New Science Confirms: If You Eat Organic You'll be Exposed to Fewer Pesticides | Civil Eats

New Science Confirms: If You Eat Organic You’ll be Exposed to Fewer Pesticides

The largest study to look at organophosphate exposure in humans sets the stage for vital research into the health effects of pesticides.

The recent debate over organic food has focused largely on nutrition. But the question of whether organic is better for you than food grown conventionally might have at least as much to do with pesticide exposure as nutrient value.

Or that’s been the theory held by many organic advocates. And while it might seem obvious that eating organic food is a good way to avoid eating pesticides, there hasn’t been a great deal of science to prove it—until now.

A new study, published today in Environmental Health Perspectives, is the first and largest of its kind and it takes us a step closer to understanding the health risks of pesticide exposure by making a clearer connection between the food eaten and the pesticides present in the bodies of people who eat it. Using dietary exposure data from nearly 4,500 people in six cities, the study looked at organophosphates (OPs), one of the most widely used type of insecticides in the United States.

For the past three decades, overall use of OPs has declined. But recent U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) data shows them to be among the top insecticides used on crops that include apples, peaches, and blueberries [PDF]. According to the latest data from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), more than 33 million pounds of OPs were used in the U.S. in 2007.

Treated crops include broccoli, cantaloupe, grapes, green beans, lettuce, nectarine, oranges, pears, spinach, strawberries, tomatoes, sweet potatoes, mangoes, and onions. So if you’re eating conventionally grown produce grown in the U.S., it’s more than likely that you’re eating some that was treated with OPs. Washing and/or peeling will remove some residue, but not necessarily all of it.

Organophosphates have been shown to be toxic to the nervous system in people who are exposed to them directly. Breathing OPs can cause immediate acute adverse effects (headaches, dizziness, weakness, nausea, difficulty breathing). Long-term exposure can cause a range of neurological effects including memory loss, anxiety, and depression. Prenatal and childhood exposure has been shown to harm developing brains and result in lowered IQ and other cognitive problems. These effects have been studied primarily in farmworkers and their families and others living in agricultural communities and elsewhere that OPs have been used.

Numerous studies have shown OP exposure among people living and working where these insecticides are applied. But the EPA has also shown that among the general U.S. population, the primary route of exposure is through food. In its biomonitoring surveys, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has found OPs in the urine of more than 75 percent of the U.S. population, indicating that exposure is indeed widespread.

What we don’t yet know is whether adverse effects may be occurring in people exposed to OPs solely through food. The first step is to determine the connection between levels of OPs in the body and food actually eaten. That’s what Cynthia Curl set out to do.

newsmatch 2023 banner - donate to support civil eats

Curl, an assistant professor in Boise State University’s School of Allied Health Sciences and the lead author on this study, managed a research project while at the University of Washington known as the MESA air study–the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis. The MESA study, which began in 1999, was designed to investigate cardiovascular disease in six major U.S. metropolitan areas. The data Curl and colleagues used was from part of that study that was conducted between 2010 and 2012 with nearly 4,500 participants. “Participants were already completing dietary questionnaires at multiple time points,” explains Curl. “We added questions about organic food consumption.”

Curl’s study is by far the largest conducted among a general population of adults in the U.S. It is also the first to combine exposure measurement with information on organic food consumption.

Curl and colleagues analyzed participants’ urine samples for evidence of OPs, then they compared these results from a subset of 720 people to the USDA’s measurements of pesticide residues on the fruit and vegetables the participants reported eating. They found that people who ate conventionally grown produce had high concentrations of OP metabolites in their urine, while people who reported eating organic produce had significantly lower levels. In fact, those who ate the least organic produce had as much as twice the pesticide levels as those who ate organic the most frequently.

“If you tell me what you typically eat, I can tell you how high your pesticide exposure is likely to be,” says Curl. “The study suggests that by eating organically grown versions of those foods highest in pesticide residues, we can make a measurable difference,” she explains.

While the primary focus of much OP research has been on both farmworkers and children, Curl says that it’s important to know that these exposures exist in the general adult population, too. Studies of farmworkers suggest that OPs are prompting adverse neurobehavioral effects–poorer results on tests of coordination, information processing, and sustained attention.

We’ll bring the news to you.

Get the weekly Civil Eats newsletter, delivered to your inbox.

The next steps in Curl’s research will be to investigate how food-related OP exposure may affect what she calls “neuro-cognitive outcomes” or working memory and mental processing speed. She expects this research to be submitted for publication sometime this summer.

