After the herb dust settled on last month’s JAMA article, I decided to write about this challenge to the business of Ayurvedic herbs, where lead, mercury, and arsenic levels have been detected.
The first thing to remember is that, alas, there is lead even in India’s spinach. I don’t think this is really about Ayurveda.
As our friend, a prominent practitioner, has elegantly summarized,
“As long as our entire food chain is polluted by human activity it will be impossible to remove every detectable trace of heavy metals, yet the levels are too low to be of harm.”
The Indian government seems to to say that the JAMA article authors are enemies of Ayurveda and others seem to say that they are Ayurveda’s friends. I think the truth is somewhere in the middle, and that battle lines need not be drawn.
To be sure, most journalists covering this story irresponsibly and breezily conflated the single worst case of metal presence with the much more common least cases, when there is a differential of 200,000%! The JAMA article summary, which is ALL that most of the newspaper articles are based on, seems designed to facilitate such confusion.
Here is the National Ayurvedic Medical Association ’s response where they advocate for
- the stoppage of imports of rasa shastra where metals are intentionally added (for ancient reasons) and
- the adherance to ANSI levels of presence of metals
- an invitation to our government to finally determine and publish reliable Good Manufacturing Practice levels.
Here is Banyan Botanicals’ response where they stand by their products – which after all met the ANSI standards (and typically the CA Proposition 65 standards as well which are used in the JAMA article, are 1/40th of ANSI, and are not at all universal).
In sum, the reduction of active metals in the food supply is admirable and necessary, but this article does the sensible reader no favor:
- no comparison to metal presence in other American and Indian agricultural products like leafy greens
- no rational separation of herb products into the majority which met ANSI limits and the 4% (mostly rasa shastra products) that did not
- no discussion of the ecology of industrial chemicals in agriculture, large or small
- no investigation, no consideration at all, of the possibility that rasa shastra may confer some sort of protection from or via the elevated metal presence, as presented in ideas from the ancients (perhaps by binding the metals, etc.).
If you have questions about whether your herb is included in the study, feel free to contact us.

7 responses so far ↓
1 louise s // Sep 27, 2008 at 7:15 pm
Awesome article! L
2 Robin // Sep 27, 2008 at 7:41 pm
I had been greatly disturbed after first reading about these issues, and I found your article very helpful in putting it all into perspective!
Thank you!!!
3 Lis' // Sep 27, 2008 at 7:53 pm
Very good, sister dear!
4 Lis' // Sep 27, 2008 at 7:53 pm
Good job!
5 Elyjja // Sep 27, 2008 at 8:05 pm
This is an excellent and helpful article.
6 Jen // Sep 28, 2008 at 11:55 am
Loved your fresh perspective!
7 L // Sep 28, 2008 at 4:45 pm
And look what is in our drinking water here in the usa. it takes a sharp mind to see the flaws in the jama article.
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