WARNING: Discount Cinnamon Found to be TAINTED With Outrageous Amounts of LEAD
The FDA reported Wednesday that some brands of cinnamon sold in discount stores around the nation are contaminated with extremely high levels of lead.
Ground cinnamon sold at Dollar Tree and Family Dollar tainted with lead: FDA https://t.co/7JZHWcT1Tn pic.twitter.com/mx7qGnq8Li
— New York Post (@nypost) March 7, 2024
As of yet, there has been no explanation offered as to how the cinnamon was contaminated.
ABC News reports:
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration said cinnamon sold by stores including the Dollar Tree and Family Dollar contains lead at levels that could be unsafe for people, particularly children, with prolonged exposure to the spice. The agency urged suppliers to recall the products voluntarily.
Cinnamon products included in the agency’s safety alert include the La Fiesta brand sold by La Superior and SuperMercados; Marcum brand sold by Save A Lot stores; MK brands sold by SF Supermarket; Swad brand sold by Patel Brothers; El Chilar brand sold by La Joya Morelense; and Supreme Tradition brand sold by Dollar Tree and Family Dollar stores.
“Removing the ground cinnamon products in this alert from the market will prevent them from contributing elevated amounts of lead to the diets of children,” the alert said.
Consumers should not buy the products and should throw away any containers they have at home, the agency said.
Family Dollar and Dollar Tree have reportedly discarded the tainted cinnamon from their stores.
Customers in possession of the contaminated cinnamon can return the products to their local stores for a refund.
The recent news has people rightfully concerned on social media.
It also has people wondering how on Earth lead got into cinnamon in the first place.
🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔
— Dorene Brown (@DoreneBrow9456) March 7, 2024
How the F did lead get into this product??
— CryptoMarkLA (@CRYPTOMARKLA) March 7, 2024
Check your cupboards and stay safe out there.
The AP has more on this latest story:
FDA officials launched what they called a “targeted survey” of cinnamon products sold in discount stores after an October 2023 recall of lead-tainted cinnamon applesauce pouches that sickened nearly 500 U.S. children.
The ground cinnamon products in Wednesday’s notice had lead levels of 2.03 to 3.4 parts per million, far lower than the puree pouches, which contained 2,270 parts per million to 5,110 parts per million of lead.
No illnesses or other health effects have been reported in connection with the new ground cinnamon alert, the FDA said.
There is no safe level of lead exposure for humans. Long-term exposure of lead can cause problems, especially in growing children, including learning disabilities, behavioral difficulties and lower IQ.
This is a NEW warning from March 2024, but we brought you a similar warning back in 2023 about many other spices.
Read here:
WARNING: New Study Shows “Rat Poison” Found In Many Top Brand Name Spices!
If you don’t like eating literal “Rat Poison” with your salt and pepper, then pay attention…
This is a major consumer products alert!
Do you love to cook with spices?
Of course, who doesn’t?
Variety is the spice of life, and spices are the, uhhhh, spice of cooking!
But what happens when you reach for the Onion Powder or the Oregano, and along with those you get a heavy dose of Arsenic?
Arsenic would otherwise be known as literal “rat poison”.
Or Cadmium, which is a heavy metal.
Or Lead!
You know how we can no longer use lead-based-paint or leaded gasoline because of how toxic it is to humans?
What if the big companies had been putting it in your spices all along and you didn’t even know?
What if one of the reasons you constantly feel tired, slow and unmotivated is because you’re slowly being poisoned by what you eat?
It’s a Red Alert 🚨 situation, and I’m here to not only give you the bad news but also to give you a solution!
I never like to leave you with only the bad news, so keep reading and I’ll give you the solution to fix this for yourself and your family.
Check this out:
“The analysis found that roughly one-third of the tested products (40) had ‘high enough levels of arsenic, lead, and cadmium combined… to pose a health concern for children’… and adults.”
