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DO YOU USE
THESE PRODUCTS
By David Steinman, Natural Health
Magazine, September/October, 1997 pp. 54 - 56
"If so, you may want to rethink how much you use them. Studies point
to their possible dangers."
"Ron Owens’ parents never imagined what would happen to their son
after they sent him to summer camp in 1972. Ron was like every other
teenager at this mountain camp in California: He swam, played sports,
slept in a cabin with other campers. Unlike the other boys, though,
Ron slept a few feet from a no-pest strip. Night after night, he was
exposed to dichlorvos (DDVP), a toxic pesticide. Not long after camp
ended, the boy died of a fatal blood disease—aplastic anemia—that the
family’s attorneys argued was caused by the boy’s exposure to
chemicals in the no-pest strip. (The manufacturer admitted no
wrongdoing, but did give the Owens family a small settlement.) Today,
twenty five years after Ron’s death, you can still buy no-pest strips
containing the chemicals suspected of having caused the boy’s death.
As a consumer advocate who has investigated the safety of thousands of
products over the past fifteen years, I’ve heard too many accounts of
people, often children, felled by dangerous products. Every day we use
products that we think are safe—we assume the product has been tested
and any dangerous ingredients labeled. The truth is, products are not
always safe and manufacturers don’t have to tell us so. (The warning
statement on the no-pest strip makes no mention of these health risks:
bone marrow damage and aplastic anemia, as reported in 1980 in
Clinical Research; immune system suppression, as determined by the
World Health Organization in 1986; and cancer and birth defects, as
reported by Shirley A. Briggs and the Rachel Carson Council in Basic
Guide to Pesticides [Hemisphere, 1992].)
Cosmetic products are notorious. Hair dyes with suspected
cancer-causing ingredients are not required to carry warning labels.
Products often list fragrances, which can contain up to 600 different
compounds, many carcinogenic or otherwise toxic, but the label only
says they contain a "fragrance". And while cosmetic makers are
required to list ingredients, they are not required to conduct
pre-market safety tests.
"Even if the [Food and Drug Administration] suspects that serious
adverse health effects are caused by a cosmetic product, they can’t
require the manufacturer to provide test data to prove the product
safety", says Oregon Senator Ron Wyden.
It should be said that products with even very toxic ingredients are
not likely to kill you—or even cause illness—with one-time or
short-term use. But when so many different products on the market
contain toxic ingredients, come claim that they may endanger the
health of immunologically vulnerable people who use them regularly. If
you or your children frequently use such products, the risks climb.
Guarding yourself is simple: the less you breathe, eat, or absorb a
toxic chemical, the less chance there is that it can harm your health.
I recommend that people act on the side of safety and simply not
use—or radically reduce their use of—products whose ingredients are
proven to be dangerous, or even suspected of being dangerous based on
the available research.
In 1995, with the help of consumer advocate Ralph Nader and Samuel
Epstein, M.D., the coauthor of my book The Safe Shopper’s Bible
(Macmillan, 1995), I compiled a list of those products that I
personally choose to avoid or use sparingly.
Personal Hygiene Products
1. CREST
toothpaste lists saccharin and FD&C Blue No. 1 on its label. A
clear-cut bladder carcinogen in animal studies (with some evidence
from human studies), saccharin has been rated carcinogenic by the
International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) for a decade.
(Cancer warnings for saccharin are required on artificial sweeteners.)
Children and adults absorb the saccharin by swallowing or through the
tissue in their mouths. FD&C Blue No. 1 has also caused tumors in
experimental animals. Crest should not be singled out. Many other
brands, including Colgate, also contain these two toxic substances.
2. The main
ingredient in JOHNSON’S BABY POWDER is talc.
In
1982, Daniel Cramer, M.D., an obstetrician and gynecologist, found
that women who used talc for feminine hygiene had a three-fold
increase in their risk of ovarian cancer. Additional reports in Lancet
(1979), Cancer (1982), and Obstetrics & Gynecology (1992) confirm the
risk associated with frequent and prolonged use of talcum powder in
the genital area. In 1994 the Cancer Prevention Coalition in Chicago
petitioned the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to require a label
warning on this product. The FDA has not acted on this matter.
