Fish, Plastic
Water Bottles and Your Health
The fish-rich waters surrounding the Hawaiian Islands
still play a substantial role in many residents’ and visitors’ diets.
Seafood is readily available and many island supermarkets offer
a wide range of shellfish, whole fish, fillets and steaks and various
pokes. Yum- yum. As a local expression goes, “lucky that
we live in Hawaii.”
The only problem with it all is that the average consumer is driven
to addled numbness by the overload of conflicting studies on the
safety of fish consumption. Unfortunately, the answer is not clear
cut. Eating fish is both good and bad for you.
The good news is that fish are low in calories and contain
easily digested protein and beneficial fats called omega-3 fatty
acids. These fats are essential nutrients which moderate a variety of
beneficial physiological processes, including inhibiting inflammation
and offering protection from heart disease.
But there is lots of sad news for fish lovers. The Food and Drug
Administration recommends that pregnant women eat seafood only
sparingly if at all and refrain from eating fish that are high
in mercury content. Recent medical studies suggest that even very
low levels of mercury exposure may cause damage to unborn babies
and young children.
Data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control indicates that
one in 12 women of childbearing age has blood mercury levels above
those considered safe by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA), which means that more than 300,000 children born in the
U.S. each year are at risk from exposure to mercury.
How did the mercury get in the fish? We put it there. Mercury
is released into the atmosphere from the earth as part of a natural
degassing. But most of the contamination comes from coal fired
power plants, mining, waste disposal and certain industrial processes.
Airborne mercury eventually falls into surface waters where it
can accumulate in streams and oceans. Bacteria in the water transform
mercury into methylmercury, and fish absorb it when they eat smaller
aquatic organisms. Mercury then works its way up the food chain
and eventually accumulates in human tissues. Mercury poisoning
causes brain and nerve damage, resulting in impaired coordination,
blurred vision, tremors, irritability and memory loss, behavioral
problems and loss of intelligence. Mercury also causes heart disease,
cancer and reproductive system damage. A very nasty poison.
Now that we know all this, why does the FDA still
permit industry to release annually, by its own estimate, 2,000
to 3,000 tons of
mercury directly into our ecosystem? For the answer, we need only
to look at the influence that industry exerts into government regulations
that affect individual health and the health of the environment.
Enough politicizing – back to health.
Sadly, some of the fish which are highest in mercury content
are also among the most popular here in Hawaii. These include ahi (yellowfin
tuna), tuna, albacore tuna, Chilean sea bass, grouper, bluefish,
amberjack, cobia, swordfish, shark, king mackerel and tilefish.
But take heart! There are several fish with no detectable
traces of mercury in their tissues. These include catfish, flounder,
hake, Pollock, wild salmon, and tilapia. Fish with low levels of mercury
in their tissues include cod, crab, and mahi mahi. Farmed salmon,
although free of mercury, is high in PCB’s, chemicals which
also cause severe health problems.
Want to find out how much mercury you are carrying in
your tissues? See your physician and ask for a hair analysis. Hair tests provide
a more reliable and accurate measure of mercury levels than blood
tests do. Heavy metals in your blood tend to vary dramatically
with meals while hair samples provide a historical record of an
individual's average level of mercury. This record can go back
several months depending on the length of hair. The EPA has determined
that a safe level for mercury as measured in hair is one part per
million. This is totally arbitrary.
Each person responds differently to different levels of accumulated
toxins in the tissues. All of us are to some extent undermined
by even a low level of toxins. Even that one part per million can
cause damage to a vital cell, setting off a chain of events.
Mercury detoxification takes time. It can be done either intravenously
or orally. Again, see your health professional for details.
Eau de Plastic
Here in Hawaii, when we remember to do so, we take a bottle of
water along with us when we leave our homes. Most of us have bought
a plastic water bottle in a supermarket or convenience store and
refilled it from our own water at home or office. We might have
thought that by reusing the bottle we were not only saving money
but also doing a good deed for the environment. I wish that this
were all there was to the story.
Recent studies have revealed that dangerous levels of
bacteria were found in reused plastic water bottles. In addition, toxic
compounds leech into the water from all the commonly used, disposable,
plastic water bottles. Washing the bottles in hot, soapy water
before reusing them only makes things worse because increased levels
of chemical toxins are released by a more rapid breakdown of the
plastic.
The best approach is to avoid disposable plastic bottles. Nalgene
bottles, which can be located on the internet, are safer. They
are made of a more rigid plastic and have much less toxic leeching.
into the water. For hot or acidic liquids, choose thermoses
with stainless steel or ceramic interiors. But don't forget the sniff
test: If you can smell or taste the plastic in a bottle, toss it
in the recycling bin and get yourself a new one.

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