The largest study of its kind has found that organic foods
and crops have a suite of advantages over their conventional counterparts,
including more antioxidants and fewer, less frequent pesticide residues.
The study looked at an unprecedented 343 peer-reviewed
publications comparing the nutritional quality and safety of organic and
conventional plant-based foods, including fruits, vegetables, and grains. The
study team applied sophisticated meta-analysis techniques to quantify
differences between organic and non-organic foods.
"Science marches on," said Charles Benbrook, a
Washington State University researcher and the lone American co-author of the
paper, published in the British Journal of Nutrition. "Our team learned
valuable lessons from earlier reviews on this topic, and we benefited from the
team's remarkable breadth of scientific skills and experience."
Most of the publications covered in the study looked at
crops grown in the same area, on similar soils. This approach reduces other
possible sources of variation in nutritional and safety parameters.
The research team also found the quality and reliability of
comparison studies has greatly improved in recent years, leading to the
discovery of significant nutritional and food safety differences not detected
in earlier studies. For example, the new study incorporates the results of a
research project led by WSU's John Reganold that compared the nutritional and
sensory quality of organic and conventional strawberries grown in California.
Responding to the new paper's results, Reganold said, "This is an
impressive study, and its major nutritional findings are similar to those
reported in our 2010 strawberry paper."
The British Journal of Nutrition study was led by scientists
at Newcastle University in the United Kingdom, with Benbrook helping design the
study, write the paper, and review the scientific literature, particularly on
studies in North and South America. In general, the team found that organic
crops have several nutritional benefits that stem from the way the crops are
produced. A plant on a conventionally managed field will typically have access
to high levels of synthetic nitrogen, and will marshal the extra resources into
producing sugars and starches. As a result, the harvested portion of the plant
will often contain lower concentrations of other nutrients, including
health-promoting antioxidants.
Without the synthetic chemical pesticides applied on
conventional crops, organic plants also tend to produce more phenols and
polyphenols to defend against pest attacks and related injuries. In people,
phenols and polyphenols can help prevent diseases triggered or promoted by
oxidative-damage like coronary heart disease, stroke and certain cancers.
Overall, organic crops had 18 to 69 percent higher
concentrations of antioxidant compounds. The team concludes that consumers who
switch to organic fruit, vegetables, and cereals would get 20 to 40 percent
more antioxidants. That's the equivalent of about two extra portions of fruit
and vegetables a day, with no increase in caloric intake.
The researchers also found pesticide residues were three to
four times more likely in conventional foods than organic ones, as organic
farmers are not allowed to apply toxic, synthetic pesticides. While crops harvested
from organically managed fields sometimes contain pesticide residues, the
levels are usually 10-fold to 100-fold lower in organic food, compared to the
corresponding, conventionally grown food.
"This study is telling a powerful story of how organic
plant-based foods are nutritionally superior and deliver bona fide health
benefits," said Benbrook.
In a surprising finding, the team concluded that
conventional crops had roughly twice as much cadmium, a toxic heavy metal
contaminant, as organic crops. The leading explanation is that certain
fertilizers approved for use only on conventional farms somehow make cadmium
more available to plant roots. A doubling of cadmium from food could push some
individuals over safe daily intake levels.
More than half the studies in the Newcastle analysis were
not available to the research team that carried out a 2009 study commissioned
by the UK Food Standards Agency. Another review published by a Stanford
University team in 2011 failed to identify any significant clinical health
benefits from consumption of organic food, but incorporated less than half the
number of comparisons for most health-promoting nutrients.
"We benefited from a much larger and higher quality set
of studies than our colleagues who carried out earlier reviews," said
Carlo Leifert, a Newcastle University professor and the project leader.
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