Household Products
3. ORTHO WEED-B-GON
LAWN WEED KILLER
contains 2,4-D
Agricultural studies by National Cancer Institute (NCI) researchers
strongly link exposure to this chemical with high cancer rates.
Another NCI study found that dogs whose owners use 2,4-D weed killers
have higher rates of cancer.
4. LYSOL DISINFECTANT
SPRAY
may contain
ortho-phenylphenol. This germ killer is carcinogenic, according to
both the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and IARC. Lyson’s
manufacturer stopped using this ingredient in 1995, but I still see
cans of Lysol containing ortho-phenylphenol on store shelves. Be sure
to read the label when buying this product. The older formula of
Lysol, which does contain this chemical, is particularly troubling
because as a spray it can be inhaled deeply into the lungs.
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Cosmetics
5. BONNE BELL GRAPE
LIP SMACKER FLAVORED LIP GLOSS,
which is marketed to teenagers, contains saccharin and FD&C Blue No. 1
(both of which are discussed on page 56). Although this product is not
directly ingested, these ingredients can be absorbed through the skin
on the lips, or through the mucous membrane in the mouth. This lip
gloss also contains fragrances and propylene glycol, two of the
leading causes of contact dermatitis, an allergic skin reaction.
6. COVER GIRL
REPLENISHING NATURAL FINISH MAKE-UP
contains several potentially toxic ingredients, but no warnings. The
first is butylated hydroxyanisole (BHA), which is carcinogenic,
according to IARC. The second, triethanolamine, which keeps the makeup
moist, can combine with nitrite contaminants to form carcinogenic
nitrosamines. An FDA report done in 1988 found 30 percent of cosmetic
products contained these carcinogens. A third ingredient, lanolin, is
perfectly safe by itself; however, it may be contaminated with
pesticides. According to a 1993 report from the National Research
Council, some 16 pesticides were identified in lanolin; diazinon
[sic], a neurotoxin, was found in 21 of 25 samples.
7. CLAIROL NICE ‘N
EASY
hair dye contains
par-phenylenediamine, a dye that was recently shown to induce breast
cancer in animals. It also contains quaternium 15, a preservative that
often causes allergic reactions. One-fifth of cases of non-Hodgkin’s
lymphoma among women are linked to hair-dye use. Indeed, more than a
dozen studies link hair dyes with cancer, yet the FDA requires no
warning of this hazard on product labels. Clairol is not the only hair
dye to pose these risks. Many other brands, including L’Oreal, and
Revlon, contain similar chemicals.
8. GRECIAN FORMULA
for men contains lead acetate. Lead damages the nervous, circulatory,
and reproductive systems. And this particular form of lead can
penetrate skin. Recently, researchers at Xavier University found that
large amounts of lead are left on the fingers of adults and children
who rub their hands through the hair of men using lead-based anti-gray
products. The FDA has suggested it will "study" the situation,
according to a February 5, 1997 Associated Press report. While they do
that, Karen Filkins, M.D., director of reproductive genetics at West
Penn Hospital in Pittsburgh, says, "Avoid products that could contain
lead, especially if you are pregnant. And prevent exposure to young
children".
Pet Products
9. ZODIAC CAT & DOG
FLEA COLLAR
contains propoxur.
This chemical is a carcinogen, according to a 1989 report done by
researchers at Cornell University, University of California, and
Michigan and Oregon State Universities. It may also cause learning
disabilities, according to Basic Guide to Pesticides.
David Steinman, a former representative of the public interest at the
National Academy of Sciences, is co-author of the forthcoming Breast
Cancer Prevention Program (Macmillan, 1997). He is author of Diet for
a Poisoned Planet (Ballantine, 1992), and co-author of The Safe
Shopper’s Bible (Macmillan, 1995) and Living Healthy in a Toxic World
(Perigee, 1996)."
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