date:Oct 11, 2012
childhood can set the stage for problems later in life, Hamilton said.
In September, Consumer Reports released a study that found detectable levels of arsenic in a childhood staple, rice, sold in U.S. supermarkets.
The news, which came less than a year after a similar report uncovered fruit juices contaminated with arsenic, left some parents frightened and frustrated.
Oh great, another contaminated thing, said Diana Chaplin of New York City, who has now stopped feeding rice to her two-year-o