Yes, organics is a $29 billion industry and still growing. Something is pulling us toward those organic veggies that are grown without synthetic pesticides or fertilizers.
But if you're thinking that organic produce will help you stay healthier, a new finding may come as a surprise. A new study published in the Annals of Internal Medicine finds scant evidence of health benefits from organic foods.
"There's a definite lack of evidence, " says researcher Crystal Smith-Spangler at Stanford University School of Medicine, especially when it comes to studies of people.
She and her colleagues collected 200 peer-reviewed studies that examined differences between organic and conventional food, or the people who eat it.
A few of these studies followed people who were eating either organic or conventional food and looked for evidence that the choice made a difference in their health.
One study, for instance, looked at whether eating organic food while pregnant would influence the likelihood of eczema and other allergic conditions among children, and another looked at whether eating organic meat would influence the risk of a Campylobacter infection, a bacterial food-borne illness. When the researchers looked at the body of evidence, they found no clear benefits. But they say more research is needed.
It's important to note, though, that such studies have a really hard time uncovering subtle effects of our environment, or what we eat, on our health. Too many other powerful influences get in the way. Also, these studies only followed people for a very short time — about two years or less. That's hardly enough time to document any particular health benefit.
Most of the studies included in this collection looked at the food itself — the nutrients that it contained as well as levels of pesticide residues or harmful bacteria.
As you might expect, there was less pesticide contamination on organic produce. But does that matter? The authors of the new study say probably not. They found that the vast majority of conventionally grown food did not exceed allowable limits of pesticide residue set by federal regulations.
Some previous studies have looked at specific organic foods and found that they contain higher levels of important nutrients, such as vitamins and minerals. We've reported on one particularly ambitious experiment, which is supposed to go on for a hundred years, comparing plots of organic and conventional tomatoes. After 10 years, the researchers found that tomatoes raised in the organic plots contained significantly higher levels of certain antioxidant compounds.
But this is one study of one vegetable in one field. And when the Stanford researchers looked at their broad array of studies, which included lots of different crops in different situations, they found no such broad pattern.
Here's the basic reason: When it comes to their nutritional quality, vegetables vary enormously, and that's true whether they are organic or conventional. One carrot in the grocery store, for instance, may have two or three times more beta carotene (which gives us vitamin A) than its neighbor. That's due to all kinds of things: differences in the genetic makeup of different varieties, the ripeness of the produce when it was picked, even the weather.
So there really are vegetables that are more nutritious than others, but the dividing line between them isn't whether or not they are organic. "You can't use organic as your sole criteria for judging nutritional quality, " says Smith-Spangler.
Of course, people may have other reasons for buying organic food. It's a different style of agriculture. Organic farmers often control pests by growing a greater variety of crops. They increase the fertility of their fields through nitrogen-fixing plants, or by adding compost instead of applying synthetic fertilizer.
That can bring environmental benefits, such as more diverse insect life in the field or less fertilizer runoff into neighboring streams. But such methods also cost money. That's part of what you are buying when you buy organic.
So if you really want to find the most nutritious vegetables, and the organic label won't take you there, what will?
At the moment, unfortunately, there isn't a good guide. But a lot of scientists are working on it.
They're measuring nutrient levels in all kinds of crops, and discovering some surprising things, as The Salt reported last week — such as supernutritious microgreens. They're trying to breed new varieties of crops that yield not a bigger harvest but a more nutrient-rich harvest.
The problem is, farmers still get paid by the pound, not by the vitamin. And consumers buy their food the same way. What this really requires is a whole new food system that can track those extra-nutritious crops from farmer's field to consumer's shopping basket.
為什么有機(jī)食物可能不那么健康?
