Archive for the ‘Fragrances’ Category

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“School Cleaner Test Results”

February 20, 2012

From an Environmental Working Group (EWG) study:

“EWG tested over 20 cleaners used in schools in California, and detected hundreds of air contaminants not listed as ingredients by manufacturers. Further testing shows that cleaning a model classroom using 3 widely used, certified green products produces far less air pollution than cleaning the same classroom with 3 common conventional cleaners.”

Check out the overall results, and prepare to be shocked by what was detected vs. what was disclosed by the manufacturers – including known carcinogens and asthmagens. Or maybe you won’t be shocked, since there’s lots more research out there exactly like this. Whatever, “School Cleaners Test Results” is a good reference if you want to protect your children, your home, yourself.

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The Importance of Consent – and Prior Knowledge

February 5, 2011

The Importance of Consent in Everyday Situations

by Cara on April 15, 2010

From: http://thecurvature.com/2010/04/15/the-importance-of-consent-in-everyday-situations/

in disability,rape and sexual assault,women’s health

Yesterday, I had my hair cut.

As the stylist called my name, she asked if I would like a shampoo. I politely declined. She then noticed how thick my hair is and she said she was going to take me back to the sink to wet it. And being incredibly used to this, I readily agreed and followed.

But just as she had finished wetting my hair and I expected her to turn the water off, she started squirting stuff on my head.

I froze. I’m not great with confrontation, especially with strangers, and have difficultly forming exactly what I want to say in just a short moment. She kept rubbing my head, then squirting some more, rubbing and squirting, rubbing and squirting.

The salon smell was all around me, and finally when she’d finished rinsing, only to squirt yet more stuff on my head, I blurted out “so what’s all this stuff you’re putting on my head?”

“You don’t use conditioner?” she asked incredulously.

Once she’d finished lecturing me on why I should use conditioner, I opened my mouth again to say, “I mean, before, too. You put a lot of things on my head.”

“Oh, that? It was shampoo. Don’t worry, I’m not going to charge you for it. It just makes my life easier.”

The problem was that it made my life a whole lot more difficult.

 

You see, I’m allergic to almost all artificial scents. Quite a few popular natural scents, too. I can’t walk down the shampoo aisle, or the soap aisle, or the laundry detergent aisle in the store. I have to go to natural food stores and actively seek out all natural, unscented products, which is usually not an easy task. I can’t use normal cat litter or home cleaning agents, I can’t borrow a friend’s lotion, and I cringe at being around someone who is wearing cologne or perfume. If these products are actually put on my body, it’s a very unpleasant thing, indeed.

So I sat there through my actual haircut just waiting for it to be over, and begging for it to end soon. I tried to take breaths as shallow as possible, to keep as much of the scent out of my nose as I could. When she asked, this time, whether I would like any product put in my hair, I declined and said “I’m allergic to most products, actually.” Her “oh” was a guilty one, and I dropped other plans to rush the 20 minutes home and hop directly in the shower. My third shampoo and blow dry for the day complete, I could finally breathe again.

Contrary to how this post looks, I’m not writing it because I want to complain about a bad experience in customer service. I don’t doubt that the stylist was genuinely trying to make her own life easier, and genuinely thought she was doing me a favor in the process. I’m writing this post because of the simple fact that a favor to one person is not a favor to another. I’m writing this post because such situations are so common and can be so very, very easily avoided.

In the end, it could have been a lot worse. While I’m allergic to just about everything, my allergies aren’t particularly severe in the big scheme of things. My nose itches and runs, my eyes burn, and my head hurts. But I don’t usually break out in hives or a rash. I don’t get migraines and need to lay down for hours after exposure. My eyes don’t water, my skin doesn’t puff up, and my airways don’t close. I don’t have chronic pain issues that could be triggered by certain scents. I don’t have sensory issues that make it difficult to be touched. And surely there are many, many other problems I don’t have that I don’t even know enough to be aware of.

Though I don’t consider my own personal allergies to make me disabled, this is in part a disability issue. It’s in part about the way that most people seem to assume a “norm” and forget the huge number of people who don’t fit it, and who can be harmed by the assumptions. It is in part about the way that certain conditions are made invisible, forgotten about, or assumed to not exist until or unless told otherwise.

