 This study on the carcinogenic risks associated with the intake of various meats estimated the risk was so great that we may not want to feed beef, pork, or chicken to kids more than like five times a month. This was in Europe, where lamb contamination is a particular problem. In the United States, if there was any standout, it would be chicken and PBDEs, flame-retardant chemicals, not only compared to other meats, but other countries. U.S. chickens are like 10 to 20 times more contaminated than samples taken from other countries that have been tested. Though diet is not the only source of exposure, as those eating vegetarian have only about 25% lower levels in their bloodstream than those eating meat, though a large proportion of that may be from chicken. For other chemicals, diet may play a larger role. Studies of the pollutants in the breast milk of vegetarians dating back over 30 years have found the average vegetarian levels of some pollutants were only 1 to 2% as high as the national average. In fact, for the 6 out of 7 pollutants they looked at, there wasn't even overlap in the range of scores. The highest vegetarian value was lower than the lowest value obtained in the general population. This is presumed to be because these pollutants concentrate up the food chain, so biting lots from all the way down the food chain, and plants, those eating vegetarian, may have an edge. For example, dioxins and meat, fish, and dairy believe to contribute almost all the dioxin body exposure. And indeed, if you look at those eating strictly plant-based diets, I may only have about a third of the level of dioxins and PCBs, or even less than a fifth circulating throughout their bodies. This study really struck me, and India has been facing a major problem of treating its millions of pounds of electronic waste every year, and these poor workers of these electronic waste recycling plants can be exposed to high levels of toxic chemicals, ending up with this kind of concentration of PCBs in their bloodstream twice as high as those living about 250 miles away along the coast. But these were non-vegetarian workers at the waste plant. The PCB levels of the vegetarians working at the same plant was even lower. The problem with these cross-sectional studies is that we can't single out the diet, maybe vegetarians have other lifestyle behaviors that protect them. You don't know until you put it to the test, change people's diets and see what happens. That's hard to do with persistent pollutants like PCBs, which may take literally decades to detoxify from the body, but we can't get rid of heavy metals like mercury in a matter of months. And indeed, within three months of the exclusion of meat, poultry, fish, and eggs from their diets, there was a significant drop in the levels of toxic heavy metals in their bodies, including mercury, cadmium, and lead up to about a 30% drop within three months. What if we just stick to organic meat? Certified organic meat comes from livestock that are fed with organically produced feed that is free from pesticides and animal byproducts and by law, and therefore one would assume that there should be a lower accumulation of chemical residues. However, on a practical level, there are simply no studies on the chemical residue content in organic meat until now. Researchers acquired 76 samples of different kinds of meat, both organic and conventional, and quantified their levels of contamination with 33 different chrysanogenic persistent organic pollutants. After all, the ingestion of food contributes more than 90% to total current exposure to these compounds, especially food from animal origin. On the other hand, an increasing number of consumers are choosing organic. In fact, organic food production increased like 50% during the last decade, so are consumers of organic meat protected or not? Well, no sample was completely free of chrysanogenic contaminants, which is to be expected, given how polluted our world is these days. But what was surprising was that the difference between organically and conventionally produced meats were minimal. Furthermore, the current pattern of meat consumption exceeded the maximum limits either way, strikingly the consumption of organically produced meat. Not only does it appear to diminish this chrysanogenic risk, but was sometimes found to be even higher. Bottom line, sadly, is that the consumption of organic meat does not diminish the chrysanogenic potential associated with the intake of these pollutants.