Food - Written by admin on Wednesday, January 23, 2008 12:50 - 3 Comments

FDA May Clear Cloned Food, But Public Has Little Appetite

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pigg.jpg Consumer advocates and others have complained bitterly in recent years that the Food and Drug Administration has veered from its scientific roots, making decisions on controversial matters — such as the emergency contraceptive “Plan B” — on political rather than scientific grounds.

Now comes a test of just how rational the public wants the FDA to be.

Later this week, the agency is expected to release a formal recommendation that milk and meat from cloned animals should be allowed on grocery store shelves. The long-awaited decision comes as polling data to be released this week show that the public continues to have little appetite for such food, with many people saying the FDA should keep it off the market.

The FDA decision is based on a substantial cache of data from rigorous studies, all of which have concluded that milk and meat from cloned animals is virtually identical to such products from conventional animals. Scientists have also been unable to detect health problems in laboratory animals raised on clonal food.

By contrast, studies have found that consumers’ discomfort with the idea of eating food from clones is largely based on vague emotions. Indeed, polls have repeatedly found that the public understands little about what cloning really is.

That raises the issue: Should decisions such as this one be based solely on science, or should officials take into account public sensitivities, which may be unscientific but are undeniably real?

Regulators and leaders of the handful of companies poised to enter the cloned-food market say this is a chance for the government and the public to hew to the facts.

“There is no science-based reason” to withhold clone-derived meat or milk from the market or to require that they be labeled as such, FDA scientists conclude in a report in the Jan. 1 issue of the journal Theriogenology.

But others say people cannot help but be emotional about food, and those feelings deserve consideration — if for no other reason than because ignoring them could weaken confidence in the food supply.

“There is more to this issue than just food safety,” said Susan Ruland of the International Dairy Foods Association, which represents such major companies as Kraft Foods and Dannon. The organization’s member companies are concerned that sales of U.S. dairy products could drop by 15 percent or more if the FDA allows the sale of meat and milk from clones.

“There’s a real trust in milk as a wholesome provider of core nutrition in your diet,” Ruland said. “You don’t want to fool around with that.”

Some farm-state legislators share that concern. In a Dec. 11 letter to Health and Human Services Secretary Mike Leavitt, Sen. Patrick J. Leahy (D-Vt.) and six other senators asked that the FDA submit its plan to a scientific review board and take other steps to get more public input. As of Friday, Leavitt had not responded.

Source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/12/24/AR2006122400561.html?nav=rss_technology



3 Comments

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Luka
Jan 23, 2008 12:55

I don’t understand how cloning animals is cheaper and/or more effective than breeding (free, no?).

morale.taker`
Jan 23, 2008 12:56

Clone == identical twin.

Would you refuse to eat meat or milk from a cow solely because it had an identical twin?
No, I didn’t think so.

I think the problem is that people confuse cloned animals with transgene animals; transgene animals have modified genome, and while they too are exceedingly unlikely to be bad for you, that’s at least within the realm of distant possibility. A clone is simply genetically identical to another completely safe animal - exactly like an identical twin.

@pacodog: the point of cloning is that you clone only the best animals, so you know from the start that all the clones have good combination of genes. In ordinary breeding there’s never any guarantee that any of the offspring from a high-performing animal will ever be as high-performing as the parent.

Julian
Jul 30, 2008 4:40

The mega corporations have messed food up completely, Detroit killed public transport and now we are blaming us because we drive everywhere and eat junk and are becoming obese. Why should we trust these double-dealers any more. Dump oil and technology and get back to growing your own, I say, don’t feed the machine.

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