<http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/>
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*Hot Dogs Should Carry Cancer Warning Labels Says US Non Profit Group*
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/158523.php

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A US non-profit organization filed a lawsuit on Wednesday asking a New
Jersey county court to force food companies to put labels warning of *cancer
* <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/info/cancer-oncology/whatiscancer.php>risks
on any hot dogs they sell in New Jersey.

Described by the Los Angeles Times (LAT) as a vegan advocacy group, Cancer
Project, wants food companies like Oscar Mayer and Hebrew National, big
names in the hot dog world, to put labels on their hot dogs warning that
eating this product and other processed meats *"increases the risk of
cancer".*

President of the Cancer Project, Neal Barnard, who is an adjunct professor
at the George Washington University medical school in Washington, DC, told
LAT that:

*"Just as tobacco causes **lung
cancer*<http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/info/lung-cancer/what-is-lung-cancer.php>
*, processed meats are linked to **colon
cancer*<http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/150496.php>
*."
*
*"Companies that sell hot dogs are well aware of the danger, and their
customers deserve the same information,"* he added.

The lawsuit, which according to the LAT is seeking class action status, is
brought against ConAgra Foods Inc (owners of Hebrew National), Kraft Foods
Inc (owners of Oscar Meyer), Sara Lee Corp, Nathan's Famous Inc, and
Marathon Enterprises Inc.
[image: hotdogs..jpg]
62 per cent of Americans eat some kind of processed pork, says Cancer
Project, adding that in 2006, 1.5 billion pounds of hot dogs were consumed
in the US, at an average of 32 pounds a year per person.

The group refers to a report from the American Institute for Cancer Research
and the World Cancer Research Fund where scientists say there is no safe
amount of processed meat that can be eaten, and that just one 50-gram
serving of bacon, sausage, deli meats or other processed meats, every day
increases a person's chance of getting *colorectal
cancer*<http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/155598.php>by 21 per
cent on average.

Processed and cured meats contain nitrites which are added to help preserve
the meat. When ingested, these break down into nitrosamines and other
chemicals that are thought to be cancer-causing.

Every year, about 150,000 Americans are diagnosed with colorectal cancer,
and about 50,000 Americans are expected to die of the disease in 2009.

However, there are mixed views about the research evidence, with some
scientists saying it could be the fat content of the food (most processed
meats also tend to have high fat) that is linked to cancer. For instance a
Harvard study that pooled data from several studies found no link between
red and processed meat and cancer but it did find there was a lower risk of
cancer when fish and chicken consumption was higher.

There has been a strong reaction from the food industry and other
nutritionists have also been skeptical.

Sydney Lindner, a spokeswoman from Kraft told the press:

*"These proposals are unfounded. Hot dogs have been enjoyed by consumers for
more than 100 years."*

One nutrionist interviewed by the LAT said that people should be more
worried about the food that is usually eaten with the hot dog, such as
fat-laden potato, sugary drinks and desserts and macaroni salads.

Others say that while people should be careful about how much meat they eat,
the occasional hot dog is not going to do them any harm. And even if it may
be true that eating too much of a certain food like processed meat increases
a person's risk of cancer, putting labels on everything will just lead
to *"warning
**fatigue* <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/8877.php>*".
*
The lawsuit follows a campaign earlier this month when Cancer Project
sponsored a provocative highway billboard near Busch Stadium in St. Louis on
the day that thousands of baseball fans flocked to watch President Obama
throw the opening pitch to the 2009 All-Star Game.

The 48-foot wide digital billboard, located on I-70, one mile west of
Lindbergh Boulevard, showed a picture of hot dogs jammed in a cigarette pack
carrying the label *"Unlucky Strikes"* and the text: *"Warning: Hot Dogs Can
Strike You Out -- For Good."
*
Cancer Project says on its website that they want Baseball Commissioner Bud
Selig to put *"dietary disaster"* warning labels on hot dogs served at Major
League Baseball stadiums because, in their words, *"processed meats have
been convincingly linked to colorectal cancer".
*
Cancer Project describes itself as a group of physicians, researchers, and
nutritionists who wish to *"educate the public about the benefits of a
healthy diet for cancer prevention and survival".* The organization is
affiliated to the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine and is based
in Washington, DC.

Sources: Los Angeles Times, The Cancer Project.

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