Amy's Columns
Is That Shampoo Really Organic?-NEW!
Poisons
in Everyday Household Products? You've Got To Be Kidding
The Non-Toxic Kitchen
Top Ten Nontoxic, Earth Friendly Living Suggestions
Genetically Engineered Food: Responsible Science or X Files Episode?
Food Irradiation: Treating The Symptoms, Ignoring The Causes
Healthy Children
Poisons in Everyday Household Products? You've Got To Be Kidding
Cancer causing chemicals in popular all-purpose cleaners, spot removers
and furniture polishes? Preposterous! Nerve damaging chemicals in well-liked
window cleaners? Unheard of. Name brand perfumes made up of approximately
200 laboratory-concocted chemicals? Incredulous… but true! And this is
just the tip of the iceberg.
Safety Testing of Household Products
There's no way our government would allow manufacturers to use toxic
chemicals in the every day products that we bring into our homes and use
on a daily basis, would they? Especially products designed for infants
and children? Yes, unfortunately they would and do. But household products
are regularly safety tested by some independent entity before they go
onto store shelves, right? Wrong.
In fact, the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC), the government
agency that regulates household cleaning products, tells us on their website
that they do not have the legal authority to test or certify products
for safety before they can be sold to consumers. They add that, "responsible
companies test their products before putting them on the market" . Similarly,
the Food & Drug Administration (FDA), who monitors cosmetic products to
be sure that they are safe and properly labeled, does not review or approve
these products or their ingredients (except color ingredients that have
to be authorized for use ) before they are sold to the public, and the
"FDA cannot require safety testing ". Manufacturers testing their own
products are much like the proverbial fox guarding the hen house, the
results lack objectivity, especially when the manufacturers have everything
to gain or lose from those results. And to make matters worse, there is
no government oversight. Our federal government's approach to chemicals
has been that they are safe unless they are proven harmful. Studies financed
by the chemical industry tend to find chemicals innocent, whereas non-industry
financed studies often find them dangerous to human health.
Scanning Product Labels
We can avoid toxic chemicals by reading the product labels, right? Well,
actually, no, we can't. Thanks to trade secret laws, manufacturers of
cleaning products are not required to list all of the ingredients on the
label, only the "active" ingredients. The so-called "inert" ingredients
can make up to 99% of the product, and of the 1400 inert chemicals, 40
are known to cause cancer, brain damage, or other chronic effects, and
another 64 are classified as potentially toxic. Manufacturers of personal
care and cosmetic products don't have to tell us which chemicals make
up the product's scent or a perfume (that's where many of the toxic chemicals
are hiding).
"Eco-labels" like "allergy tested", "eco-safe", or "environmentally preferable"
can tell us which products are safer to use, can't they? According to
the Consumer's Union's, "The Consumers Union Guide to Environmental Labels",
these are general claims that are not meaningful. Here's why:
- There isn't any organization that has established standards for the
label or that can verify that the label standards are met (the manufacturer
or marketer of the product created the label)
- The label can have different meanings for different products
- The label standards aren't publicly available
- The information about the organization who created the label isn't
available, nor is the organization free from "conflict of interest",
and
- The label was not developed with broad public and industry input.
Are These Products Dangerous?
This is the one million dollar question. We know that some of the chemicals
that make up everyday household products are harmful, yet manufacturers
will assure us that these chemicals are in such small amounts that they
are virtually harmless. And yet, without independent safety testing, there
is not any credible information on the product's safety based on science.
Moreover, manufacturers don't seem to be considering the impact of the
combination of chemicals in one product, or our exposure to the myriad
of chemical household products in our homes and lives. No one is studying
the human health effects from the long-term exposure to low levels of
toxic chemicals from these household products, and yet we are all serving
as guinea pigs in a giant unregulated experiment. Yikes!
What's A Concerned Citizen To Do?
Independent toxicologists, Anderson Labs, have tested some household
products for their potential inhalation health effects. When I was running
the nonprofit that I founded, the Consumer's Healthy Home Center (www.consumershealthyhomecenter.org),
I was working to raise money to hire Anderson Labs to test a variety of
household products. The recommended "safer" products are: Ecover's Unscented
Original Herbal Formula Dish Soap, Seventh Generation's Recycled Bath
Tissue, Sanford's Vis-à-vis Wet-Erase Overhead Projector Markers (can
replace regular markers), Colin Campbell & Sons' "Nature's Carpet", and
The Icynene Insulation System®.
Benefit from Amy's research and purchase the same products that
Amy and her family use. Green Living has never been easier than
it is at Green Living Now. To start greening up your home, Amy recommends
the Kitchen Cleaning Kit, the Bathroom Cleaning Kit, and the Bodycare
Kit.
Also, is your drinking water safe? If not, you'll need a tap water
filter and a shower filter.
Amy is president/owner of Green Living Now, LLC, and was the
Founder and Executive Director of the Consumers' Healthy Home Center.
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