But ultimately, while accessibility, accommodation, and awareness are huge issues, and I think that every one of us should do our best to learn about those disabilities that we ourselves do not have, the problem I had yesterday was not even an issue of someone not being aware enough of what precise impact her actions could have on me. Though it certainly could have solved the problem in this particular instance, the ultimate cause of it was not her failure to consider that not all people can well-tolerate just any product being put on their bodies.

The issue was consent.

Consent is not just an issue in sexual situations, though we tend to talk about it largely as though it is. Consent is something that we negotiate or fail to negotiate in all of our interactions with other people, every time we touch or ask if we can touch. In this case, I consented to having my hair wet down. I didn’t consent to having product put in my hair, or to having my scalp massaged. My consent was assumed, and falsely. And while quite likely most people would have easily consented if asked “is it okay if I shampoo your hair free of charge,” I wouldn’t. The only way to know whether or not a favor is really a favor is to ask.

It’s wrong to take a person’s consent to one activity as consent to all related activities. And while those of us in anti-violence work already recognize this, it’s more than time to extend the principle beyond sex.

Many feminists and disability rights activists have made the argument long before I have, but I think it’s worth a repeat and a revisit. What if we didn’t assume our right to touch in everyday, non-sexual situations? What if we didn’t just take for granted that a certain touch will be okay? What if we were to not consider our own desires and thoughts about a certain touch, but those of the person we’re touching? Many would undoubtedly argue, and have argued, that the world would be a much colder and less intimate place. But I argue that it’d be a far more communicative place. It’d also be a world much safer to a wide variety of people. It’d be a world with a far more genuine respect for bodily autonomy and personal rights.

And yes, it very likely would transform the way that we view sex and sexual assault. If we viewed all touch as not a right but a privilege, all physical contact as requiring consent rather than acquiescence, our views on what a sexual interaction looks like and on what constitutes rape would also undoubtedly transform. But even if they did not, bodily rights matter in all circumstances, and reclaiming them in all situations, including those that are non-sexual, quite simply just matters. Our autonomy does not begin and end in the bedroom, or center around our erogenous zones. Our bodies belong to us, and every part of them has value.

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Hormone Disrupting Hand Cleaners

February 5, 2011

Antibacterials Q&A: Dr. Sarah Janssen on the Hazards of Hormone Disrupting Hand Cleaners

By Paul McRandle
Published: April 1, 2010
http://www.simplesteps.org/health/infants-children/antibacterials-qa

The use of “antibacterial” hand soaps is so widespread that we hardly give it another thought. Yet as a result almost 75 percent of Americans have been exposed to chemicals that may affect their health. And particularly worrisome is the fact that the most vulnerable of us, our children, are frequently exposed. NRDC staff scientist, Sarah Janssen, PhD, MD,  spoke with us about better practices and how to avoid “antibacterial” soaps and other products.

PM: How can you keep yourself safe from germs without using antibacterial products?

SJ: It’s impossible to keep your hands germ-free, but washing your hands frequently can help limit the transfer of bacteria, viruses and other germs and prevent illness.  Using regular soap and water is the most effective way to clean your hands and regular soap doesn’t carry any potential health risks like the so-called “antibacterial” products.

Hand washing is a skill, which requires vigorously rubbing your hands together for 20 seconds. Children can be encouraged to do this by singing a song such as “Row, Row, Row Your Boat.” Be sure to wash around the fingernails, in the web spaces between fingers and at the base of the wrists. These zones are often missed and germs can hide there.

Be sure to wash your hands before preparing or eating food, before applying or removing contact lenses and before touching small children or sick people. Always wash your hands after preparing food, especially raw meat, going to the bathroom or changing a diaper, coughing or sneezing into your hands and leaving a public place such as public transit, a park or even the doctor’s office!

PM: Washing your hands with antibacterial soap is no more effective than using regular soap and water, but is soap and water good enough when handling babies or sick children?

SJ: Yes, good hand washing techniques using regular soap and water is preferable to using so-called “antibacterial” soaps because regular soap and water are just as effective at eliminating “germs”. So called “antibacterials”, like triclosan or triclocarban are no more effective and carry potential health risks, so we advise avoiding their use.

