Home / Press Center / Press Releases


Posted On March 25, 2008
printable version email to a friend join our e-mail list


Study: Pregnant women who eat more fish, including canned tuna, have smarter children

Harvard-led Team’s Findings To Be Published In The American Journal Of Epidemiology

Washington -- In a study scheduled for April publication in the American Journal of Epidemiology, a team of nine respected scientists from Harvard and the University of Michigan found that women who ate the most fish (more than 2 weekly servings) during the second trimester of their pregnancies delivered children with the highest scores on two cognitive tests when they reached 3 years of age. This finding flies in the face of conventional wisdom about supposed dangers lurking in fish, especially for women of childbearing age. The research covered hundreds of mother-child pairs who enrolled in Project Viva, a Massachusetts-based study that has followed mothers since early pregnancy.

This study also confirmed that conventional wisdom about the healthfulness of eating canned tuna during pregnancy is dead wrong. Researchers wrote: “The 28 mothers (8 percent) who reported eating canned tuna at least twice weekly had children with higher scores … compared with the 130 mothers (38 percent) who reported never eating tuna fish” while pregnant.

Today, Center for Consumer Freedom Research Director David Martosko said: “At a time when environmental activists are branding fish with a skull and crossbones, this is helpful evidence that fish is still the same health food it’s always been. U.S. cases of mercury poisoning from eating fish have never materialized in the medical literature, but women who run away from the fish counter during their pregnancies are clearly putting their babies’ health at risk.”

Project Viva investigators have previously found that “fish intake among pregnant women declined following the 2001 federal mercury warnings” issued by the Environmental Protection Agency and the Food and Drug Administration.

Martosko added: “Science doesn’t lie. Pregnant women who frequently eat canned tuna are having brainier children than those who don’t. Green groups have been demonizing tuna for years. Now it looks like they’ve been causing the very harm they sought to prevent. Women who swore off fish during their pregnancies in recent years were sadly misled, and they ought to be asking environmental activists for an apology.”

Internet links:

The Center for Consumer Freedom is a nonprofit coalition supported by restaurants, food companies, and consumers, working together to promote personal responsibility and protect consumer choices.

For media comment, contact our media department at 202-463-7112 ext. 115




printable version email to a friend join our e-mail list

Ad Campaigns

Brain Washed? Brain Washed?
The animal-rights nuts at the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine tried to scare Americans away from fish with a misleading ad in the Washington Post. Our rapid response made sure Post readers knew what the group was really up to… Don't let animal-rights activists brainwash you with fish stories. click to view »

Hooked on the hype? Hooked on the hype?
Discover the facts about how much mercury is in the fish you eat. click to view »


OpEds

Fishy Omega-3 risks
If the FDA's report becomes official policy, the conventional wisdom urging women of childbearing age to eat less fish will be turned completely upside-down. read more here »

Poor Children Suffer From Tuna Fears
Seafood warnings are hurting, not helping, America’s most vulnerable kids. Sad? Yes. Shameful? Absolutely. read more here »

Letters

A fish story you shouldn't swallow
Consumers shouldn't be scared away from a diet rich in seafood, despite the scary headlines generated by a recent U.S. Geological Survey report. read more here »

Little to fret over with mercury in Colorado fish
Its frustrating, but not too surprising, that so many people are overreacting to trace levels of mercury found in Colorado sport fish. read more here »

YOUR VIEWS
Concerns over mercury levels in largemouth bass from Big Bear Lake appear to be a giant overreaction. read more here »


Copyright © 1997-2009 Center for Consumer Freedom. Tel: 202-463-7112.