FDA Considers
Engineered Animals For Food
Agency Will Accept Industry Proposals To
Sell The Public Animals With Mixed DNA
CBS NEWS
(CBS/AP) The
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration said Thursday a
government review will ensure that such animals are safe to eat.
Genetically engineered animals are created when scientists
insert a gene from one species of animal into the DNA of another animal to reprogam some of its characteristics.
For example, fish could be made to grow faster, or hens
could be made to lay heart-healthier eggs.
It's unclear how consumers will react to such animals, even
with a government seal of approval.
In May of this year, A CBS News/New York Times Poll found
that 53 percent of Americans said they wouldn't buy genetically altered food.
But as CBS News chief investigative correspondent Armen
Keteyian reported then, it's hard to avoid such foods
because the FDA does not require manufacturers to label products that contain
modified ingredients.
For example, today, more than 90 percent of the
Experts say that means if it comes in a can or a box and the
label lists soybean oil or corn syrup as ingredients, odds are that it contains
Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs). Overall, 65
percent of all products in your local grocery store have GMOs...not
that you'd know it by looking.
"The industry that makes genetically modified foods
fought so hard to make sure that it wasn't labeled," nutritionist Marion
Nestle told Keteyian.
According to another CBS News poll, 87 percent of consumers
would like GMO ingredients to be labeled, just as they are in
The debate over GMOs in the
"I think that a label might be one of the questions we
want to explore." Dr. Henney said.
But in the end, the industry won out, as food makers sold
the idea that a genetic label would brand safe foods as poison.
"The terminology that's used to talk about this, to
describe this technology is frightening to consumers, they've told us
that," Lisa Katic of the Grocery Manufacturers
of America told CBS News. "What we are opposed to or against are labels
that could potentially misinform or mislead them."
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