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Are synthetic food dyes bad for you? Here’s the science.

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Synthetic food dyes тАФ and their links to neurobehavioral issues in children тАФ are having a moment.

Last month, California governor Gavin Newsom signed the California School Food Safety Act into law, banning the stateтАЩs public schools from serving or selling foods containing six synthetic food dyes starting in 2028. Earlier this month in Michigan, protests broke out in front of the Battle Creek headquarters of WK Kellogg Co., after the company drew renewed criticism for their broken commitment to remove synthetic food dyes in U.S. products, including cereals.┬а

Meanwhile, the same dyes banned in California are still approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. The agency doesnтАЩt appear to be changing course, maintaining that there isnтАЩt sufficient evidence to prove that synthetic dyes cause issues like ADHD, hyperactivity or lack of focus.┬а

The list of foods containing synthetic food dyes is a long one. And fueling the uproar is the impossibility of discerning the risk a child has while consuming them. When federal and state guidelines arenтАЩt aligned, it can be tricky to find out what foods contain the dyes and if they should be avoided altogether.

Despite limited evidence of a neurobehavioral connection, experts think some children are probably more susceptible than others. Many experts are adamant that CaliforniaтАЩs act ensures safety for the stateтАЩs public school students, and they hope the act could inspire other states to follow suit, forcing food manufacturers to reconfigure their recipes.

тАЬI think itтАЩs a great place to start because school is an environment where kids need to be able to focus. They need to be able to feel like they are in control of their bodies,тАЭ says Melanie Benesh, vice president of government affairs for the Environmental Working Group in Washington, D.C., a nonprofit corporation that cosponsored the California School Food Safety Act. тАЬIt creates a better learning environment for everyone.тАЭ

Amidst this national conversation, Science News looked at how we got to this point and what the science has to say about consuming synthetic food dyes.

What are synthetic food dyes and why are they in our food?

Synthetic dyes add color to food. Each one has a unique molecular structure that absorbs specific frequencies of light, allowing humans to perceive a rainbow of colors in otherwise bland snacks. Beyond adding a splash of color, synthetic dyes are essentially useless. They donтАЩt help preserve food or add any nutritional value; their job is to entice.

тАЬA lot of these foods are candies, cereals тАФ things that are marketed to kids,тАЭ Benesh says. When manufacturers use synthetic dye, it тАЬmakes their food more brightly colored, more attractive to kids, and I think it helps them sell their products.тАЭ┬а

What products have synthetic dyes?

Foods with synthetic dyes arenтАЩt packaged with a warning label in the United States, so sifting through individual product labels is the usually the only way to decipher exactly which food items contain which dyes. If present, synthetic dyes will be listed in the fine print of an itemтАЩs ingredients list, usually as the name of a color followed by a number (like тАЬYellow 5тАЭ). If youтАЩre looking to avoid dyes, here are some grocery store staples to watch out for:

  • Baked goods such as cake mix, sugar cookies and gingerbread
  • Snack foods such as Pop-Tarts, Cheetos and even some dried fruits
  • Candies such as M&MтАЩs, Skittles and Nerds
  • Cereals such as Froot Loops, Trix and Lucky Charms
  • Beverages and specialty drinks such as Electrolit, Pedialyte and Powerade

ItтАЩs not just food products that contain synthetic food dyes. Some eyeshadows, hair products and medications contain some of the dyes now banned in California.

When did scientists realize that synthetic dyes might be harmful?

Synthetic dyes have a long and troubled history. Lead chromate, arsenic and additives made from coal tar were some of the first iterations, packing a poisonous punch for 19th and 20th century consumers. In 1950, dozens of children fell ill after consuming Halloween candy tainted with a dangerous dye, Orange 1 (SN: 8/12/11).

Many modern synthetic dyes were invented around the same time; five of the six dyes banned in California were FDA approved by 1931. But their potential for harm wasnтАЩt widely discussed until the mid-1970s, when the idea of a potential link between food dye and childhood hyperactivity was set loose into the public, says Mari Golub, a developmental neurotoxicologist at the University of California, Davis. A flurry of research followed, but the FDA maintained their guidelines.

Still, some scientists say that associations are evident. Over the past 50 or so years, a growing body of scientific research and anecdotal evidence has pointed to a link between some synthetic food dyes and neurobehavioral issues in kids, which can present as volatile moods, hyperactivity and lack of focus.

So why did California ban the six synthetic dyes?

In 2021, CaliforniaтАЩs Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment released a report that would help push the state to ban Blue 1, Blue 2, Green 3, Red 40, Yellow 5 and Yellow 6 in public schools.┬а

The reportтАЩs authors scoured available research that investigated how synthetic food dyes affect children. They analyzed 25 clinical trial studies that compared periods of time when groups of children consumed foods colored by synthetic dyes to periods when they ate placebos. In many of the trials, parents and teachers noted any behavioral issues as they arose. The report authors eventually wrote that 16 of the studies showed a credible link between the behavioral outcomes and a childтАЩs consumption of synthetic dyes.

But uncovering a link doesnтАЩt mean that scientists can confirm that synthetic dyes are the direct cause of neurobehavioral issues. ThatтАЩs where animal studies come in.

Research with rats, mice and the occasional rabbit have shown a clearer connection between individual synthetic food dyes and neurobehavioral effects. Some animals exposed to synthetic dyes, like the ones banned, can become hyperactive or exhibit signs of memory loss.

While animal studies can be important tools for comparison, the amount of food dye given to lab rats is difficult to compare to, say, how many Red 40тАУcolored sprinkles are on a cupcake. ItтАЩs hard to tally the dye in individual sprinkles, chips and cookies across a childтАЩs diet.

But animal studies have shown that dyes do influence animals neurologically, and they can help scientists determine which individual dyes and doses start to create negative effects, says Mark Miller, a pediatric environmental health physician at CaliforniaтАЩs Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment in Oakland who worked on the assessment.

Why was CaliforniaтАЩs decision controversial?

Not everyone is supportive of CaliforniaтАЩs ban.

тАЬConsistency in food regulations across states and federal agencies is critical for ensuring public confidence,тАЭ says Sean Taylor, an organic and biological chemist with the International Association of Color Manufacturers in Washington, D.C. He notes that, the FDA reviewed the scientific literature like GolubтАЩs team did and concluded there was no causal link between children consuming synthetic dyes and unwanted behaviors.┬а

ItтАЩs hard to be specific when talking about the danger of food dyes because there isnтАЩt that much research out there to begin with. And technically, the FDA and CaliforniaтАЩs 2021 Health Assessment donтАЩt contradict each other: One finds no causal relationship; the latter finds an associative link.┬а

Because there hasnтАЩt been a study comparing one group of children with a food-dye-free diet to another group of children consuming food concentrated with individual doses of synthetic dyes, itтАЩs difficult to identify a causal relationship.

тАЬWe donтАЩt have the kind of data that would be gold standard causal data,тАЭ says Amy Gilson, the Deputy Director for External and Legislative Affairs at CaliforniaтАЩs Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment in Sacramento. ItтАЩs unlikely that a black-and-white study will ever be published. But, Gilson says, тАЬyou donтАЩt need to have all the causal data that anyone would ever want to say, тАШHey, you know thereтАЩs good evidence here. ThereтАЩs good science that points us to needing to take some action.тАЩтАЭ

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