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The repeating history of objections to the fortification of bread and alcohol: from iron filings to folic acid

Hasantha Gunasekera
MJA 2006; 185 (6): 343-344

The recent viewpoint by Kamien1 is timely, given Food Standards Australia New Zealand is currently advocating for the mandatory fortification of all bread-making flour with folic acid (80–180 μg per 100 g of bread). The proposal is now before the Australia and New Zealand Food Regulation Ministerial Council, and a decision is imminent.

In 1991, the Medical Research Council Vitamin Study Research Group reported a randomised double-blind trial conducted at 33 centres in seven countries. Periconceptual folic acid supplementation had a 72% protective effect against neural tube defects (relative risk, 0.28; 95% CI, 0.12–0.71).2 Because folic acid supplementation is ineffective when started after the pregnancy is confirmed, fortification of staple foods such as bread remains best practice.

The United States started mandatory fortification of enriched cereal-grain products a decade ago. As expected, there has been an increase in the population geometric mean concentrations of serum folate and red blood cell folate,3 and a corresponding reduction in the number of babies born with debilitating neural tube defects.4

The benefits are clear and the risks are vague. Historical concerns that folic acid supplementation could mask pernicious anaemia and cause cancer have not been substantiated by international experience in more than 50 countries.

Australian health professionals have a brief window of opportunity to join Maberly and Stanley5 and advocate for mandatory fortification in spite of commercial objections, which are based on market-share concerns for existing “designer” products. If we educate and inform our patients and the community at large, the decisionmakers should finally get the message and this cheap, safe and effective public health policy would be implemented — a decade overdue.

Hasantha Gunasekera, Clinical Research Fellow

Institute for Child Health Research, The Children’s Hospital at Westmead, Sydney, NSW.

hasanthgATchw.edu.au

  1. Kamien M. The repeating history of objections to the fortification of bread and alcohol: from iron filings to folic acid. Med J Aust 2006; 184: 638-640. <eMJA full text> <PubMed>
  2. Wald N. Prevention of neural tube defects: results of the Medical Research Council Vitamin Study. Lancet 1991; 338: 131-137. <PubMed>
  3. Pfeiffer CM, Caudill SP, Gunter EW, et al. Biochemical indicators of B vitamin status in the US population after folic acid fortification: results from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 1999–2000. Am J Clin Nutr 2005; 82: 442-450. <PubMed>
  4. Williams LJ, Rasmussen SA, Flores A, et al. Decline in the prevalence of spina bifida and anencephaly by race/ethnicity: 1995–2002. Pediatrics 2005; 116: 580-586. <PubMed>
  5. Maberly GF, Stanley FJ. Mandatory fortification of flour with folic acid: an overdue public health opportunity. Med J Aust 2005; 183: 342-343. <eMJA full text> <PubMed>

(Received 28 Jul 2006, accepted 3 Aug 2006)

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