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Total consumption of contaminants

Matís is currently working on an interesting European project where methods will be developed to assess how much of the unwanted contaminants people get from food.

The project is called Total Diet Study Exposure Study, and is working in collaboration with 19 European countries, 7th European Research Program partially sponsors the project.

The project aims to improve and standardize monitoring of how exposed we are to unwanted contaminants in food as they are on consumers' tables. In order to be able to carry out harmonized research, the methods used for food sampling, measurement of contaminants in food, quality assessment of data, etc. must first be harmonized.

The intention is to test different methods that have been used in Europe and to define the best procedures for the research. The methods will then be used to estimate the amount of contaminants that people ingest with their food in several European countries, including Iceland.

It will also summarize which contaminants and foods are most important in assessing the total consumption of undesirable substances in the diet of Europeans, but such information is a key factor in making a risk assessment for the consumption of these substances and assessing their impact on human health.

The project is therefore important for regulators and risk assessors such as the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) and the World Health Organization (WHO). The part of the research in which Matís participates includes the development and implementation of a quality framework for parties that conduct research on the total consumption of contaminants, but also the analysis of data on contaminants. Matís will also take part in an experiment to carry out a coordinated study of total consumption of four foreign substances in Iceland, and these results will be compared with comparable studies carried out in the Czech Republic, Finland, Germany and Portugal. Matís also manages a work package that aims to disseminate information regarding the project's results to stakeholders.

The study of the total consumption of contaminants allows us to get a real estimate of how much we are exposed to unwanted contaminants such as heavy metals, persistent organic pollutants, fungal toxins and other contaminants from food as we eat it, whether fried, boiled, cooked, grilled, grilled or baked. The project is for four years and is expected to be completed in 2016.

Further information is available on the project's website: www.tds-exposure.eu.

For further information, contact Matís Helga Gunnlaugsdóttir.

EN