>The researchers did not find direct evidence of contaminated turmeric beyond Bangladesh, and they point out that food safety checks by the importing countries have incentivized large-scale Bangladesh spice processors to limit the amount of lead added to turmeric destined for export. However, the researchers caution, “the current system of periodic food safety checks may catch only a fraction of the adulterated turmeric being traded worldwide.” In fact, since 2011, more than 15 brands of turmeric – distributed to countries including the U.S. – have been recalled due to excessive levels of lead.
>In fact, since 2011, more than 15 brands of turmeric – distributed to countries including the U.S. – have been recalled due to excessive levels of lead.
I could not find references about this one, but I found:
I've noticed turmeric is increasingly used as a natural colorant in the US. This makes me a bit worried about lead slipping through, with turmeric being used in that way.
Forwarded the article to a friend who relies on Turmeric already knew about it and claimed it was "big Pharma" trying to discredit alternative medicine through innuendo and flat out lies.
As with most things, the truth is probably somewhere in the middle.
generatorguy|6 years ago
blue_devil|6 years ago
I could not find references about this one, but I found:
Ground Turmeric as a Source of Lead Exposure in the United States https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5415259/
gyuserbti|6 years ago
imvetri|6 years ago
Man, first we will have to put some moral-science as their mandatory subject to clear..
EricE|6 years ago
As with most things, the truth is probably somewhere in the middle.
nikolay|6 years ago
bakul|6 years ago
Santosh83|6 years ago