ESF Workshop: Dioxin contamination in food Bayreuth, Germany, from September 28 to October 1, 2000

Dioxin and PCB monitoring programs for food and feeding stuff in most countries of the world, including many European Countries are currently inadequate. Better control of food production lines and food processing procedures is needed to minimize entry of dioxin to the food chain and will help to av...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental science and pollution research international 2001-03, Vol.8 (2), p.84-88
Hauptverfasser: Büchert, A., Cederberg, T., Dyke, P., Fiedler, H., Fürst, P., Hanberg, A., Hosseinpour, J., Hutzinger, O., Kuenen, J. G., Malisch, R., Needham, L. L., Olie, K., Päpke, O., Aranda, J. Rivera, Thanner, G., Umlauf, G., Vartiainen, T., van Holst, C.
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container_end_page 88
container_issue 2
container_start_page 84
container_title Environmental science and pollution research international
container_volume 8
creator Büchert, A.
Cederberg, T.
Dyke, P.
Fiedler, H.
Fürst, P.
Hanberg, A.
Hosseinpour, J.
Hutzinger, O.
Kuenen, J. G.
Malisch, R.
Needham, L. L.
Olie, K.
Päpke, O.
Aranda, J. Rivera
Thanner, G.
Umlauf, G.
Vartiainen, T.
van Holst, C.
description Dioxin and PCB monitoring programs for food and feeding stuff in most countries of the world, including many European Countries are currently inadequate. Better control of food production lines and food processing procedures is needed to minimize entry of dioxin to the food chain and will help to avoid dioxin contamination accidents. This would also improve the ability to trace back a possible contamination to its source. European guidelines for monitoring programs should be established to ensure comparable and meaningful results. These guidelines should define the minimum requirements for the design of monitoring programs, analytical methods, and quality assurance. Though data from Northern Europe shows that the general population exposure to dioxin and PCB has decreased during the last ten years these compounds continue to be a risk of accidental contamination of the food chain. The most prominent recent example is the Belgian dioxin contamination of feeding stuff in 1999. The Belgian dioxin contamination was not detected due to dioxin monitoring programs but by their direct biological effects seen in animals. Four other cases of dioxin contamination have been detected in Europe since 1997 due to local monitoring programs. One of them (citrus pulp pellets 1998) was in a much larger scale than the Belgian dioxin contamination. The general population's exposure to dioxins and PCBs is still in the same range (1-4 pg WHO-TEQ/kg body weight and day) as the recently revised WHO tolerable daily intake (TDI). There is concern that short-term high level exposure to dioxins, furans, and PCB may cause biological effects on the human fetal development and further research is required. Further actions to control sources building on considerable advances already made in many countries may need to be supplemented by measures to prevent direct contamination of feeding stuff or food to reduce general population exposure further.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]
doi_str_mv 10.1007/BF02987298
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G. ; Malisch, R. ; Needham, L. L. ; Olie, K. ; Päpke, O. ; Aranda, J. Rivera ; Thanner, G. ; Umlauf, G. ; Vartiainen, T. ; van Holst, C.</creator><creatorcontrib>Büchert, A. ; Cederberg, T. ; Dyke, P. ; Fiedler, H. ; Fürst, P. ; Hanberg, A. ; Hosseinpour, J. ; Hutzinger, O. ; Kuenen, J. G. ; Malisch, R. ; Needham, L. L. ; Olie, K. ; Päpke, O. ; Aranda, J. Rivera ; Thanner, G. ; Umlauf, G. ; Vartiainen, T. ; van Holst, C.</creatorcontrib><description>Dioxin and PCB monitoring programs for food and feeding stuff in most countries of the world, including many European Countries are currently inadequate. Better control of food production lines and food processing procedures is needed to minimize entry of dioxin to the food chain and will help to avoid dioxin contamination accidents. This would also improve the ability to trace back a possible contamination to its source. European guidelines for monitoring programs should be established to ensure comparable and meaningful results. 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subjects Biological effects
Body weight
Dioxins
Food chains
Food contamination & poisoning
Food production
Furans
PCB
Pesticides
Polychlorinated biphenyls
Quality assurance
title ESF Workshop: Dioxin contamination in food Bayreuth, Germany, from September 28 to October 1, 2000
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