Saturday, 19 Apr 2025

Red food dye could soon be banned as FDA reviews petition: 'Scary stuff'

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is considering banning an artificial food coloring called Red No. 3 due to potential health risks, including a link to cancer.


Red food dye could soon be banned as FDA reviews petition: 'Scary stuff'
1.0 k views

A widely used artificial food dye could soon be outlawed.

The synthetic dye, which is made from petroleum, is used as a color additive in food and ingested drugs to give them a "bright cherry-red color," according to an online statement from the FDA.

"With Red 3, we have a petition in front of us to revoke the authorization board, and we're hopeful that in the next few weeks we'll be acting on that petition," Jim Jones, the FDA's deputy commissioner for human foods, told a U.S. Senate health committee on Thursday.

Dr. Marc Siegel, clinical professor of medicine at NYU Langone Health and Fox News' senior medical analyst, joined "Fox and Friends" to discuss the potential ban of the food dye, which he calls "scary stuff."

Red No. 3 has been banned in the European Union, the U.K., and most of Asia and Australia, the doctor pointed out. 

"Why are we so late and why now?" he asked, attributing the move to the fact that "there's a new marshal in town" - namely, President-elect Donald Trump and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. 

"And Jimmy Jones, who's the head of FDA food division, is now responding to petitions from the public, from consumers and from the House of Representatives," Siegel continued. 

"And they're going to get it out of the food, finally." 

The FDA is making this move now, according to Siegel, because "they know it's going to happen one way or the other. So they want to do it now."

Red No. 3, in particular, has been shown to cause cancer in animal studies.

"All of these food dyes can be related to this - 26 studies seem to have shown it," he went on.

"It's a disgrace that we have nine synthetic dyes in our food in the United States."

Siegel said the FDA has previously stated "they can't prove" it causes these conditions.

"They don't do enough post-market analysis where it's already on the market," he said. "They're not studying it enough."

Nearly 3,000 foods are shown to contain Red No. 3, according to Food Scores, a database of foods compiled by the Environmental Working Group.

Fox News Digital reached out to the FDA requesting comment.

you may also like

Ancient settlement reveals remains of 1,800-year-old dog, baffling experts: 'Preserved quite well'
  • by foxnews
  • descember 09, 2016
Ancient settlement reveals remains of 1,800-year-old dog, baffling experts: 'Preserved quite well'

Archaeologists have recently unearthed the remarkably well-preserved remains of a dog from ancient Rome, shedding light on the widespread practice of ritual sacrifice in antiquity.

read more