When you’re on the go, alcohol-based hand sanitizers are also effective, but check the label for ingredients. All of the added “antibacterial” chemicals added to products must appear on the label as an active ingredient.

PM: So what are triclosan and triclocarban and why are you concerned about them?

SJ: Triclosan and triclocarban are chemicals added to personal care products, such as liquid and bar soaps, body washes, toothpaste and other personal care products for their so-called “antibacterial” properties. Triclosan is found in 75 percent of liquid hand soaps and triclocarban is used primarily in deodorant bar soaps. The widespread use of triclosan has resulted in the widespread exposure of the U.S. population—almost three-quarters of Americans carry residues of this chemical in their bodies. Triclosan and triclocarban are hormone disrupting chemicals and we are concerned that exposure to these chemicals could be causing harmful effects in humans.

PM: Are there any differences in the suspected health effects between triclosan and triclocarban–or, to put it simply, are they both just as bad?

SJ: Both of these chemicals are hormone disrupting chemicals, but they interfere with different hormone systems and though their toxicity is not fully understood, what we do know about these chemicals is deeply concerning. Triclosan interferes with thyroid hormone. We know that other thyroid disrupting chemicals have been shown to alter development of the brain and nervous system causing problems with learning or behavior later in life and we are concerned that triclosan could have similar effects.

Triclocarban is a unique type of hormone disrupting chemical which has not been found to have any hormone disrupting properties on its own but has been shown to enhance the activity of other hormones, such as the sex hormones, estrogen and testosterone. Boosting your sex hormones isn’t necessarily a good thing! For someone with a hormonally dependent cancer, that could mean more hormonal stimulation of cancer cell growth.

Furthermore, within our homes, there are many chemicals that interfere with both thyroid and sex hormones including flame retardants, BPA, and phthalates . Hormone disruptors are found in our electronics, furniture, carpeting, food packaging, drinking water, and cosmetics and personal care products. We are bombarded on a daily basis with dozens of different chemicals from many different places. While one chemical by itself may not pose a big health risk, it’s this cumulative exposure that we’re concerned about because all of these chemicals can act together as a group to cause greater harm than one alone.

PM: Triclosan is also used in towels and cutting boards–are there any environmental concerns about this widespread use in consumer products?

SJ: There is concern that the widespread use of these “antibacterial” chemicals is promoting antibiotic resistance, which is a looming public health crisis. Rather than using towels or other products impregnated with “antibacterials”, wash towels and other surfaces regularly with regular soap and water.

In addition, when applied to your skin or your kitchenware, these chemicals don’t just stay there but eventually are washed down the drain, flowing to water treatment plants where they end up in very high concentrations in sewage sludge. Triclosan and triclocarban are highly persistent in the environment, resisting breakdown for decades. This sludge is spread on agricultural fields as fertilizer and one study has shown that earthworms in fields recently treated with sludge contained high levels of triclosan compared to earthworms from organic fields, which did not have any detectable triclosan. This is deeply concerning since worms are indicators of contaminants that are entering the food web.

PM: Who is responsible for the regulation of these chemicals and why aren’t they doing more to protect our health and the environment?

SJ: The regulation of the “antibacterial” chemicals is confusing because depending on the use, it is regulated by different federal agencies. The FDA regulates uses of these chemicals in personal care products whereas EPA regulates non-cosmetic uses of them, such as in cutting boards, clothing, shoes. So we need both the FDA and the EPA to take action.

Senator Edward Markey is pushing for action from both agencies and hopefully we’ll see progress soon.

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Household Cleaning Sprays and Adult Asthma

February 4, 2011

The Use of Household Cleaning Sprays and Adult Asthma
An International Longitudinal Study

Abstract

Rationale: Cleaning work and professional use of certain cleaning products have been associated with asthma, but respiratory effects of nonprofessional home cleaning have rarely been studied.

Objectives: To investigate the risk of new-onset asthma in relation to the use of common household cleaners.

