Rice is being poured into a bowl.
Long-term exposure to small amounts of arsenic can increase the risk of bladder, lung and skin cancer, heart disease and diabetes. (For Spectrum Health Beat)

There’s a danger lurking in rice and you won’t find it by reading labels. It’s the chemical arsenic.

And the threat isn’t about immediate poisoning but rather that long-term exposure to small amounts can increase the risk of bladder, lung and skin cancer, heart disease and diabetes.

Arsenic naturally finds its way into our soil and water because it’s in the Earth’s crust, but it also accumulates from some pesticides and fertilizers.

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Our Take

Chronic exposure to arsenic in small doses, often from food or other sources people are not aware of, is hard to detect and poses the greatest risk for babies, said William Bush, MD, pediatrician-in-chief of Spectrum Health Helen DeVos Children’s Hospital.

“Infants are in a rapid growth phase so they consume a much larger percentage of food relative to the size and weight of their body than a small child or adult does,” Dr. Bush said. “Any exposure to toxins, therefore, shows up in greater concentration.”

Many baby formulas are rice-based and parents often are counseled to use rice cereal as one of baby’s first sources of solid food. Reports have surfaced of high levels of arsenic in organic brown rice syrup, a sweetener used in juice and baby formula.

“If a mother can’t breast-feed, we suggest using dairy-based formula. For infants who can’t tolerate dairy, a soy-based formula,” Dr. Bush advised. “For babies ready to start on solid foods, oatmeal and other grains are good choices, along with pureed fruits and vegetables.”

Rice tends to absorb arsenic more readily than many other plants. Most unfortunate is that brown rice has the highest amounts because the arsenic accumulates in the otherwise healthful outer layers, which are removed to make white rice.

You don’t have to eliminate all rice from your diet, but choose it carefully, suggests the watchdog group Consumer Reports. Their testing found that arsenic levels differ depending on the types of rice and where they were cultivated.

Here are some tips to limit your rice intake:

  • Choose white basmati and brown basmati rice cultivated in California, India and Pakistan, and sushi rice cultivated in the United States.
  • Vary your whole grains to minimize arsenic exposure—try whole wheat, amaranth, buckwheat, millet, polenta and grits.
  • Carefully read the labels of all food products: Rice, rice flour or brown rice syrup are in everything from gluten-free foods to teething biscuits.

High concentrations of arsenic in rice-based foods given to babies and children have led to recommendations to not give them rice drinks and to limit the number of servings of rice cereal. According to Consumer Reports, just one serving of rice cakes has close to a child’s weekly limit, and one serving of rice cereal and rice pasta could put kids over the maximum amount.