
New York - German health authorities and researchers have warned about the harmful effects of drinking the Taiwanese bubble tea, after finding that the popular dessert beverage presents a choking hazard to children and may contain cancer-causing chemicals.
The warnings, released separately, come as Europe, Germany in particular, begin to catch on to the bubble tea trend which has already swept major urban centers in North America to become a popular dessert beverage, the New York Daily News reported.
After analyzing the tapioca balls which make up the “bubbles†in the drink, researchers from the University Hospital Aachen, for instance, found that the pearls contained polychlorinated biphenyls or PCBs such as styrene, acetophenone, and brominated substances, chemicals that shouldn’t be in food at all, researchers told German paper The Local.
Samples were taken from an unnamed chain in Monchengladbach, in northwest Germany and the tapioca balls were made in Taiwan.
The study comes on the heels of a public health warning from the country’s German Federal Institute for Risk Assessment earlier this month, which warned that the tapioca balls also present a choking risk to children.
“Especially with children aged up to four years, there is a risk of foreign objects accidentally entering the lungs,†Dr. Andreas Hensel said in a statement.
“And that is precisely what can happen when the bubbles are sucked up through a straw,†he added.
| Other Articles: |
 |
Traumatic childhood may up risk of drug addiction (31st Aug, 2012) |
 |
Hookah smoking as bad as cigarettes for lungs (31st Aug, 2012) |
 |
What babies eat after birth may determine lifetime risk of obesity (31st Aug, 2012) |
 |
Milk chocolate fans dislike bitter taste (31st Aug, 2012) |
 |
Prenatal exposure to chemicals from household items may lead to obesity (31st Aug, 2012) |
 |
Wisdom is matter of culture (31st Aug, 2012) |
 |
What babies eat determines risk of obesity (31st Aug, 2012) |
 |
Eating junk food could also give you dementia (31st Aug, 2012) |
 |
Heavy smoking more than doubles risk of fatal brain bleed (30th Aug, 2012) |
 |
Junk food could also damage brain, says study (30th Aug, 2012) |
 |
More abortions linked to risk of preterm birth and low birth weight in babies (30th Aug, 2012) |
 |
Earphones dubbed as hazardous as noise from jet engines (30th Aug, 2012) |
 |
Chronic stress may up stroke risk (30th Aug, 2012) |
 |
How steady job could benefit diabetics (30th Aug, 2012) |
 |
Disruption of circadian rhythm causes obesity and other health problems (30th Aug, 2012) |
 |
Chocolate may help cut stroke risk in men (30th Aug, 2012) |
 |
Cutting calories may not help you live longer (30th Aug, 2012) |
 |
Why eating fermented sausage often results in sickness (30th Aug, 2012) |
 |
Over-50s advised to take statins to prevent heart disease (29th Aug, 2012) |
 |
Common virus could give you type 2 diabetes later in life (29th Aug, 2012) |
 |
Regular aspirin use may prolong life of men with prostate cancer (29th Aug, 2012) |
 |
New pathway to stimulate burning of body fat found (29th Aug, 2012) |
 |
Male circumcision `cuts risk of sexually transmitted infections` (29th Aug, 2012) |
 |
Exercise `beneficial for cancer patients but few oncologists suggest it` (29th Aug, 2012) |
 |
Circadian rhythm disruption `may cause deadly diseases like cancer` (29th Aug, 2012) |