Nature’s Path Envirokidz Organic Chocolate Koala Crisp cereal tests positive for unsafe levels of Lead, Cadmium, and Arsenic. See the lab report here.

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For those new to the Lead Safe Mama website:

Tamara Rubin is a multiple-federal-award-winning independent advocate for childhood Lead poisoning prevention and consumer goods safety, and a documentary filmmaker. She is also a mother of Lead-poisoned children (two of her four sons were acutely Lead-poisoned in 2005).


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Important Background: What is an Action Level?

Please note the following key points:

The original lab report for this product is below (at the bottom of this page). The graphic above shows the levels of metals detected in this product (in red) along with the low threshold of detection (in green) for each the metals not detected with the laboratory testing that Lead Safe Mama, LLC had completed for this product. The numbers are juxtaposed (in blue) to the “Action Level” proposed by the medical and scientific community in 2021 as part of the Baby Food Safety Act.

  • These levels were set as “Action Levels” that are (in fact) protective of human health.
  • An “Action Level” is NOT the same as a “Maximum Allowable Level.”
  • Once something is as toxic as the “Action Level,” it is officially in the realm of heavy metal levels that can cause lasting harm to children.
  • The “Action Level” is the level at which the scientific and medical community believes the company (or government) needs to take ACTION to fix the problem (which also includes taking ACTION to inform the public that their product has an unsafe level of the metal detected at-or-above the “Action Level” — and which relevant batch numbers should be recalled/ not consumed).
  • These Action Levels are not arbitrary, however they were not passed into law.
  • These Action Levels reflect the current advice of the medical and scientific communities as levels both achievable and protective of infants and toddlers — regardless of the fact that it is not illegal to have food for children test positive at these levels (as the Baby Food Safety Act of 2021 was not passed into law).
  • The legitimacy of these levels as “Action Levels”/ “Levels of Concern” (even though they were not adopted as law) is similar to the legitimacy of the America Academy of Pediatrics’ level of concern for Lead in water — which is 1 ppb — even though the FDA’s official “level of concern” for Lead in water is 15 ppb (you can read more about that here).

Note re: “Cereal/ not cereal” considerations

With the “Action Levels” proposed in 2021, there were noted exceptions for cereals (allowing cereals to have higher levels of toxicants as their proposed “Action Level”). Given the fact that children (and others) often eat dry packaged cereals as a snack food, without milk (as an on-the-go item that parents can easily throw in a bag), it is the position of Lead Safe Mama, LLC that the proposed higher “Action Level” for “foods that are cereal” is not relevant and should not be considered in evaluating the risk (which should only be evaluated based on the lower proposed “Action Levels” for “foods that are not cereal”).

We have specifically discussed this in detail in several of the articles we have written with lab reports for cereal products that children typically tend to eat as finger foods/ snack foods — without milk (Cheerios, Purely Os, and Seven Sundays are a few examples). The screenshot below is from the proposed 2021 legislation. Here’s a link to the full PDF of the proposed legislation.


For safer food choices, click here.


Published: July 31, 2024

A full lab report for the product pictured is below. Please scroll down.

For this article, we have copied most of the text from our recent report about Simple Mills Chocolate Mint Cookies as most of the considerations are the same, so if you already read that article you may want to scroll directly down to the bottom of the page to see the lab report.


For context for all the food testing we are conducting, it is important to understand that all U.S. federal agencies agree there is no safe level of Lead exposure. Lead exposure should be eliminated whenever possible.

Lead bio-mimics Calcium and is absorbed by the body in place of Calcium (in Calcium-rich biological structures, including the brain and bones). Nearly 90% of the Lead we have ever been exposed to is still in our body, which is why we need to focus all of our attention on PREVENTION when it comes to Lead exposure.

Lead poisoning is the single most preventable — yet single most expensive — environmental illness in the world today.

The above statement is out of the mouths of scientists and medical professionals and is not in dispute at all.

If there are Lead-free choices/ Lead-free alternatives for products (especially foods) — it is our duty as parents to choose Lead-free options whenever possible.

Most detox protocols are snake-oil hoaxes that do not actually remove Lead from the body (some actually have potential to cause significant harm — including by causing/ contributing to an increase in Lead exposure). Prevention is key. Most detox protocols after exposure are — at best — an ineffective placebo solution and — at worst — a potential source of additional poisoning.

