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Study links restaurant meals with higher levels of plastic-based chemicals in body

Asian News International, Washington DC | ByAsian News International
Mar 30, 2018 09:42 AM IST

A new study will scare you into cooking your own meals. It says that people who dine out more often, be it in posh restaurants or fast food joints, may be exposed to greater concentrations of hormone-altering chemicals, called phthalates, in their bodies.

If you have a habit of eating out, it could be costing you more than a portion of your paychecks. It turns out, eating outside the home — at restaurants, fast-food joints, and cafeterias, including delivery and take-out — is correlated with higher body levels of phthalates, a ubiquitous class of chemicals linked to all sorts of ailments, a study found.

Researchers investigating levels of phthalates in the human body, which have been linked to asthma, breast cancer, type 2 diabetes and fertility issues in the past few years, were found to be nearly 35% higher in participants who had eaten out the previous day compared with those who stayed at home. (Shutterstock)
Researchers investigating levels of phthalates in the human body, which have been linked to asthma, breast cancer, type 2 diabetes and fertility issues in the past few years, were found to be nearly 35% higher in participants who had eaten out the previous day compared with those who stayed at home. (Shutterstock)

Phthalates, a group of chemicals used in food packaging and processing materials, are known to disrupt hormones in humans and are linked to a long list of health problems.

The study is the first to compare phthalate exposures in people who reported dining out to those more likely to enjoy home-cooked meals. People who reported consuming more restaurant, fast food and cafeteria meals had phthalate levels that were nearly 35% higher than people who reported eating food mostly purchased at the grocery store, according to the study.

Posh restaurants as well as fast food joints up the risk of ingesting a range of hazardous compounds. (Shutterstock)
Posh restaurants as well as fast food joints up the risk of ingesting a range of hazardous compounds. (Shutterstock)

“This study suggests food prepared at home is less likely to contain high levels of phthalates, chemicals linked to fertility problems, pregnancy complications and other health issues,” says senior author Ami Zota, from the Milken Institute School of Public Health, part of George Washington University in Washington DC, US.

Lead author Julia Varshavsky, of the University of California, Berkeley, School of Public Health, Zota, and their colleagues used data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) collected between 2005 and 2014.

The 10,253 participants in the study were asked to recall what they ate and where their food came from in the previous 24 hours. The researchers then analyzed the links between what people ate and the levels of phthalate break-down products found in each participant’s urine sample. The team found that 61% of the participants reported dining out the previous day.


“Pregnant women, children and teens are more vulnerable to the toxic effects of hormone-disrupting chemicals, so it’s important to find ways to limit their exposures,” says Varshavsky.

Home-cooked meals may be one way to limit exposure to these harmful chemicals. “Preparing food at home may represent a win-win for consumers,” adds Zota.

“Home cooked meals can be a good way to reduce sugar, unhealthy fats and salt. And this study suggests it may not have as many harmful phthalates as a restaurant meal.”

At the same time, phthalate contamination of the food supply also represents a larger public health problem, one that must be addressed by policymakers. Zota and Woodruff’s previous research shows that policy actions, such as bans, can help reduce human exposure to harmful phthalates. The study has been published in the journal Environment International.

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