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Organic Health Products

These days, it can become difficult to tell if a health product really is "organic" as it seems that producers, manufacturers, and marketers alike simple throw the term around. The meaning of the word "organic" has grown to mean so much in just the past couple of decades. Consumers are not intently looking at what their food made of; which hormones are in it, was this meat free-range, which "organic" ingredients were used, or even if there was anything that was "inorganic" used in the ingredients.

Organic has become the catchall, consumer-friendly term for anything regarding health. It's become synonymous to just meaning "this organic products won't hurt you." There wasn't much to stop manufacturers from just stamping on the word on all of their organic health products, and sprinkling other words to sweeten the deal for consumers.

This is what caused retailer Whole Foods Market to require any and all health and beauty products claiming to be "organic" to be certified by either the Agriculture Department's National Organic Program or NSF International. Any products making organic claims without certification from either of the above agencies would be pulled from the shelves of Whole Foods Market.

Consumers rely heavily on the "organic" tag on their products to tell them whether it's good for them, or at the very least won't cause them any harm on the long term. The problem is that many of these consumers have very little knowledge as to what truly constitutes "organic" in health and beauty products. The bigger problem is that even manufacturers don't know as much about what makes a product "organic" as they're letting on.

Not many consumers know to look for the certification on the label rather than the organic tag. It's come to Whole Foods Market to take on that responsibility instead, which they rightfully should since their customers expect and trust them to live up to what they say they're providing.

The bigger responsibility now lies on the regulating agencies. The Agriculture Department works closely with the Food and Drug Administration in labeling standards for organic products.

Whole Foods Market itself doesn't provide exclusively organic health products. It only pulls products that claim to be organic and fail to comply with the proper certification. Non-organic products can still be bought from Whole Foods Market but they won't have the "organic" tag on them.

So, the next time you drive down to Whole Foods, don't assume that everything in there is organic. Be mindful enough to look for the right tags on the product labels.

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