Permalink: https://media.greenpeace.org/archive/Traditional-Chinese-Medicine-at-Home-27MZIFV9BXI7.htmlConceptually similarTraditional Chinese Medicine at HomeGP04LXKCompleted★★★★Traditional Chinese Medicine at HomeGP04M1KCompleted★★★★Traditional Chinese Medicine at HomeGP04M4ECompleted★★★★Traditional Chinese Medicine at HomeGP04M1MCompleted★★★★★★Traditional Chinese Medicine at HomeGP04M93Completed★★★★★★Traditional Chinese Medicine at HomeGP04M4CCompleted★★★★Traditional Chinese Medicine at HomeGP04M4DCompleted★★★★Traditional Chinese Herbs - Angelica SinensisGP04M3OCompleted★★★★Traditional Chinese Herbs - Angelica SinensisGP04M3PCompleted★★★★View AllGP04LX5Traditional Chinese Medicine at HomeA Chinese woman prepares chicken soup with Chinese Angelica sinensis and dates, a common food therapy for Chinese people. Greenpeace is currently investigating pesticide residue in Chinese herbal medicine and highlighting the need to end the use of toxic chemicals in industrial agriculture.Locations:Asia-Beijing-ChinaDate:29 May, 2013Credit:© Yang Di / GreenpeaceMaximum size:4288px X 2848pxKeywords:Chickens-Cooking-Day-Food-Health-Indoors-KWCI (GPI)-Medications-Pesticides-SAGE (campaign title)-Toxics (campaign title)-WomenShoot:Traditional Chinese Medicine Use in Home FoodImages of home food prepared with Angelica sinensis. Greenpeace East Asia is currently investigating pesticide residue in Chinese herbal medicine and highlighting the need to end the use of toxic chemicals in industrial agriculture. Chinese herbal products are trusted and used as food ingredients for healing purposes in soups, stir fries and teas by millions of people around the world. However the Greenpeace investigation has revealed that these herbs are covered in pesticide residue considered illegal in China and highly hazardous by the World Health Organisation (WHO). The findings are just another example of the failure of chemicals based industrial agriculture to deliver healthy foods for people.