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>Date: Sun, 10 Jun 2007 08:41:25 -0500
>From: "Kristina K. Carlton" <[log in to unmask]>
>Subject: Fish
>
>Hi All,
>
>I just found out that I am intolerant to chicken, beef, and pork. I need to
>avoid these foods for at least 12 weeks and am looking at different protein
>options. I tested ok for venison, duck, goose, and ostrich and also various
>fish. With fish I am concerned about mercury or other harmful substances
>used on farm raised fish. Which fish would be safe to eat?
>
>Thanks,
>Kristina
There've been a number of scientific studies done on the issue of mercury in
fish. The most reliable, and longest-running one, the Seychelles study,
confirmed that there are no effects whatsoever, no matter how small, for
people who ate 10 times as much fish/shellfish per week as the average
American. Here's a website re this study, along with another website which
points out quite a few of the inconsistencies behind the mercury claims:-
http://tinyurl.com/2orch2
http://www.fishscam.com/
Whatever the case, even those behind the mercury-claims usually state that
it's OK to eat the smaller fish at the bottom of the food-chain, as they are
claimed to have lower mercury-levels.
In the case of farmed fish, I've found out that the US has fewer rules and
restrictions than European countries . For example, the chemical
canthaxanthin is regularly used in the US to give farmed salmon the same
colour as wild-caught salmon - this is because wild-caught salmon eat
shrimp etc, to get their natural pink-red colour, whereas farmed salmon are
fed all sorts of muck so that their flesh has a sickly grey colour, without
that extra chemical-dye. The UK has banned canthaxanthin, in the case of
organic-farmed fish, because of its suspected cancer-causing properties
etc., but nonorganic farmed salmon can still have the chemical added to it.
I gather that the US doesn't have an official organic category for farmed
fish, as yet, so best to just buy wild-caught fish. Farmed shellfish is
another matter- from what I understand, it's mostly a lot healthier than the
equiavlent farmed fish - there have been some serious health concerns re the
shrimp/prawn-farming industry, but that's all I've heard.
Geoff
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