HealthPop
By

David W Freeman /

CBS News/ September 16, 2011, 10:16 AM

Apple juice-arsenic flap puts Dr. Oz in cross-hairs

dr oz apple juice Wikimedia Commons / Getty Images
(CBS/AP) Call it the sippy cup saga. Dr. Memhet Oz says apple juice contains potentially dangerous levels of arsenic, but the FDA and other medical experts say the popular TV doctor is all wet.

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"There is no evidence of any public health risk from drinking these juices," the agency said on its website. "And FDA has been testing them for years."

A sticky situation got even stickier on Thursday, when Dr. Richard Besser scolded him on "Good Morning America" for what Besser called an "extremely irresponsible" report that was akin to "yelling 'Fire!' in a movie theater."

Besser headed the CDC before joining ABC news as health and medical editor several years ago.

Arsenic occurs naturally in water, air, food and soil in two forms. The FDA says organic arsenic is essentially harmless because it quickly passes through the body. Inorganic arsenic - the type in pesticides - can cause cancer if consumed at high levels or over a long period.

"The Dr. Oz Show" did not break down the type when it tested juice samples. As a result, the FDA said, the results are misleading. And the agency's tests found lower total arsenic levels from one of the same juice batches the Oz show tested - 2 to 6 parts per billion of arsenic versus the 36 that Oz's show had claimed.

Tests of the same batch conducted by two food-testing labs for the juice's maker, Nestle USA, which sells Juicy Juice under the Gerber brand, also found levels consistent with the FDA results.

In a letter published on the Oz show's website, Nestle said it told the program's producer in advance that the method the show's lab used was intended for testing waste water, not fruit juice, and "therefore their results would be unreliable at best." The FDA also sent a letter in advance to the show and threatened to post its findings and the letters online if the program proceeded.

Oz went ahead.

"American apple juice is made from apple concentrate, 60 percent of which is imported from China," the website version of his report says. "Other countries may use pesticides that contain arsenic, a heavy metal known to cause cancer."

Tim Sullivan, a spokesman for Oz's show, said in an interview: "We don't think the show is irresponsible. We think the public has a right to know what's in their foods."

Sullivan said Oz does not agree that organic arsenic is as safe as authorities say it is. The show will do further tests to distinguish organic from inorganic arsenic in juice samples, he said.

"The position of the show is that the total arsenic needs to be lower," he said. "We did the tests. We stand by the results and we think the standards should be different."

In an interview with The Associated Press on Thursday, even Oz said he wouldn't hesitate to keep giving his four children apple juice.

"There's no question in my mind folks can continue drinking apple juice. ... There have been no cases at all of kids being harmed by elevated levels of arsenic, and the kinds of numbers we are talking about are not high enough to cause acute injury," he said.

He said he was concerned instead about the possible ill effects from drinking apple juice for many years.

What's the bottom line? Dr. Steven Novella, a neurologist at Yale University and an outspoken critic of iffy medical advice appearing in the media, said Dr. Oz's dubious warning about apple juice had an upside. On his blog, Neurologica, he wrote on Friday, "The Dr Oz show did raise an important issue - health fear mongering and irresponsible reporting for ratings by medical celebrities."

© 2011 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
29 Comments Add a Comment
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pr_boxer says:
Ted Haggard,Jim & Tammy Bakker,Jimmy Swaggert,Jim Jones,Dr Oz, he's just as much of a fraud as the others, he's just selling a different product. Its so obvious I don't know why everyone doesn't see it.
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formrusmcsgt says:
"The Dr Oz show did raise an important issue - health fear mongering and irresponsible reporting for ratings by medical celebrities."
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Well, fear mongering and irresponsible reporting are a Fox staple.

No surprise there.
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pohd1 replies:
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Problem this is a CBS story not Fox. What an bigoted idiot.
my_tee_mouse replies:
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Dr. Oz airs on Fox stations, pohd1. That's two lessons on why people should do their homework before jumping to conclusions.
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someonewhogivesasht says:
Back in my college days, I took a part time job at Gerber, I tasted the food for consistency. Several times batches of stuff were discarded when an inspector caught something wrong. I can't ever recall anything being dealt with internally, only when an inspector found something was soimething done about their product. We had a large batch of apple juice that had something wrong, instead of destroying it, they dilluted it with other clean batches. I didn't work there much longer. Doctor OZ only reported somethging I and my family have known about the food industry for years, that's why we buy fresh and cook a lot.
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klbro replies:
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All of these nay sayers are undoubtedly LOBBYISTS for the food industry!!! The food industry has KILLED so damn many Americans and still THEY blame DR OZ! They shoot the messenger instead of investigating those that are killing US! I have been saying for the past decade that the FOOD INDUSTRY is going to the next TOBACCO industry. WELL my biggest fears are coming true. Hey MR LOBBYISTS: Careful of the LISTERIA on the latest batches of cantelopes....
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J_Bishop says:
Thank you, Dr. Oz. Too many instances of putting the corporation first make it clear the FDA is a captive agency. It is good for industry to know independent scrutiny is also a possibility.
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Scimajor replies:
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Independant scrutiny is one thing. Making things up out of thin air is quite another.
Hosheen replies:
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It;s good for irresponsible media junkies to know there are gullible people like you to fool and raise ratings.
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hephu211 says:
Most people know that this apple concentrate is not even made from real apples. This was known for years. Dr. Oz is just mentioning this from a non -conventional medicine manner. Most Doctors knew already knew that apple concentrate is poison....
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Scimajor replies:
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I don't suppose you care to back up any of your assertions with actual proof?

There's not one single study to back up your claims. NOT ONE. Stop making things up. That's why "Dr." Oz is in trouble (making things up with no peer reviewed scientific study to back him up.).
klbro replies:
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Scimajor:
How do you and the other lobbyists sleep @ night???? I sure hope these companies don't end up poisoning any of your family- if you are still on speaking terms w/ them...
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mari1963 says:
Dr oz is trying to get ratings. I think the guy is creepy and should be taken off the air. I don't think his show ever gives any valuable information to the public. Shame on him.
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WillowSunstar says:
People making statements like this should be forced to prove it. I am tired of people like Dr. Oz and Michelle Bachmann making statements not based on facts.
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Hosheen replies:
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@louisville12 Didn't you read the article? His tests were the wrong kind.The producers and he were told this before the show was even aired. In their quest for sensationalism and ratings, they didn't care. That's as disgusting as your comprehension deficit.
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vielmann says:
I don't know what everyone's upset about. That pseudo scientist Limbaugh is always touting bullcrap science and hardly a word said.
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Jaylah54 says:
Personally, I think the whole Dr. Oz show is an exercise in fear mongering and sensationalism, and I can't think of any reason why a sane, rational person would pay the slightest attention to anything he says.

"Ten Completely Unheard of Diseases Since They're All So Rare, and How You're Probably Dying of All Ten!!!

Probably great for raging hypochondriacs, but why would anybody else even listen to such baloney?

I have no doubt that GPs all over this country would like nothing more than to conk Oz-Quack over the head for sending perfectly healthy patients to them, all in a tizzy because they were convinced that they had some disease of which there are only 5 reported cases, worldwide, each year.

"Dr" Oz, here's a helpful hint for you. EVERYTHING causes cancer if used inappropriately.



If the crap "Dr" Oz routinely spouts on his programs isn't actually "illegal" enough to get his license to practice medicine revoked, it is certainly irresponsible and unethical enough to make rational people treat it as the worthless "information" it actually is.
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Scimajor says:
No way!!! A television personality isn't the best source of reliable scientific data? I can't believe it!
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