Browsers that can not handle javascript will not be able to access some features of this site.
Skip Navigation
Michigan Department of Community HealthMichigan.gov
Michigan.gov Home MDCH Home | Online Services | Sitemap | Contact MDCH
Printer Friendly Version Printer Friendly   Text Only Version Text Version  Share this page.
MDCH Releases 2009 Michigan Family Fish Consumption Guide

Contact:  James McCurtis (517) 241-2112
Agency: Community Health


July 8, 2009

The guide provides advice on selecting fish safe to eat from Michigan rivers, inland lakes, and the surrounding Great Lakes. The guide has length and species-specific advice for individual Michigan waters. The advice is based on test results conducted on the fillet (edible portion) of the fish.

Young children, and especially the unborn fetus, are at greatest risk if exposed to too much of the chemicals that build up in fish. Women of childbearing age and young children who regularly eat sport-caught fish from Michigan waters are strongly encouraged to follow this guide's advice. The guide also provides advice about eating safe fish for adult men and women beyond childbearing age.

In addition to the fish and water body specific advice, the guide provides protective advice for the fish consumer who only occasionally eats sport-caught fish, such as:

- Removing the fat removes many of the unwanted chemicals from the fish. Always cut off all of the visible fat, and remove or poke holes in the skin. Baking, broiling or grilling will let the fat drip away. Do not eat the drippings.

- Mercury is in the meat of both store-bought and sport-caught fish. It cannot be cut or cooked away.

- Eat different types of fish from a variety of sources to reduce your chance of getting too many meals of fish that are not safe to eat.

This simple advice is explained in more detail in a single brochure titled Eat Safe Fish.

To obtain any of these materials or for more information about Michigan's Fish Consumption Advisory, call the Michigan Department of Community Health toll free at 1-800-648-6942 or go to www.michigan.gov/fishandgameadvisory.

Michigan Business One Stop
Link to Department and Agencies Web Site Index
Link to Statewide Online Services Index
Link to Statewide Web-based Surveys
Link to RSS feeds available on this site
Related Content
 •  Michigan Department of Community Health Offers Tips to Prevent the H1N1 Influenza Virus
 •  October 15 Marks Seventh Annual National Latino AIDS Awareness Day in Michigan
 •  Marshall Physician has License Summarily Suspended
 •  Salmonella Typhimurium Outbreak in Michigan Linked to Consumption of Raw Alfalfa Sprouts
 •  West Bloomfield Physician Has License Summarily Suspended
 •  Battle Creek Nurse Loses License
 •  Granholm Recognizes October as Breast Cancer Awareness Month
 •  Michigan Distributes Pain Management Guide to Health Professionals
 •  Michigan Fall Prevention Awareness Day
 •  Roseville Nurse Has License Summarily Suspended
 •  Michigan to Recognize Older Workers
 •  MDCH Makes Available Potassium Iodide Pills to Those Near Nuclear Power Plants
 •  Michigan Surgeon General to Visit "Generation With Promise" Schools in Benton Harbor
 •  Michigan Observes National Ovarian Cancer Awareness Month in September
 •  Michigan Observes September as Prostate Cancer Awareness Month
 •  MDCH Releases a Public Health Consultation for Tittabawassee River Floodplain Properties
 •  Older Adults Receive Senior Citizen of the Year Awards
 •  Michigan Surgeon General to Visit "Generation With Promise" Schools in Benton Harbor
 •  Michigan to Receive Funding to Prepare for Novel H1N1 Influenza
 •  MDCH Reminds Parents about the Importance of Immunizations

Michigan.gov Home | MDCH Home | Contact MDCH | State Web Sites
Privacy Policy | Link Policy | Accessibility Policy | Security Policy | Michigan News | Michigan.gov Survey

Copyright © 2001-2009 State of Michigan