Note Re: Low Thresholds of Detection for this Report
- This report — similar to some of the other reports we are publishing this month — references different “low thresholds of detection” for some of the metals we are testing for (different than some of the reports we have shared previously).
- If you look back through the history of laboratory testing Lead Safe Mama, LLC has been coordinating (of foods and supplements) since we began this initiative in March 2024, the low thresholds of detection have varied across this time period.
- Given we are using a network of labs (SimpleLab is a network of labs, not a single lab) for the laboratory testing we are coordinating, this may happen periodically.
- The lab used to test a product may determine the confidence level for their low threshold of detection (for testing a specific product or product type) to be different than the level other labs have determined for similar products/ product-types tested.
- While we would ideally prefer low thresholds of detection for each metal we are testing for to fall at-or-below the 2021 proposed action levels, for reports (like this one) where one-or-more toxicants have been found present at levels at-or-above the 2021 proposed levels of concern for children (discussed in detail below), this information is still quite relevant to report as these findings indicate the product falls in a range that is possibly/ likely unsafe for consumption by children (when referencing the 2021 proposed health protective standards).
- Said another way, for this particular product, while we don’t know the exact levels of Mercury down to a single digit part per billion range (except that the level falls somewhere below 10 ppb), the fact that the Cadmium, Lead, and Arsenic levels are at-or-above 10 ppb is enough information to indicate there is a concern with the toxicant profile for this product.
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).
- Tamara owns and runs Lead Safe Mama, LLC — a unique community collaborative woman-owned small business for childhood Lead poisoning prevention and consumer goods safety.
- Since July of 2022, the work of Lead Safe Mama, LLC has been responsible for six product recalls (FDA and CPSC).
- All test results reported on this website are science-based, accurate, and replicable.
- Please check out our press page to see some of the amazing coverage of our work so far this year!
This is an ad-free article.
Advertising and affiliate income help Lead Safe Mama, LLC cover the costs of the work we do here (independent consumer goods testing and childhood Lead poisoning prevention advocacy). We have removed ads from most of our more widely-read articles (and newly published articles, too — like this one!) to make them easier for you to read. In addition to supporting this work by starting any shopping you might be doing with a click on our affiliate links, if you would like to support the independent consumer goods testing and childhood Lead poisoning prevention advocacy work of Lead Safe Mama, LLC by making a contribution (which will also help us keep our more widely-read articles ad-free), click here. Thank you!
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 orange, above the action levels discussed/ or in green, below the action levels discussed) for each metal not detected with the laboratory testing 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. For this round of testing, SimpleLab (our laboratory testing provider) had a change of labs and their low threshold of detection is slightly higher than in previous testing rounds.
- These 2021 levels were proposed as “Action Levels” because they are (in fact) protective of human health.
- An “Action Level” is NOT the same as a “Maximum Allowable Level.”
- Many food manufacturers misinterpret guidance on heavy metals to mean “allowable levels” and consider it reasonable for their products to test positive below these levels.
- This is a (perhaps intentional?) misunderstanding/ misinterpretation the food industry makes — a misunderstanding which food manufacturers use to justify the presence of heavy metals in their products.
- Heavy metals accumulate in the body.
- It is the cumulative/ aggregate impact of heavy metal exposure (over a lifetime) that makes even small/ incidental/ seemingly trivial exposures particularly damaging and dangerous. You can read more about that here.
- Once a food product has the amount of heavy metal (Lead, Cadmium, Mercury, or Arsenic) noted (above) as the “Action Level,” that product is officially considered (by the scientific and medical community) unsafe for consumption by children as toxicants (found at-or-above these levels) are in the range of heavy metal levels that have been demonstrated to cause lasting harm.
- Action Levels are unrelated to serving size.
- Action Levels are relevant for any amount of a food product that may be consumed (any quantity of the food in question).
- PPB (parts per billion/ ppb) measurements are a percentage (albeit a very small percentage) and apply to any quantity of the food product tested.
- For more discussion about serving size considerations (and why relying on “serving size” to limit toxicant exposure is not a relevant metric/ not a metric protective of human health), read this article.
- These “Action Levels” proposed in 2021 are the levels at which the scientific and medical community believe the manufacturer (or government) needs to take ACTION to fix the problem.
- One “Action” would be for the manufacturer to take steps to reduce the levels of toxicants in the food product.
- Another “Action” would be for the manufacturer to cease sales of the product until the product could be made safe.
- Another “Action” would be for the manufacturer to inform the public that a specific food product has an unsafe level of the metal detected at-or-above the “Action Level” — making a highly-visible public announcement regarding which relevant batches of the product should be recalled/ no longer consumed.
- The Action Levels proposed within the Baby Food Safety Act of 2021 were not arbitrary toxicant levels, but were proposed because they are the levels most protective of human health. However, the Baby Food Safety Act of 2021 was not passed into law.