In the meantime, Curl says it’s important to make sure you eat enough fruit and vegetables, no matter how they’re grown. “The health benefits of eating fruit and vegetables are well established,” she says. But if you want to reduce pesticide intake, her study affirms that organic produce is a logical choice.

Elizabeth Grossman was a senior reporter for Civil Eats from 2014 to 2017, where she focused on environmental and science issues. She is the author of Chasing Molecules, High Tech Trash, Watershed and other books. Her work appeared in a variety of publications, including National Geographic News, The Guardian, The Intercept, Scientific American, Environmental Health Perspectives, Yale e360, Ensia, High Country News, The Washington Post, Salon, The Nation, and Mother Jones. She passed away in July 2017, leaving behind a legacy of dedication to her mission of journalism that supports and protects people and the planet. Read more >

Like the story?
Join the conversation.

  1. Nick
    Flawed headline. The study addressed one small group of pesticdes that are not organic, guaranteeing the outcome they want. It should say "If you eat organic, you will be exposed to less organophosphates." You can still be exposed to many pesticides on organic produce and an honest study would address that. What were the levels of oil, soap, Bt, spinosad, pyrethrin, and other organic pesticides?
  2. Bill Stewart
    I assumed that most people's reasons for eating organic food were that you avoid pesticides, not that organic fertilizers give you much extra nutrition?
  3. Jocelyn
    Please clarify how the certification process of organically grown produce can allow the use of pesticides?? What is the point of supporting certified organic produce if it will kill us in the same way that toxic Big Ag does?
    We haven't even started on the question of how can pesticides be permitted in organic farming if they kill our precious pollinators? Too many loopholes, too much money in certain pockets!! ???
  4. Eric
    Jocelyn, synthetic pesticides like the organophosphates mentioned in this article are prohibited on certified organic crops. However, other "natural" pesticides are permitted. These include things like elemental copper, rotenone, and chrysanthemum extracts. They are all highly toxic but are natural so permitted. Another exposure route for organic crops is drift from neighboring fields. Many studies have shown that while organic produce has far fewer synthetic pesticide residues, it does have some. I've never see a study measuring natural pesticide residues so those levels are unknown.
  5. Deb Phillips
    Enormous hurdles remain in most parts of the country for farmers to grow organically, when consumers demand perfect specimens of fruit and vegetables. Get to know a farmer for more insight.
  6. JD
    Jocelyn, So called biological and botanical pesticides derived from either microbes or plants are allowed in organic production and although they can be very toxic, they biodegrade very rapidly and usually do not pose a longer term residual risk like most synthetic pesticides and herbicides. All pesticides don't work if used on a regular basis over the long term as pests develop resistance over time. Most organic farmers understand this.
  7. Elizabeth Grossman
    The USDA National Organic Program details can be found here: http://bit.ly/1d8cuj7 and the list of substances that are & are not allowed on food that can be certified as organic under this program is here: http://bit.ly/16XOoFU

    Answers to some other questions about organic certification can be found here on the Oregon Tilth website: http://tilth.org/certification/

More from

Pesticides

Featured

Volunteers from DTE Energy pack prepackaged boxes for delivery to churches and homebound seniors at Focus: HOPE, a local agency located in Detroit, Michigan that operates the Commodity Supplemental Food Program (CSFP) in a client choice model so that participants can select the foods they want. (Photo credit: Preston Keres, USDA)

The Government Spends Billions on Food. Who Benefits?

In this week’s Field Report: A push to improve federal food purchasing heats up, the first food-focused COP kicks off, dust storms accelerate, and new evidence suggests that fair-trade certifications are failing to protect farmworkers.

Popular

With Season 2, ‘High on the Hog’ Deepens the Story of the Nation’s Black Food Traditions

Stephen Satterfield and Jessica B. Harris watching the sunset at the beach, in a still from Netflix's High on the Hog Season 2. (Photo courtesy of Netflix)

Building a Case for Investment in Regenerative Agriculture on Indigenous Farms

Jess Brewer gathers livestock at Brewer Ranch on the Cheyenne River Sioux Reservation. (Photo courtesy of Intertribal Agriculture Council, www.indianag.org)

Walmart and EDF Forged an Unlikely Partnership. 17 Years Later, What’s Changed?

Aerial view of cargo containers, semi trailers, industrial warehouse, storage building and loading docks, renewable energy plants, Bavaria, Germany

Relocalizing the Food System to Fight a ‘Farm-Free Future’