At a public meeting Aug. 11, representatives from the Center for Science in the Public Interest and the National WIC Association asked the USDA and HHS to recommend in the upcoming guidelines specific fish that are higher in desirable omega-3s and lower in methyl mercury, exposure to which could damage the cognitive development and performance of infants and children.

However, industry stakeholders pushed back during the meeting and asked that the 2020-2025 Dietary Guidelines for Americans instead emphasize the Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee’s findings, published earlier this summer, that there are no adverse effects of eating seafood during pregnancy or early childhood.

How the agencies respond could significantly impact the seafood industry as the Dietary Guidelines for Americans, which are updated every five years and slated for publication this year, are the basis for federal nutrition policies, including what is served at schools, in prisons and through food assistance programs.

DGAC reinforces legacy advice despite new science

Decades after the US government first warned in the 1990s that pregnant women and children avoid or limit certain seafood at higher risk of mercury contamination, the current dietary guidelines advisory committee was the first to undertake a systemic review of seafood’s potential impact on neurocognitive development.

The committee’s review of 13 studies, including six articles from three randomized control trials, did not yield sufficient evidence to draw meaningful relationships between seafood consumption and cognitive, language and communication development. However, it did find favorable associations with consumption during pregnancy and some infant cognitive development.