By Maggie Fox
You’re
getting more trans-fat than you think you are in processed foods, a new
study shows. Many foods labeled trans-fat-free in fact do contain some
of the artery-clogging gunk, a team at the New York health department
found.
A check of 4,340
top-selling packaged foods shows that 9 percent of them contain
partially hydrogenated oils — the chemically hardened oils that are the
source of trans-fats. Of of these, 84 percent proclaimed themselves free
of trans-fats, with “0 grams."
“This labeling is cause
for concern because consumers, seeing the 0 g trans-fat on the
Nutrition Facts label, are probably unaware that they are consuming
trans-fat,” Jenifer Clapp of the New York City Department of Health and
Mental Hygiene and colleagues wrote in their report.
Many studies have shown
that trans-fats, produced when liquid fats are made to be solid like
butter, are as damaging to arteries as saturated fats such as butter and
lard. “The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has tentatively
determined that partially hydrogenated oils (PHOs), the main dietary
source of industrial trans-fat, are not ‘generally recognized as safe’
for consumption,” Clapp’s team writes in the journal Preventing Chronic Disease.
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