toxaphene, and dieldrin trigger
stringent consumption advice for farmed salmon purchased from wholesalers
and for store-bought farmed fillets.
This advice is much more restrictive than consumption advice triggered
by contaminants in the tissues of wild salmon.The most restrictive advice (less than one-half meal of salmon per month),
which reflects the highest health risks, was generated for farmed salmon
fillets purchased from stores in Frankfurt, Germany, and for farmed salmon
from Scotland and the Faroe Islands.
The concentrations of PCBs, toxaphene, and dieldrin trigger EPA
consumption advice of no more than 1 meal per month for all samples of
farmed salmon and for all but two samples of store-bought salmon, for
which the advice is no more than 2 meals per month.
The methods used to develop this consumption advice for PCBs, toxaphene,
and dieldrin are based on
estimates of potential cancer risks and
on an
assumption of risk additivity.
A variety of noncancer health effects have also been associated with
exposure to PCBs, toxaphene, dieldrin, and other contaminants found in
salmon.
Some of these noncancer endpoints, such as adverse neurobehavioral and
immune effects and endocrine disruption, occur at lower concentrations
than those implicated in cancer.
However, these hazards were not considered in the present analysis because
quantitative risk or threshold levels are not available regarding these
effects.
Our data indicate that farmed salmon have significantly higher contaminant
burdens than wild salmon and that farmed salmon from Europe are
significantly more contaminated than farmed salmon from South and North
America.
Fish that is not contaminated is a healthy food, high in nutrients, such
as omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids, that are known to have a variety
of beneficial human health effects.
However, this study suggests that consumption of farmed salmon may result
in exposure to a variety of persistent bioaccumulative contaminants with
the potential for an elevation in attendant health risks.
Although the risk/benefit computation is complicated, consumption of
farmed Atlantic salmon may pose risks that detract from the beneficial
effects of fish consumption.
This study also demonstrates the importance of labeling salmon as farmed
and identifying the country of origin.
Further studies of contaminant sources, particularly in feeds used for
farmed carnivorous species such as salmon, are needed.
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Here are some of the conclusions of the study:
1) Contaminant concentrations in farmed and wild salmon do not exceed
U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) action or tolerance levels.
(( It is Safe to Eat ))
2) FDA action and tolerance levels are not strictly health-based.
(( I disagree ))
3) The studies (consumptive) advice is much more restrictive than
consumption advice triggered by contaminants in the tissues of wild
salmon.
(( Stricter than EPA standards ))
(( see meals per month chart below ))
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It is also obvious that the study compared apples to oranges.
Farm raised Atlantic Salmon were Compared to Wild Pacific Salmon.
Any "wild Atlantic salmon" would be included with the European market
salmon that were just as highly contaminated as the farmed group.
This nullifies the farmed to wild comparison leaving the conclusions
concerning feed sources and geographical location as the only significant
findings.
Meals per Month: (Red is farmed) (green is wild)
The advice is much more restrictive than what is suggested by contaminants
in the tissues of wild salmon and EPA standards.