I think we've got two messages. If you're not pregnant and you're not going to become pregnant, eat fish. If you are pregnant or you are going to become pregnant, you should still eat fish, but you should eat fish low in mercury.

A Quantitative RiskBenefit Analysis of Changes in Population Fish Consumption.

That has been so successful, we constantly have to have more delivery runs. We were starting to have to look at some kind of fee structure, which we didn't want to do.

It's important to evaluate the pros and cons. Because when you do evaluate the pros and cons, if you make certain plausible assumptions about how people react, you can get some serious negative results.

Fish are an excellent source of omega-3 fatty acids, which may protect against coronary heart disease and stroke, and are thought to aid in the neurological development of unborn babies, ... If that information gets lost in how the public perceives this issue, then people may inappropriately curtail fish consumption and increase their risk for adverse health outcomes.

These and other potential health effects yield a classic risk-risk trade-off.

Obviously the higher gold price is going to be beneficial for the mining industry.

A Quantitative Analysis of Prenatal Intake of n-3 Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids and Cognitive Development.