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Gerber Natural Baby Food Stage 2 Puree Green Bean -- 4 oz Each / Pack of 2


Gerber Natural Baby Food Stage 2 Puree Green Bean
  • Our price: $2.39


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Gerber Natural Baby Food Stage 2 Puree Green Bean -- 4 oz Each / Pack of 2

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Gerber Natural Baby Food Stage 2 Puree Green Bean Description

  • Sitter
  • Non-GMO
  • 22 Green Beans
  • No Artificial Flavors or Colors
  • BPA Free

These green beans were grown using our Clean Field Farming™ practices.


Directions

Baby Foods May Be Served At Room Temperature or Warmed. You can feed your baby directly from each convenient tub. If one tub is too large for your baby, spoon out the desired portion into another dish for feeding and refrigerate the unused portion to enjoy later (within 2 days of opening). If you feed directly from the container, discard any unused portion.

 

To Warm:

1. remove plastic lid

remove foil seal completely and discard

2. replace plastic lid

heat on high for 15 seconds in microwave up to 1500w

3. stir

always test temperature (by tasting) before serving

Free Of
gmo, bpa

*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.


Supplement Facts
Serving Size: 1 Tube
Servings per Container: 2
Amount Per Serving% Daily Value
Calories40
Total Fat0 g0%
Sodium5 mg
Total Carbohydrate6 g6%
Fiber2 g
Total Sugars3 g
Includes Added Sugars0 g
Protein1 g
Vitamin D00%
Calcium04%
Iron06%
Potassium030%
Other Ingredients: green beans, water.
Warnings

Do not use if Foil Seal is broken or missing.

Refrigerate after opening and use within 2 days.

The product you receive may contain additional details or differ from what is shown on this page, or the product may have additional information revealed by partially peeling back the label. We recommend you reference the complete information included with your product before consumption and do not rely solely on the details shown on this page. For more information, please see our full disclaimer.
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Yes, Toxic Metals Lurk in Baby Food. Here's How to Avoid Them.

If you have a baby, you likely were startled by an October 2019 study showing 95 percent of baby food containers that were tested had at least one of four toxic heavy metals — arsenic, cadmium, lead and mercury.

The study, commissioned by the Healthy Babies Bright Futures initiative, found that one-fourth of the 168 baby foods tested contained all four of these toxic heavy metals.

Baby Boy Leaning Forward in High Chair Being Spoon Fed by Parent Who Has Ensured No Toxic Metals in Baby Food | Vitacost.com/blog

“Even in the trace amounts found in food, these contaminants can alter the developing brain and erode a child’s IQ,” the study warns. “The impacts add up with each meal or snack a baby eats.”

Samantha Radford, who holds a Ph.D. in analytical chemistry and runs the Evidence-based Mommy website, says it’s virtually impossible to avoid these toxic metals in our food supply. That’s because these metals are found in soil, Radford says, and anything that’s grown for us to consume — from apples to zucchini — comes from the soil. Therefore, you can’t entirely avoid these metals if you buy regular or organic baby foods or you make your own baby foods.

Thankfully, you can take steps to lower your baby’s exposure to arsenic, cadmium, lead and mercury.

1. Skip rice cereal.

Healthy Babies Bright Futures identifies rice cereal as the No. 1 source of arsenic in infants’ diets. As an alternative, try cereals with lower-arsenic ingredients like oatmeal and multigrain flour.

Your baby won’t be missing out on much by removing rice cereal from their diet, as it’s low in protein and high in carbs.

2. Ditch rice-based snacks.

Puffs and other snacks made with rice flour are loaded with arsenic, according to Health Babies Healthy Futures. Therefore, you should opt for rice-free packaged snacks. Even better, go with snacks like apples, unsweetened applesauce, bananas, beans, cheese, grapes, hard-boiled eggs, peaches or yogurt, the organization recommends.

3. Cut back on carrots and sweet potatoes.

While carrots and sweet potatoes supply vitamin A and other nutrients, Healthy Babies Healthy Futures says they’re laced with cadmium and lead. You can still put carrots and sweet potatoes on your baby’s plate, but be sure to add plenty of other fruits and vegetables to minimize the impact from cadmium and lead, the group says.

4. Be choosy about juice.

Healthy Babies Healthy Futures advises that apple, pear, grape and other fruit juices include arsenic and lead.

“Levels aren’t as high as in some other foods, but toddlers drink juice often, so it’s a top exposure source,” the group says.

To reduce reliance on juice, quench your youngster’s thirst with water or milk, Healthy Babies Healthy Futures recommends.

5. Ditch teething biscuits.

Teething biscuits seem innocent enough, but they frequently contain arsenic, cadmium and lead, according to Healthy Babies Healthy Futures. In addition, they lack nutrients and can lead to tooth decay. Instead of teething biscuits, doctors and dentists suggest teething-pain solutions like a frozen banana, a peeled and chilled cucumber, or a clean, cold wet washcloth or spoon, according to Healthy Babies Healthy Futures.

What else can you do?

Aside from making changes in your little one’s diet, you can sign a petition started by Healthy Babies Healthy Futures calling on the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to limit the amounts of arsenic and lead in rice-based baby foods, particularly rice puffs.

“The FDA must set strong standards that require baby food to have no measurable amount of these heavy metals in children's food products, and companies must swiftly remove these toxins,” U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, a Connecticut Democrat, says in a news release. “Anything short [of that] is a repugnant failure to protect children from irreversible health impacts during critical developmental years.”

Healthy Babies Health Futures notes that baby food companies are working to boost the safety of rice-containing baby food. For instance, levels of arsenic in infants’ rice cereal are nearly 40 percent lower today than what they were 10 years ago.

In the end, Radford says parents shouldn’t be “overly alarmed” by the metals-in-baby-food study, since “the metal content of baby food really isn’t any more elevated than all the other food that adults and older children consume every day.”

“While you may be hoping to create a perfect world for your baby, keep in mind that food contaminants can occur in any part of our food system. Also, pollutants are found in our air and water, and vary based on location,” adds Amanda Kostro Miller, a registered dietitian who sits on the board of advisers of the Smart Healthy Living website.

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