  • For more information on the background of the issue of childhood Lead poisoning, please watch the documentary film I directed and produced titled MisLEAD: America’s Secret Epidemic, linked here.
  • For information about the most effective (scientifically proven) natural detox protocol (that you can buy for pennies in your local grocery store), click here.
  • To see a full list of all of the foods we have tested and reported on (and the related articles we have written) since we started doing food testing for Lead, Cadmium, Arsenic, and Mercury, click here.
  • To see a full list of all the foods we have pending/ currently at the lab (and all of the items we are seeking community funding for future testing and reporting on), click here.
  • For safer snack choices for your children, click here.
  • For general guidelines on avoiding Lead in your diet, click here.
  • For a comprehensive discussion of the concerns for Lead in baby food, click here.
  • For a list of products we have tested that tested negative (non-detect) for Lead, Cadmium, Mercury, and Arsenic, click here.

A few more key background points:

  • Lead Safe Mama, LLC is a unique community collaborative woman-owned small business in which YOU (Our community: Readers of this website and followers of our social media channels) decide what we test and you (our community) help cover the cost of the testing we do.
  • The testing we report on is truly independent third-party testing — community-driven and community-funded — not influenced by any agency, person, or business.
  • We are sharing this scientific information (laboratory test results for food products that the Lead Safe Mama community has asked us to test, and that the Lead Safe Mama community has funded testing for) with you (Lead Safe Mama readers) to help you make informed decisions for your family.
  • We are not doing this to cause panic, fear, or anxiety.
  • Most other organizations and businesses completing food testing are not sharing the actual lab test results for the food products they are testing. We have chosen to “lift the veil of mystery” and share the actual lab reports so you have hard data to use as a basis for any decision-making you need to do. We are confident that you are smart enough to understand what the numbers mean (to take the time to learn what they mean) and use this as a basis to make informed decisions for your family.
  • While none of us can change the past, we can at least hopefully take the time to learn about the toxicant profiles of the foods we feed our families and use that information to make the best choices we can moving forward.
  • #KnowBetterDoBetter

The most important question to ask yourself right now: If you had known that this product tested positive for unsafe levels of Lead and Cadmium (and Arsenic, too!), would you have chosen it for your family? For me the answer to this question is a resounding “no!” 

My children have eaten cereals from this brand in the past (in fact, many, many boxes of this exact cereal), and — based on the test results for this particular product — our family will no longer be purchasing any products from this company.

For me I am (personally) horrified and saddened that I fed this food to my acutely Lead-poisoned children over the past two decades, thinking it was a safer choice (even paying more for the brand when we were short on funds, given the “known fact” it was a safer choice).

We certainly understand that others may choose to use this information to make different choices for their family based on their own standards and/or circumstances — and we think no one should be judged or criticized for making whatever choices seem right for them.

Hopefully the information we provide will help you make whatever choices you make with a foundation of knowledge and facts (rather than selecting products based on blind acceptance of the marketing hype and spin found in the greenwashed language and manufacturer’s claims).

The test results for this food product support the following considerations:

  1. As a society, we really need to reconsider how and what we are feeding our children.
  2. At minimum, as parents, we need to consider eliminating (at least significantly so) highly-processed (made by machines) snacks based from any kind of processed flour (including seed and nut flours).
    • Note: In our testing to date, processed packaged food products made of flour (any type of flour) appear to be more contaminated than some other products — likely both as a result of contamination introduced by the mechanized grinding and processing of the ingredients used to make the flours in addition to contamination likely introduced during the machining process required to make the final shaped/ formed product (cereal O’s, puffs, or cookies, etc).
  3. We also need to consider limiting/ eliminating ANY TYPE of store-bought processed, packaged snacks from our children’s diets whenever possible (not just the flour-based products).
  4. Societally, we need to more closely examine how our culture of eating processed, packaged food (which frequently tests positive for high levels of known carcinogens, like Cadmium) is impacting cancer rates, types, and what we can do in response to these findings. The epidemic of cancer in the United States is not generated by some mysterious source — we are accumulating ample evidence that it is clearly rooted in widespread contamination of our food supply (contamination which is primarily found in processed, packaged foods).
  5. We need to demand more from our food supply chain (every step of the way: Not just growing, but the entire system, including harvesting, processing, packaging, and distribution). We need to demand that profit-driven corporate interests (no matter how large or small the corporation) stop manufacturing and selling contaminated products — especially food products with contaminants like Lead and Cadmium, two toxicants that are well-established as causally linked to countless life-long health impairments (and are also toxicants that accumulate in the body over a lifetime).
  6. As consumers, we need to demand (and advocate for) effective regulatory oversight of the food industry.
  7. Finally, we need to demand greater accountability and higher standards related to the language used for marketing and selling products — especially products ostensibly being sold as “healthier” and/or “more natural” choices for children.

