The IARC’s decisions have also faced criticism for sparking needless alarm over hard to avoid substances or situations. It has previously put working overnight and consuming red meat into its “probably cancer-causing” class, and using mobile phones as “possibly cancer-causing”, similar to aspartame.
Pickes are on the list too I think.
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Can we avoid click-bait headlines like “exclusive”? This is a Reuters story about the WHO. It’s not exclusive.
Weren’t they saying this back in the 90s?
That’s… pretty bad…
Sure, I didn’t think the stuff was actually healthy as such but this is pretty big.
Going to have to keep an eye on this…
It looks like the actual research suggests that you can have the amount of aspartame in 12-36 cans of diet soda before you increase your cancer risk, so even if you stay on the conservative side of that, and say “no more than 12 cans,” I think most people don’t have to change their aspartame intake in response to this. You should definitely talk to your doctor about it if you already have a high cancer risk, or really like diet soda, or just want more reliable information than you can get online.
I think the more useful takeaway from this article is that beverage companies are trying to keep aspartame from being declared a possible carcinogen. That’s hardly surprising, but it seems more verifiably true than the proposition that aspartame is a significant carcinogen. A lot of things can increase cancer risk slightly, but much fewer increase cancer risk enough to worry about them.
Wy partner chews a lot of gum and I just checked - it contains aspartame. Anyone knows of any decently priced alternatives?
Full Xylitol ones should not need other sweeteners. Availability probably depends on where you are.