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Fears that humans are at increased risk of cancer from eating beef from cattle
fed growth hormones are being raised by a government adviser.
John Verrall, a pharmaceutical chemist and consumer representative on the
Veterinary Products Committee, has refused to endorse a report by the
committee that effectively says the hormones are safe.
“Over the last two years a number of important studies have shown that the
information used by regulators to assess the safety of hormone residues in
food has been wildly inaccurate,” he said. “It is now clear that very much
smaller amounts of sex hormones in food than previously thought can cause
genital abnormalities in baby boys, premature puberty in girls and increase
the risk of cancers later in life.”
The hormone drugs have been banned in Europe for 20 years but they are still
used in Australia, New Zealand, the United States, Canada, Mexico and Chile.
From this list of countries Britain imports beef from only Australia (4,700
tonnes a year), but it is believed the hormones are used illegally in other
countries. The Government has not tested imports for the drugs for the past
18 months.
Calls for the Government to introduce urgent testing of meat for the hormones
are being led by the Soil Association. Richard Young, policy adviser for the
green lobby group, said: “Almost 40 per cent of the beef commissioned in the
UK is imported yet it is not subjected to any- thing like the same level of
residue testing as British beef.”
The Veterinary Products Committee’s report was finalised in January and
concluded: “The weight of evidence at present available suggests that the
likely levels of human exposure to hormonally active substances in meat from
treated animals would not be sufficient to induce any measurable
physiological effect.”
However, Mr Verrall insisted that he should be allowed to produce a minority
report flagging his concerns and even threatened to resign. He criticised
the committee for ignoring research that suggests there is no safe minimum
threshold of growth hormone residue in meat. Scientists at Copenhagen
Universityhave claimed that even tiny amounts of hormones eaten by
pre-pubescent children can be harmful in the long-term.
Mr Verrall has been allowed now to publish his minority report: “There is
clear evidence of the risk to human health posed by those hormones and there
is no threshold dose-response for oestrogens,” it says.
The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs never comments on
leaked official reports prior to publication.
The alert over the safety of beef imports coincides with a call by the
National Farmers’ Union for a total ban on beef imports from Brazil after an
EU Food and Veterinary Office investigation that found lax regulations on the
use of drugs in cattle and scant residue checks in meat.
The poor controls and the outbreak of foot-and-mouth in parts of Brazil have
already prompted the United States and Australia to ban Brazilian beef.
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