- Regardless of the fact the Baby Food Safety Act of 2021 never passed into law — and it is therefore legal to have foods and supplements marketed for consumption by children test positive for Lead, Cadmium, Mercury, and Arsenic at-or-above these levels — these Action Levels still reflect the current (modern/ relevant) advice of the medical and scientific communities as levels both achievable by the industry and safeguards of infant and toddler health.
- Food industry lobbyists fought against formalizing these proposed “Action Levels” as a government standard, alleging the levels were unachievable.
- The image below (with the number ELEVEN) links to a landing page with 11 food products we have already tested this year (2024), all of which have been “non-detect” for toxicants with low thresholds of detection (for Lead, Mercury, Cadmium, and Arsenic) far below the 2021 proposed Action Levels.
- These 11 food products (about 10% of the foods Lead Safe Mama, LLC has tested and reported on so far since March 2024 when we began laboratory testing foods) clearly demonstrate these Action Levels as achievable across a range of food types (salt, flour, coffee, oatmeal, chia seeds, hemp seeds, soy milk, packaged fruit-based snacks, beverages, and more).
- The legitimacy of these levels as “Action Levels”/ “Levels of Concern” (even though they were not adopted as law) is mirrored by the legitimacy of the American Academy of Pediatrics’ level of concern for Lead in water, which is 1 ppb despite the FDA’s official “level of concern” for Lead in water being 15 ppb (you can read more about that here).
“Simply Not Achievable”
While the packaged, processed food industry would have consumers (and the government) believe the standards proposed in 2021 are unachievable, this industry position (an oft-rearticulated response to nearly every set of laboratory test results for food we have published to date) is simply not true. It is possible to make safer processed, packaged food products that fall well below the safety levels for toxicants proposed within the Baby Food Safety Act of 2021. To read more about the 11 food items Lead Safe Mama, LLC has tested and reported on so far that resulted in “non-detect” for Lead, Cadmium, Mercury, and Arsenic (with the limits of detection as reported for each product), click the image below (with the big number 11)!
Here are direct Amazon links to those 11 safer products as well (this list is growing alongside the food testing we are organizing — to see the updated list at any time, click the graphic with the number above):
- Sea Salt (Oregon, USA)
- Amazon link for this product: https://amzn.to/3Y3Xehm
- Article with the lab test report for this product
- Organic Einkorn Flour (Italy)
- Amazon link for this product: https://amzn.to/3LIqxix
- Article with the lab test report for this product
- Organic, Gluten-Free, Sprouted Rolled Oats (Canada)
- Amazon link for this product: https://amzn.to/3WIQ1BN
- Article with the lab test report for this product
- Organic, Non-GMO, Gluten-Free Chia Seeds (Mexico)
- Amazon link for this product: https://amzn.to/3YvE7xC
- Article with the lab test report for this product
- Organic Espresso Roast Ground Coffee (Multi-Country Origin, Non-USA)
- Amazon link for this product: https://amzn.to/3yo1eiL
- Article with the lab test report for this product
- Sparkling Grape-Flavored Tonic
- Amazon link for this product: https://amzn.to/4cjFYZu
- Article with the lab test report for this product
- Pure Organic Layered Fruit Bars in Strawberry Banana Flavor
- Amazon link for this product: https://amzn.to/3WQEekA
- Article with the lab test report for this product
- Pure Organic Layered Fruit Bars in Raspberry Lemonade Flavor
- Amazon link for this product (sold in a box assortment, we haven’t found these sold separately): https://amzn.to/3XcFsIp
- Article with the lab test report for this product
- GoGo Squeez Organic Fruit On The Go in AppleApple Flavor
- Amazon link for this product: https://amzn.to/3XhWYLe
- Article with the lab test report for this product
- Organic Soy Milk
- Amazon link for this product: https://amzn.to/4dwev8l
- Article with lab report to be published shortly
- Organic Hemp Seeds
- Amazon link for this product: https://amzn.to/4e05RP9
- Article with lab report to be published shortly
Amazon links are affiliate links.
Published: October 13, 2024
Sunday
Hello! We are working on publishing a LOT of test results very quickly.
We will be updating this section of each article (with more information about the specific product and other similar products for context) as time permits, but we wanted to make sure the greater Lead Safe Mama community (and the general public) had access to this scientific data (about foods and supplements in their home) as quickly as possible.
Please scroll down to see the full laboratory test report for the product pictured above.
Thank you for your patience.
Please do check out the other links on this page for additional information about the truly independent, third-party, laboratory testing we are conducting on food products.
As there are almost no reasonable safety thresholds proposed for toxicants (heavy metals) consumed by adults (in foods and supplements), our focus is (as always) on the health of children. The available proposed safety thresholds (and guidance) for foods consumed by adults are not set at levels protective of human health and therefore are not relevant to Lead Safe Mama, LLC’s work.
Some additional reading & links that may be of interest:
- This is the Lead Safe Mama Amazon affiliate link to purchase the test kits we used for this testing.
- Here’s our landing page with links to all the food test results for products we have tested and reported on so far.
