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in General Factchecking by Newbie (490 points)
Food dyes your children eat may cause hyperactivity and moodiness. An Ohio State child and adolescent psychiatrist offers some advice.

5 Answers

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by Novice (700 points)
The author of the article is L. Eugene Arnold. He is a board-certified child & adolescent psychiatrist. With over 50 years of experience in child psychiatric treatment research. He seems credible since he's worked with children and adolescents. And he has experience with research on child psychiatric treament. The original article claims that consuming food dyes can make children more hyperactive and moody. Another article also supports this claim. The article showcases a research study done by the United Kingdom's Food Standards Agency. The study used 300 children and analyzed if food dye could increase hyperactive behavior. The study resulted in, "hyperactive behavior increased with both the mixtures containing artificial coloring additives". This suggests that the claim made about food dyes causing hyperactivity and moodiness is true. But other factors like sugar may also contribute to these behaviors.

https://www.webmd.com/add-adhd/childhood-adhd/food-dye-adhd
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by Novice (990 points)

The article's author, L. Eugene Arnold, is a board-certified child and adolescent psychiatrist with over 50 years of experience in child psychiatric treatment research. His extensive background in working with children and conducting research lends credibility to his perspective. The original article asserts that consuming food dyes can increase hyperactivity and moodiness in children. This claim is supported by a study conducted by the United Kingdom's Food Standards Agency, which involved 300 children. The study found that "hyperactive behavior increased with both the mixtures containing artificial coloring additives." While this supports the connection between food dyes and behavioral changes, it’s important to note that other factors, such as sugar, may also contribute to these behaviors.

https://www.webmd.com/add-adhd/childhood-adhd/food-dye-adhd

True
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ago by Newbie (300 points)
edited ago by
This claim is true but it also depends on the children's overall well-being. The article mentions that Red 40 dye contains chemicals that come from petroleum that can be harmful for the body. The article also mentions that there are also certain qualities in children that can make dyes more harmful, for example: ADHD, anxiety, and Oppositional defiant disorder. Having experienced the harm of Red 40 or food dye in general, I can say that I do notice a difference in the way it affects my behavioral and mental well-being.

Although, nothing has been proven, the article mentions that there is research showing that food dyes can contribute to the hyper-activity of children. The National Library of Medicine has also done research on this topic, specifically with children that have ADHD and have found a relationship between behavioral effects and artificial food dye. The article linked has valuable information that can help support this claim.

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3441937/
True
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ago by Newbie (330 points)
As I read over the links posted in this forum and did my research I can confidently say that the food dye does affect young children more than adults. But this is due to the developing brain and body. These artificial colors don't react well with a child's body in the development stage. It can cause, kids with certain diagnoses such as ADHD, anxiety, and oppositional defiant disorder, to act even more out of control. Or even worsen the diagnosis over time says Ohio State University. Keep these ingredients out of your body and off the shelves of stores!

https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/red-dye-40-adhd#summary

https://health.osu.edu/health/mental-health/food-dye
Can't be true or false (Opinion, poem, etc.)
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ago by Newbie (310 points)

I don't think this claim is entirely accurate. If you scroll further into this article, it says that "not everything has been completely proven yet". Other studies say similar things like some children are affected more than others (OEHHA). MedicalNewsToday also says that dyes may worsen ADHD for some children, but we still need more research on it. Another theory is that sugar is actually the cause of the hyperactivity in foods with these synthetic dyes in them, but that also hasn't been completely proven yet. 

I think to an extent there could be a relationship between dyes like Red 40 and hyperactivity in children, but there isn't much evidence or research on it yet to say for certain. 

 https://oehha.ca.gov/risk-assessment/press-release/report-links-synthetic-food-dyes-hyperactivity-and-other-neurobehavioral-effects-children

https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/red-dye-40-adhd

Exaggerated/ Misleading

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