Methods: Within the follow-up of the European Community Respiratory Health Survey in 10 countries, we identified 3,503 persons doing the cleaning in their homes and who were free of asthma at baseline. Frequency of use of 15 types of cleaning products was obtained in a face-to-face interview at follow-up. We studied the incidence of asthma defined as physician diagnosis and as symptoms or medication usage at follow-up. Associations between asthma and the use of cleaning products were evaluated using multivariable Cox proportional hazards or log-binomial regression analysis.

Measurements and Main Results
: The use of cleaning sprays at least weekly (42% of participants) was associated with the incidence of asthma symptoms or medication (relative risk [RR], 1.49; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.12−1.99) and wheeze (RR, 1.39; 95% CI, 1.06−1.80). The incidence of physician-diagnosed asthma was higher among those using sprays at least 4 days per week (RR, 2.11; 95% CI, 1.15−3.89). These associations were consistent for subgroups and not modified by atopy. Dose–response relationships (P < 0.05) were apparent for the frequency of use and the number of different sprays. Risks were predominantly found for the commonly used glass-cleaning, furniture, and air-refreshing sprays. Cleaning products not applied in spray form were not associated with asthma.

Conclusions: Frequent use of common household cleaning sprays may be an important risk factor for adult asthma.

Complete article:
http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?tool=pubmed&pubmedid=17585104

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“New Risks Linked to Asthma Rise”

February 4, 2011

NY Times: Well, February 12, 2009

New Risks Linked to Asthma Rise

By TARA PARKER-POPE

A decline in aspirin use, exposure to household sprays and cleaners and lack of vitamin D may all help explain surging asthma rates in the past few decades.

For years the hygiene hypothesis has been used to explain stark differences in asthma rates around the world. In Western countries, asthma rates are about 50 times higher than in rural Africa, for instance. The hygiene hypothesis suggests that Westerners have less exposure to bacteria, viruses and parasites, altering the immune response and increasing risk for allergic diseases.

But Dr. Harold S. Nelson, professor of medicine at the asthma and allergy specialty hospital National Jewish Health in Denver, says the hygiene hypothesis doesn’t fully explain rising asthma rates in the United States and industrialized countries. The incidence of asthma has doubled in the United States since the 1980s.

In a recent talk at National Jewish Health’s annual Pulmonary and Allergy Update conference, Dr. Nelson noted that lower levels of vitamin D, exposure to spray cleaning compounds, and a wider use of acetaminophen in place of aspirin have contributed to the asthma epidemic.

The concern with household cleaners is that the spray mist can be inhaled and irritate the lungs, increasing risk for asthma. The biggest culprits appear to be glass cleaners and air fresheners. A major European study of cleaning product use in 10 countries found that people who used the cleaners four days a week faced double the risk of adult asthma. Weekly use increased risk by 50 percent. Australian researchers have also found a link with household cleaning sprays and asthma in children.

In a November 2007 article in The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, researchers from Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston reviewed the evidence showing a link between low vitamin D levels in mothers and childhood asthma. The authors wrote:

We hypothesize that as populations grow more prosperous, more time is spent indoors, and there is less exposure to sunlight, leading to decreased cutaneous vitamin D production. Coupled with inadequate intake from foods and supplements, this then leads to vitamin D deficiency, particularly in pregnant women, resulting in more asthma and allergy in their offspring.

Declining aspirin use may also help explain rising asthma rates. Young children should not be given aspirin because it increases risk for Reye’s syndrome. But a common alternative, acetaminophen, the ingredient in Tylenol, may increase a child’s risk for asthma when used in very young children or in high doses. The drug lowers levels of the antioxidant glutathione, which can help protect against lung damage caused by oxidants. In a study of more than 200,000 6- and 7-year-olds, use of acetaminophen in the first year of life was associated with a 46 percent increase in prevalence of asthma symptoms. Children using higher doses of acetaminophen had three times the risk of asthma.

Dr. Nelson notes that the research isn’t conclusive, but that people can take simple measures to lower their exposure to these new risk factors. Use liquid cleaners or pump sprays that don’t generate a fine mist. Eliminate use of spray air fresheners. Pregnant women and mothers should talk to their obstetricians and pediatricians about whether they should consider vitamin D supplements. And parents should discuss pain relievers with the pediatrician. Every pain reliever carries risks, and alternatives to Tylenol like ibuprofen can increase risk for gastrointestinal complaints. However, doctors may recommend switching between pain relievers or limiting exposure to acetaminophen in certain cases.

