Made with Love

Processed Meats Declared Too Dangerous for Human Consumption

Maurice Boscorelli

Senior Member
Joined
May 30, 2010
Messages
19,322
iStock_000003032538XSmall.jpg


The World Cancer Research Fund (WCRF) has just completed a detailed review of more than 7,000 clinical studies covering links between diet and cancer.1 Its conclusion is rocking the health world with startling bluntness: Processed meats are too dangerous for human consumption. Consumers should stop buying and eating all processed meat products for the rest of their lives.

Processed meats include bacon, sausage, hot dogs, sandwich meat, packaged ham, pepperoni, salami and virtually all red meat used in frozen prepared meals. They are usually manufactured with a carcinogenic ingredient known as sodium nitrite.2 This is used as a color fixer by meat companies to turn packaged meats a bright red color so they look fresh. Unfortunately, sodium nitrite also results in the formation of cancer-causing nitrosamines in the human body. And this leads to a sharp increase in cancer risk for those who eat them.

A 2005 University of Hawaii study found that processed meats increase the risk of pancreatic cancer by 67 percent.3 Another study revealed that every 50 grams of processed meat consumed daily increases the risk of colorectal cancer by 21 percent.4 These are alarming numbers. Note that these cancer risks do not come from eating fresh, non-processed meats. They only appear in people who regularly consume processed meat products containing sodium nitrite.

Sodium nitrite appears predominantly in red meat products (you won’t find it in chicken or fish products). Here’s a short list of food items to check carefully for sodium nitrite and monosodium glutamate (MSG), another dangerous additive:

  • Beef jerky
  • Bacon
  • Sausage
  • Hot dogs
  • Sandwich meat
  • Frozen pizza with meat
  • Canned soups with meat
  • Frozen meals with meat
  • Ravioli and meat pasta foods
  • Kid’s meals containing red meat
  • Sandwich meat used at popular restaurants
  • Nearly all red meats sold at public schools, restaurants, hospitals, hotels and theme parks


If sodium nitrite is so dangerous to humans, why do the FDA and USDA continue to allow this cancer-causing chemical to be used? The answer, of course, is that food industry interests now dominate the actions by U.S. government regulators.

The USDA, for example, tried to ban sodium nitrite in the late 1970′s but was overridden by the meat industry.5 It insisted the chemical was safe and accused the USDA of trying to “ban bacon.” Today, the corporations that dominate American food and agricultural interests hold tremendous influence over the FDA and USDA. Consumers are offered no real protection from dangerous chemicals intentionally added to foods, medicines and personal care products.

You can protect yourself and your family from the dangers of processed meats by following a few simple rules:


  1. Always read ingredient labels.
  2. Don’t buy anything made with sodium nitrite or monosodium glutamate.
  3. Don’t eat processed meats served by restaurants, schools, hospitals, hotels or other institutions.
And finally, eat more fresh produce with every meal. There is evidence that natural vitamin C found in citrus fruits and exotic berries (like camu camu) helps prevent the formation of cancer-causing nitrosamines, protecting you from the devastating health effects of sodium nitrite in processed meats.

The best defense, of course, is to avoid eating processed meats altogether.

References:

1
2 https://voices.yahoo.com/sodium-nitrite-processed-meats-causes-cancer-2522974.html?cat=5
3 https://preventcancer.aicr.org/site/News2?page=NewsArticle&id=15642&news_iv_ctrl=0&abbr=pr_
4
5

https://institutefornaturalhealing....-declared-too-dangerous-for-human-consumption
 
papasmerf said:
horse crap

moderation is the key


I've believed deli meats were bad for us years ago.. I gave up all deli meats, hot dogs just for the reason's posted in MB''s thread.
 
Robintheboywonder said:
I've believed deli meats were bad for us years ago.. I gave up all deli meats, hot dogs just for the reason's posted in MB''s thread.

all depends on the process and the meat

if you make a steady diet of any food you will not do well
 
papasmerf said:
all depends on the process and the meat

if you make a steady diet of any food you will not do well

How about Fresh Blue Little Man in a sandwich ....would that count as meat....
or would it be process meat?:-Cool/"
 
Great, no deli! There goes breakfast lunch and dinner!

PAPA i'm hungry and I need my cold coffee and prunes. Oldguyzer has been slipping!!
 
Madman said:
Now we can both be spinners!


It is my understanding that no matter how skinny I get, I'm just too tall to ever be considered a spinner.
 
I've been eating canned food with meat all my life and still standing.
 
While I don't doubt processed meats are laden with preservatives and other additives, the issue I have is with the source of the information. The World Cancer Research Fund has no real standing in the research world, does not have an unbiased view, and tends to push its own agenda. Hardly impartial research, and hence highly suspect.
 
papasmerf said:
all depends on the process and the meat

if you make a steady diet of any food you will not do well

No one has ever died of eating too much broccoli, other than perhaps of boredom. Bacon, it appears, can kill you in multiple ways. While the some of the sources for this may not have credentials OG believes the American Cancer Society echoes many of the findings
Higher consumption of processed meats like hot dogs, pepperoni, and bacon is associated with increased risk of colon cancer. The thing is, HCAs aren't the only compound in these types of processed meats potentially linked to cancer; the preservatives are as well.
Nitrites and nitrates are added to meats to preserve color and prevent spoilage. Unfortunately, these compounds can be converted to nitrosamines, which are also known causes of cancer in animals (though again, the link in people is unclear). Hot dogs, bacon and the like may also be preserved by methods involving smoke or salt, which also increases the exposure to potentially carcinogenic chemicals.
https://www.cancer.org/cancer/news/...3/31/hot-dog!-headlines-can-be-deceiving.aspx
 
Back
Top Bottom