| Government Should Warn About Mercury in Fish, Says CSPI | |
Groups Say FDA Should Urge States to Require Point-of-Purchase Notices
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) should urge states to require easy-to-understand advice
about mercury in fish right at the seafood counter, according to the
nonprofit Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI). Such
notices would warn high-risk consumers—pregnant women, women who may
become pregnant, and young children—not to eat swordfish, shark, king
mackerel, and tilefish, and they should limit their consumption of
fresh, frozen, and canned white tuna.
California already uses point-of-purchase notices similar to
the one CSPI proposed to the FDA, and several major grocers, including
Safeway and Wild Oats, post versions of their own. But CSPI says a
standardized message would be beneficial to state policymakers,
retailers, and consumers alike, many of whom are justifiably confused
about the risks posed by mercury in seafood.
“The current advisory on mercury in fish is very complex and
was clearly not intended for the general public,” said CSPI food safety
director Caroline Smith DeWaal. “FDA should ask urge supermarkets to
put clear information right at the fish counter, where pregnant women
or those serving young children can easily see it. That way, pregnant
consumers don’t have to avoid the fish counter, but can easily choose
alternative seafood that doesn’t carry the risk.”
DeWaal is speaking on Tuesday at an international conference, Seafood and Health, in Washington, D.C.
In
2003, then-FDA Commissioner McClellan wrote in a letter to CSPI, “One
of the key needs for an advisory to be successful is for it to be clear
and well-communicated. There are many ways that in which this can be
achieved, including the use of printed materials at the
point-of-purchase.”
Mercury is an environmental pollutant that bioaccumulates in
large ocean-dwelling fish, such as swordfish, shark, some types of tuna
and king mackerel. Eating seafood is the leading cause of exposure to
methylmercury, a reproductive toxin that can cause neurological damage
to the developing fetus and young children. Women can avoid the risk by
steering clear of fish containing high-levels of mercury for 12 months
before becoming pregnant.
In 2001, FDA issued an advisory warning to pregnant women,
those planning to become pregnant, nursing mothers and those feeding
young children to avoid fish that contain the highest levels of
mercury. The advisory was revised in 2004, with the agreement of both
the FDA and the Environmental Protection Agency. The revision included
advice on limiting consumption of white (albacore) tuna to six ounces
per week and to limit overall fish consumption to 12 ounces per week.
CSPI’s letter to FDA
notes that while California has already implemented a mandatory
point-of-purchase advisory, and some chains are adopting them
voluntarily, “the size and content of the messages vary. Therefore, FDA
would be performing an important service by providing a standard health
communication that all fish retailers can use.”
The Natural Resources Defense Council, the Mercury Policy
Project, and the environmental group Oceana similarly are calling on
the FDA to push point-of-purchase advisories on mercury in seafood.