是的,有機(jī)產(chǎn)品具有290億美元的產(chǎn)值,而且在繼續(xù)增長(zhǎng)。這些不依賴農(nóng)藥和化肥生長(zhǎng)的蔬菜在無形當(dāng)中吸引著我們。
但是,如果你認(rèn)為有機(jī)食物可以使你更健康,一個(gè)新的發(fā)現(xiàn)會(huì)讓你很吃驚。在《內(nèi)科年報(bào)》上刊登的一項(xiàng)新的研究表明,有機(jī)食物并沒有發(fā)現(xiàn)明顯的營(yíng)養(yǎng)價(jià)值。
“缺少明確的跡象“斯坦福大學(xué)醫(yī)學(xué)院的研究者Crystal Smith-Spangler說,尤其是對(duì)一些人進(jìn)行研究時(shí)。
她和她的同事對(duì)200對(duì)-對(duì)比試驗(yàn)進(jìn)行了回顧性研究,來檢測(cè)有機(jī)食物和傳統(tǒng)食物,或者吃了這些食物的人群的區(qū)別。
對(duì)吃了有機(jī)食物或者傳統(tǒng)食物的人群進(jìn)行跟蹤調(diào)查,來尋找它們?cè)谌梭w中造成的不同跡象。
其中一項(xiàng)研究,例如,當(dāng)在懷孕時(shí),食用有機(jī)食物是否對(duì)在嬰兒中產(chǎn)生的濕疹或者過敏產(chǎn)生影響;或者食用有機(jī)肉類是否對(duì)感染彎曲桿菌或者細(xì)菌性斑點(diǎn)病的幾率產(chǎn)生影響。當(dāng)研究者檢測(cè)這些人群時(shí),并沒有發(fā)現(xiàn)明顯的區(qū)別。但是他們說,需要進(jìn)一步的研究。
但是值得注意的是,雖然,這樣的研究要經(jīng)歷一個(gè)艱難的過程來發(fā)現(xiàn)它們對(duì)我們的環(huán)境造成的微小的影響或者我們吃的食物對(duì)健康的影響。產(chǎn)生了太多其它的強(qiáng)大影響。另外,這些研究只對(duì)人群跟蹤了一個(gè)非常短的時(shí)間-大概兩年或者更少。幾乎不能記錄任何特殊的養(yǎng)生價(jià)值。
這項(xiàng)研究更多的是對(duì)食物本身的研究——它所包含的營(yíng)養(yǎng)價(jià)值,食物殘留或者有害細(xì)菌的程度。
就像你所期待的那樣,有機(jī)食物上的農(nóng)藥污染較少,但是那有關(guān)系嗎?這項(xiàng)新研究的作者說,可能沒有多大的關(guān)系。他們發(fā)現(xiàn)聯(lián)邦法律也規(guī)定傳統(tǒng)的食物也不允許農(nóng)藥殘留超標(biāo)。
以前的一些研究表明,在一些特殊的有機(jī)食物中發(fā)現(xiàn)較高的營(yíng)養(yǎng)成分,像維生素和礦物質(zhì)。我們報(bào)告了一項(xiàng)特殊偉大的實(shí)驗(yàn),這項(xiàng)試驗(yàn)將持續(xù)100年,用來比較有機(jī)番茄和傳統(tǒng)番茄。經(jīng)歷十年,研究者發(fā)現(xiàn),有機(jī)番茄內(nèi)的抗氧化物含量明顯增加。
但是這只是對(duì)一塊試驗(yàn)田中的一種蔬菜進(jìn)行研究。當(dāng)斯坦福的研究者再看他們龐大的研究數(shù)據(jù),這包括處于許多不同條件下不同農(nóng)作物,他們沒有發(fā)現(xiàn)那樣顯著的特征。
基本的原因:當(dāng)談到營(yíng)養(yǎng)價(jià)值,蔬菜變異顯著,無論它是有機(jī)的還是傳統(tǒng)蔬菜。雜貨店的胡蘿卜,舉個(gè)例子,含有的β-胡蘿卜素是旁邊那根的2到3倍。所有的食物都這樣:不同的遺傳基因產(chǎn)生不同的物種,甚至天氣也會(huì)影響它的成熟度。
所以一些蔬菜的營(yíng)養(yǎng)價(jià)值是高于其他的,但是它們的分界線并不是取決于它們是否為有機(jī)蔬菜?!蹦悴荒軐⒂袡C(jī)食物作為判斷它們營(yíng)養(yǎng)價(jià)值的唯一標(biāo)準(zhǔn),“ Smith-spangler說。
當(dāng)然人們也有其他一些原因來購(gòu)買有機(jī)食物。那就是農(nóng)業(yè)的不同類型。生產(chǎn)有機(jī)食物的農(nóng)民通過種植不同種類的農(nóng)作物來控制害蟲。他們使用氮固定裝置來增加土地的肥料,或者使用堆積肥料代替合成化肥。
那樣可以帶來環(huán)境效益,像農(nóng)場(chǎng)中昆蟲的多樣性,較少的肥料流入鄰近的河流。但是那些方法也花費(fèi)金錢。那就是你在購(gòu)買有機(jī)食物時(shí)所付的錢的一部分。
如果你真的想找到最有營(yíng)養(yǎng)價(jià)值的蔬菜,有機(jī)食物的標(biāo)簽不能帶給你什么,那什么會(huì)呢?
這時(shí),很不幸,沒有任何指導(dǎo)。但是很多的科學(xué)家正在進(jìn)行研究。
他們測(cè)量所有農(nóng)作物中的營(yíng)養(yǎng)水平,然后發(fā)現(xiàn)了一些令人驚奇的事。上周The Salt 報(bào)道-像超營(yíng)養(yǎng)微綠素。他們?cè)噲D培育新的農(nóng)作物——不是提高農(nóng)作物的產(chǎn)量而是提高它們的營(yíng)養(yǎng)價(jià)值。
問題就是,農(nóng)民仍然是通過重量獲得報(bào)酬,而不是通過維生素含量。消費(fèi)者也是通過同樣的方法來購(gòu)買食物。整個(gè)新的食物系統(tǒng)真正需要的是-能夠跟蹤這些具有額外營(yíng)養(yǎng)價(jià)值的食物從田里進(jìn)入消費(fèi)者的購(gòu)物籃中。
也許,沿著這條路,你會(huì)真的在超市的廣告上看到這樣的標(biāo)示,例如,富含鐵的豆子。也許它們是有機(jī)食物或者不是。