Holy crap. Spice companies are literally poisoning Americans!https://t.co/FoEbMCtW7x
— Kyle Becker (@kylenabecker) March 26, 2023
Literally poisoning Americans:
“Lead, arsenic, and cadmium can increase the risk of cancer, cognitive and reproductive problems, and other adverse conditions—even in small amounts. Exposure puts children at risk for lowered IQ, behavioral problems (such as attention deficit hyperactivity disorder), Type 2…
— Kyle Becker (@kylenabecker) March 26, 2023
Maybe you’re not just tired, maybe you’re being slowly poisoned like that one episode of Dateline I saw where the woman poisoned her husband by feeding him small doses of antifreeze each day for a whole year.
Anyone else see that episode?
Except the wife is played by the Big Consumer Goods Companies that hate you and you’re the dying husband.
Sorry folks, I’m not making this stuff up, I’m just reporting the news.
According to this report, OVER ONE-THIRD of 126 large big-brand products tested had EXCESSIVE heavy metal levels:
No I’m not saying heavy metals are excessive in all your store bought spices, I’m saying over a third of 126 varied brands products tested have excessive heavy metals levels. pic.twitter.com/rBrqD5XvMd
— Whip (@WhipSpoon) April 1, 2023
FOUR Lawsuits have been filed already:
Four lawsuits have been filed over the last two years over significant levels of #toxic #HeavyMetals in big brand names of #herbs and #spices. An analysis by Consumer Reports (CR) in 2021 detailed the problem. https://t.co/ooFp6MuIec
— Epoch Health (@EpochHealth1) March 26, 2023
From Popular Mechanics:
In new research, Consumer Reports tested a total of 126 products from stores like Walmart and Trader Joe’s and found that 40 “had high enough levels of arsenic, lead, and cadmium combined, on average, to pose a health concern for children when regularly consumed in typical serving sizes.” Beyond big-brand names like McCormick and private labels, the offenders also include spices and herbs from the beloved Wauwatosa, Wisconsin-based brand Penzeys.
It’s important to note that there is no safe amount of lead, especially for children. That’s because our bodies don’t have a way to digest heavy metals, so they can easily accumulate in the body, physically interfering with other processes. (Remember when Entourage’s Jeremy Piven blamed a public outburst on mercury poisoning because he’d been subsisting on only sushi?)
“In children, [lead] can affect brain development, increasing the risk for behavioral problems and lower IQ,” Consumer Reports explains in the report, published last month. “In adults, it can contribute to central nervous system problems, reproductive problems, and hypertension, and can damage kidney and immune function.”
Lead in foodstuffs is usually tested through a standard protocol laid out by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), known colloquially as “EAM 4.7.” EAM stands for Elemental Analysis Manual for Food and Related Products. “This resource serves as a reference, for analysts at the FDA and around the world, providing not only general analytical information and procedures and detailed laboratory methods, but also helpful notes from analysts’ experiences using these methods,” the FDA explains online. In this testing, an acid chemically “digests” foods before they’re fed through a mass spectrometer machine that identifies the chemical signatures of different elements.
Which Herbs and Spices Contained High Levels of Lead?
Consumer Reports tested a total of 126 products across 38 brands, using two or three samples for each product. They ranked products from least to most concerning with the following system: no concern, some concern, moderate concern, and high concern. Here are the products that ranked as moderate or high concern:
La Flor Ground Oregano
La Flor Ground Turmeric
Happy Belly (Amazon) Ground Thyme
Spice Islands Sweet Basil
Tone’s Ground Thyme
And from Consumer Reports:
Roughly one-third of the tested products, 40 in total, had high enough levels of arsenic, lead, and cadmium combined, on average, to pose a health concern for children when regularly consumed in typical serving sizes. Most raised concern for adults, too.
For two herbs, thyme and oregano, all the products we tested had levels that CR experts say are concerning.
In 31 products, levels of lead were so high that they exceeded the maximum amount anyone should have in a day, according to CR’s experts.
When people think about heavy metals in their diet it’s probably the lead in their drinking water. But our tests show that dried herbs and spices can be a surprising, and worrisome, source.
Also troubling: There was no single predictor of which products contained higher levels of heavy metals—for example, brand name didn’t matter, and neither did “organic” or “packed in USA” claims.