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What past experience? If you mean tobacco, they haven't given up yet! Do you have other examples besides tobacco where a mountain of dead bodies piled up before the manufacturers did something?
Originally posted by kwakakev
From past experience they will not give up until there it a mountain of dead bodies that can no longer be ignored.
1. The studies I've seen tend to show there's not the safety problem suggested in the media for adults (except perhaps pregnant women who should be very particular about everything),
2. There are safer alternatives for some applications, like baby bottles, etc. But for canned foods, is there a known safer alternative?
This is my point. That how we got to where we are. The corrosion with the metal in the can was a safety concern, so scientists went to the lab and found a safer alternative (or so they thought, and so far no study has contradicted it for adult use). Wikipedia explains why the cans are lined, to prevent interaction with the metal which can make us even sicker than the BPA:
Originally posted by kwakakev
Tin cans just use to be tin, I am not aware of the reasons for BPA in the first place. Defiantly no need for it in glass products. If the medical community is finding problems with one product then the scientist need to go back to the lab and look for something else.
Although tin is corrosion resistant, acidic food like fruits and vegetables can cause corrosion of the tin layer. Nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea have been reported after ingesting canned food containing 200 mg/kg of tin. A study showed that 99.5% of tested cans contain below 200 mg/kg of tin.
Perhaps the lower tin concentrations are due to improved coatings on the insides of the cans?
Health effects of tin in food
High concentrations of tin in food irritate the digestive tract and may cause stomach upsets
in sensitive people at tin concentrations above 200 mg/kg, with an increased risk of
effects at concentrations above 250 mg/kg. These effects, the symptoms of which include
fever, headache, nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, abdominal cramps and bloating, are shortterm
with recovery expected soon after exposure...
The Survey shows that levels of tin in each type of food sampled, with one exception, are
lower than those reported in previous surveys
So it seems like they are using the coating to avoid contamination or interaction with the tin, or aluminum, or whatever the can is made of, The interactions with the metal may make us sicker than the coatings used?
As expected, tin concentrations in products packed in fully lacquered cans, which have no
exposed tin on the inside of the can, had a lower mean tin content (less than 5 mg/kg, 166
samples) than those packed in unlacquered or partially lacquered cans (59 mg/kg, 234
samples). Other factors such as headspace (the atmosphere above the food i.e. space not
in contact with food) and vacuum were less significant, but for some types of product
appeared to have a contributing effect on tin concentration.
I can only guess what cause this was something like an inadequate coating of the inside of the can (and apparently BPA when used properly makes an effective coating to prevent tin contamination).
As soon as we were alerted to the preliminary results from the FSA tin surveillance
programme, we immediately initiated a full investigation. When this identified isolated
batches of Heinz Spaghetti in Tomato Sauce cans that may have contained levels of tin,
albeit in trace amounts, but above required levels, we immediately implemented a
voluntary national recall as a precautionary measure. No other Heinz products were
affected.
Remember I said don't believe everything you read in the media?
Originally posted by kwakakev
latimesblogs.latimes.com...
I have not gone deep into the scientific literature, but I am expecting some damning evidence and case studies from what some of the media have portrayed.
Do you think that suggests that the number 7 on the container means it contains BPA? Well I could understand why some might interpret it that way, but #7 means "other" which is "other than recycling categories 1-6".
Consumers checking whether plastic items contain BPA should look for the number "7" at the bottom of the container, an indicator used for recycling.
It may or may not have any BPA if it has a 7, they could have made that much more clear.
The SPI resin identification coding system is a set of symbols placed on plastics to identify the polymer type. It was developed by the Society of the Plastics Industry (SPI) in 1988, and is used internationally. The primary purpose of the codes is to allow efficient separation of different polymer types for recycling.
7-Other: Other plastics, including acrylic, acrylonitrile butadiene styrene, fiberglass, nylon, polycarbonate, and polylactic acid