Genetically Modified Food Labeling Through the Lens of Public Health

As Californians rejected Proposition 37, which would have required labeling of food that’s been genetically modified, debate continues on the health implications of eating such foods.

Written byUniversity of California - San Francisco
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A UCSF Scientist and a Physician Weigh In on the Heated Debate over the Safety of GMOs

As Californians rejected Proposition 37, which would have required labeling of food that’s been genetically modified, debate continues on the health implications of eating such foods.

Genetically modified organisms, or GMOs, generally refer to crop plants in which a gene has been introduced from another plant in a technique called gene-splicing to get the plant to express desirable traits, such as herbicide tolerance or insect resistance. Traditionally, getting plants to express desirable traits was done through plant breeding, but that can be time-consuming and produce results that aren’t always accurate.

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the first GMO crops in 1994, and as of 2011, about 88 percent of all corn and 94 percent of all soybeans produced in the country were grown from genetically engineered seeds, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Other common genetically engineered crops include alfalfa, canola, cotton, papaya, zucchini and sugar beets, which are used to make sugar.

As Californians prepare to vote on Proposition 37, which would require labeling of food that’s been genetically modified, debate continues on the health implications of eating such foods. University of California, San Francisco  

California’s Proposition 37 would have required the labeling of raw or processed foods produced with the help of genetic engineering, and it would prohibit those foods from being marketed as “natural,” with some exemptions, including restaurant food, pet food, alcohol and meat from animals that ate GMO plants.

Supporters of Proposition 37 posed it as a consumer “right to know” issue, while opponents said the labeling would be alarmist because there’s no conclusive evidence of health risks associated with GMO foods.

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