- Here’s our landing page listing all the food testing we have in-progress (at the lab/ pending, etc.) — please consider making a contribution in support of any of the pending crowd-funded foods if they are a food you use! Thank you.
- Here’s information on 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) and how to collaborate with Lead Safe Mama, LLC on the food testing we are hosting.
Amazon links are affiliate links. If you purchase something after clicking on a Lead Safe Mama, LLC Amazon affiliate link, Lead Safe Mama, LLC may receive a percentage of what you spend — at no extra cost to you.
Lab report for the product pictured above:
Crystal Rioux says
This is insane how this is allowed. I believe I took these, or very similar when pregnant with my son
Sheila says
Hi! I just picked up some Nature’s Plus folic acid yesterday. Do you know if lead is an issue in other brands of folic acid, aside from NatureMade? Thank you!
TheNoToxMom says
Lead seems to be an issue in supplements overall as they are not regulated for heavy metals in the US. Other prenatal vitamins are testing just as badly. I sincerely hope we can find at least one brand that does not contain heavy metals. That remains to be seen. You can always click the search bar at the top right of the website and search keywords like “prenatal” to see other articles with test results.
Beni says
Horrified and feeling like crying. I took this prenatal for 4.5 years through 2 pregnancies and a year of TTC, plus bf-ing my now 1 year old.
TheNoToxMom says
I empathize with you. It feels like we’ve been poisoning our children unknowingly all along. I would stop taking all supplements, especially since you’re breast-feeding currently. The body mass of a child is much less than that of an adult , so their heavy metal levels can be a lot higher if an adult is being exposed to heavy metals while breastfeeding. If you have been taking any supplements, I recommend checking your baby’s BLL (blood lead level) at the pediatrician’s office. (Not the finger prick b/c it’s not accurate.) You can tell them you’ve been staying in a home that was built before 1979. If they tell you no, tell them you would like it notated in your child’s chart that they refused to test for lead. Then they will do it.
Beni says
Ironically we just had us all tested as we do live in a home built in the 60s and it’s a routine test for 1 year olds where I live due to the town being almost entirely built pre 1975.
We all tested below the lower limit of sensitivity for the test that was run. Im tempted to seek a more sensitive test.
I can’t stop my meds or supplements unfortunately or my QoL and functionality decrease to a point I can’t work or parent my kids.
Lburns says
I am pretty sure that I took these as well with. It’s pregnancies. My children are 3 and almost 6. I have their lead levels checked every year at their well visits (not the finger prick)and mine have tested fine. Hope this can give you some peace of mind. It’s always good to have lead levels checked yearly though.
Tamara says
The finger stick has a low threshold of detection of 3.3 in most cases, so it does not rule out exposures below 3.3, which can still be concerning levels.
More on that here:
https://tamararubin.com/2021/12/my-childs-lead-test-came-back-as/
and Here:
https://tamararubin.com/2017/01/if-a-doctor-says-your-babys-blood-lead-level-is-normal-get-a-new-doctor-theres-no-normal-level-of-lead-in-blood/
T
Lburns says
I’ve never had the finger pricks done for that exact reason.
Suz P says
Are any prenatal vitamins recommended?
Tamara says
We have not found a Lead-free prenatal vitamin.
T
Arlene H says
What is the lowest dose of lead you have found for prenatals? 🙁 and what brand was it? Currently pregnant and in dire need.
Tamara says
https://tamararubin.com/2024/09/smartypants-organic-prenatal-multi-omegas-gummy-vitamins-test-positive-for-a-higher-level-of-lead-than-m-ms-chocolate-candies-august-2024-laboratory-test-report-here/
Ray says
I took these with both my children. They were both premature and one son has significant developmental delays. I wish they checked babies for heavy metals when they are born. Very sad I took this & wonder if the delays are from this…
TheNoToxMom says
Have you had your son’s heavy metal levels checked with a blood test recently? I recommend checking his BLL (blood lead level) at the pediatrician’s office. (Not the finger prick b/c it’s not accurate.) You can tell them you’ve been staying in a home that was built before 1979. If they tell you no, tell them you would like it notated in your child’s chart that they refused to test for lead. Then they will do the test.
Lburns says
I get my children’s levels tested every year at their well visits. Thankfully their doctor has never given any pushback.
Ann says
I added the following comment to an EWG action form for the FDA review of harmful chemicals, deadline to add comments is Dec. 6th.
“Lead in Prenatal vitamins is of utmost concern.
Require laboratory testing of prenatal supplements to ensure that our most vulnerable citizens, newborn babies, are not exposed to lead in the womb from supplements that expectant mothers are encouraged to take. Please see NatureMade prenatal vitamins sold by Walmart are laboratory tested high in lead.
https://tamararubin.com/2024/10/nature-made-prenatal-folic-acid-dha-softgels-multivitamin-test-positive-for-lead-cadmium-arsenic-september-2024-lab-report/“
Tamara says
Thank you.
T