“There is a lot of supporting evidence for all three of these new risk factors,” Dr. Nelson said.

http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/02/12/new-risk-factors-linked-to-asthma-rise/

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Do Toxins Cause Autism?

January 30, 2011

[An article well worth reading in its entirety because there's much good info and references here. One quote, in speaking about the proliferation of developmental disorders in children, and cancers in everyone:
" they constitute a huge national health burden, and suspicions are growing that one culprit may be chemicals in the environment. An article in a forthcoming issue of a peer-reviewed medical journal, Current Opinion in Pediatrics, just posted online, makes this explicit."]

{Our thought for the day: for many years miners used to use take canaries with them when they went into their mines, because canaries are so sensitive to noxious gases. When the canaries got sick – or died – the miners quickly got out to good air and safety. This early warning system saved a lot of miners. Today we have human “canaries” in our midst – children with autism, the millions of people with ES/MCS (aka toxic encephalopathy), young people with cancers – but most of us are not paying attention. Our canaries are warning us, and we ignore them at our peril.}

NY Times, February 25, 2010
Op-Ed Columnist

Do Toxins Cause Autism?

By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF

Autism was first identified in 1943 in an obscure medical journal. Since then it has become a frighteningly common affliction, with the Centers for Disease Control reporting recently that autism disorders now affect almost 1 percent of children.

Over recent decades, other development disorders also appear to have proliferated, along with certain cancers in children and adults. Why? No one knows for certain. And despite their financial and human cost, they presumably won’t be discussed much at Thursday’s White House summit on health care.

Yet they constitute a huge national health burden, and suspicions are growing that one culprit may be chemicals in the environment. An article in a forthcoming issue of a peer-reviewed medical journal, Current Opinion in Pediatrics, just posted online, makes this explicit.

The article cites “historically important, proof-of-concept studies that specifically link autism to environmental exposures experienced prenatally.” It adds that the “likelihood is high” that many chemicals “have potential to cause injury to the developing brain and to produce neurodevelopmental disorders.”

The author is not a granola-munching crank but Dr. Philip J. Landrigan, professor of pediatrics at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York and chairman of the school’s department of preventive medicine. While his article is full of cautionary language, Dr. Landrigan told me that he is increasingly confident that autism and other ailments are, in part, the result of the impact of environmental chemicals on the brain as it is being formed.

“The crux of this is brain development,” he said. “If babies are exposed in the womb or shortly after birth to chemicals that interfere with brain development, the consequences last a lifetime.”

Concern about toxins in the environment used to be a fringe view. But alarm has moved into the medical mainstream. Toxicologists, endocrinologists and oncologists seem to be the most concerned.

One uncertainty is to what extent the reported increases in autism simply reflect a more common diagnosis of what might previously have been called mental retardation. There are genetic components to autism (identical twins are more likely to share autism than fraternal twins), but genetics explains only about one-quarter of autism cases.

Suspicions of toxins arise partly because studies have found that disproportionate shares of children develop autism after they are exposed in the womb to medications such as thalidomide (a sedative), misoprostol (ulcer medicine) and valproic acid (anticonvulsant). Of children born to women who took valproic acid early in pregnancy, 11 percent were autistic. In each case, fetuses seem most vulnerable to these drugs in the first trimester of pregnancy, sometimes just a few weeks after conception.

So as we try to improve our health care, it’s also prudent to curb the risks from the chemicals that envelop us. Senator Frank Lautenberg of New Jersey is drafting much-needed legislation that would strengthen the Toxic Substances Control Act. It is moving ahead despite his own recent cancer diagnosis, and it can be considered as an element of health reform. Senator Lautenberg says that under existing law, of 80,000 chemicals registered in the U.S., the Environmental Protection Agency has required safety testing of only 200. “Our children have become test subjects,” he noted.