We have been feeding this product to our kids — what should we do now!?

If you have been feeding this Nature’s Path Envirokidz cereal products to your young children (or consuming them yourself) on a regular basis, out of an abundance of caution we recommend that you stop doing so immediately and consider getting a Blood Lead Level (BLL) test, or better yet, a full heavy metals panel including Arsenic and Cadmium testing (to help determine if they or you have had any exposure of concern from eating this product).

Please read the exchange in the image below (from Instagram earlier today) with considerations specifically about food-based toxicant exposure:

We always encourage you to rely on science to help you make informed decisions for your family.

Negative health impacts have been demonstrated with blood Lead levels as low as 0.43 (in the study referenced in the image above).

  • Try finding a lab that tests down to a BLL of 1.0 or lower — you at least want to start by making sure your children do not test positive for a blood lead level of 1.0 micrograms of Lead per deciliter of blood or higher.
  • If they (or you) do test positive for a BLL of 1.0 or higher, that level is considerably higher than the current national average (for children and for adults) and is indicative of a likely source of Lead exposure in their lives.
  • For any family that has a family member test positive for a BLL of 1.0 or higher it is always worth doing further investigation, looking for (and identifying) potential sources of Lead exposure (including dietary sources) and eliminating those potential sources, then retesting 45 to 90 days after the suspected source of Lead exposure has been eliminated.

Having baseline heavy metals testing done for everyone in your family is a good place to start.

Hopefully you and your children will all test negative for Lead (and Cadmium, and Arsenic) after regularly consuming a product like this, but it is better to get a test done and know the answer (to have a baseline for future comparative testing) than to not test at all.

You can learn more about BLL testing (including questions to ask to help make sure you get the most accurate possible testing done) at this link, and this link.

We discuss considerations related to heavy metal panels done with urine testing and hair testing at this link.


Some additional reading & links that may be of interest:

  1. This is the Lead Safe Mama affiliate link to purchase the test kits we used for this testing.
  2. This page has a full spreadsheet listing of all of the food testing we have completed and that we have in-progress.
  3. Here’s our landing page with links to all the results for food products we have tested.
  4. Here’s how to send your own food samples into a lab for testing (the cost is $195 per single food sample tested for Lead, Cadmium, Mercury, and Arsenic) or how to collaborate with Lead Safe Mama, LLC on the food testing we’re hosting.
  5. Check out the Food category of articles here on Lead Safe Mama dot com.

Amazon links are affiliate links. If you purchase something after clicking a Lead Safe Mama, LLC Amazon affiliate link, we may receive a percentage of what you spend at no extra cost to you.


Graphics from the manufacturer’s website listing for this product as of July 31, 2024:

 

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7 Comments

  1. Thank you so much for all that you do! It’s so helpful and I appreciate you and your team! Can you please share how to submit a request for a food product to be added to the testing queue?

  2. Nooooo, this brand is my kids favourite brand. We do avoid chocolate flavoured cereal though. Is this coming from the chocolate?

    1. Hello! Thank you for commenting! This is AJ (one of Tamara’s sons).
      Unfortunately, virtually ALL chocolate is contaminated at every step of the production process. Here’s a link to my mom’s movie for more information:

  3. THANK YOU so much for all of your HELPFUL information and research!! We all are so incredibly grateful!!!

  4. Thank you so much, Tamara. Your work is incredible and I have been following you for years!
    My kids eat the Panda Puffs from the same company and the composition is very different. I wonder if you are considering opening a go fund me for the panda puffs too. They are organic too, but they are corn based.
    Thank you!!!!

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