One peer-reviewed study published this year in Environmental Health Perspectives gave a hint of the risks. Researchers measured the levels of suspect chemicals called phthalates in the urine of pregnant women. Among women with higher levels of certain phthalates (those commonly found in fragrances, shampoos, cosmetics and nail polishes), their children years later were more likely to display disruptive behavior.

Frankly, these are difficult issues for journalists to write about. Evidence is technical, fragmentary and conflicting, and there’s a danger of sensationalizing risks. Publicity about fears that vaccinations cause autism — a theory that has now been discredited — perhaps had the catastrophic consequence of lowering vaccination rates in America.

On the other hand, in the case of great health dangers of modern times — mercury, lead, tobacco, asbestos — journalists were too slow to blow the whistle. In public health, we in the press have more often been lap dogs than watchdogs.

At a time when many Americans still use plastic containers to microwave food, in ways that make toxicologists blanch, we need accelerated research, regulation and consumer protection.

“There are diseases that are increasing in the population that we have no known cause for,” said Alan M. Goldberg, a professor of toxicology at the Bloomberg School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins University. “Breast cancer, prostate cancer, autism are three examples. The potential is for these diseases to be on the rise because of chemicals in the environment.”

The precautionary principle suggests that we should be wary of personal products like fragrances unless they are marked phthalate-free. And it makes sense — particularly for children and pregnant women — to avoid most plastics marked at the bottom as 3, 6 and 7 because they are the ones associated with potentially harmful toxins.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/25/opinion/25kristof.html

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“Camp Nostink”

January 30, 2011

[When you read the following please keep in mind that this is all about life and health - not simple choices which affect no one but the chooser. So many people seem willfully ignorant of the effects that their lifestyle choices can have on others.]

a handout for friends and family visiting the chemically sensitive
A handout for family and friends visiting the chemically sensitive

Welcome To Camp Nostink!

Hi Kids! I bet you’re really excited about going to Camp Nostink, but there are a few things you should know before you get on the bus. First of all, did you know that BIG SCARY BEARS eat children who smell like icky scented soap and lotion and shampoo and detergent and deodorant? When these BIG SCARY BEARS smell perfume or essential oils on a little boy or girl, they do very grisly things. Have you ever wondered why mosquitoes are repelled by Avon Skin So Soft? This is because mosquitoes are smart and move out of the way before the bears come. Do you want to have your arms and legs ripped off by a BIG SCARY BEAR? If not, you must rid yourself of all scents before coming to Camp Nostink, and not bring ANY scented products with you. You know what really smells pretty? Fresh air without icky chemicals like acetone and benzaldehyde and limonene. These chemicals are in your hairspray and makeup and perfume and soap and shampoo and lip balm, which is why the bears are so mad! When people try to sell you these products, you should get mad like a bear and bite them on the arms! Grrrrrrrr.

Even when you use fragrance free bear-proof items (see: How to Be Fragrance Free) to clean and moisturize and primp and deodorize yourself, your clothes will still smell like yucky scented detergent, so unless you get rid of the smell the BIG SCARY BEARS will still eat you. Your Mommy and Daddy probably buy detergent that has a Fresh Clean Scent that is actually a bunch of really bad chemicals that cause cancer. If your Mommy and Daddy buy dryer sheets, you probably live in a cult. Talk to a camp counselor about how to get deprogrammed and be adopted by new parents. You see, dryer sheets are manufactured by SATAN. Remember that queasy feeling you used to get in your tummy when the little Snuggle bear appeared on TV to advertise fabric softener? Remember how you had nightmares that the Snuggle bear came into your bedroom with a pitchfork and asked for your soul? You had those nightmares because the Snuggle bear, as you probably suspected, is the devil.

If you have ever used dryer sheets, it will be impossible to exorcise the prince of darkness from your clothes. You might as well throw them out. At Camp Nostink, you can wear “guest clothes” if you like that contain NO SATAN. These clothes are 100% Satan-free and bear-repellent. Before coming to Camp Nostink, you should follow the Camp Nostink guidelines for washing clothes. Don’t trust your own sense of smell. Remember, BIG SCARY BEARS have a much stronger sense of smell than you do. And remember, it hurts a lot to have your arms ripped off.

Bug spray is made by evil people who want to kill all cute furry animals and create a master race of giant cockroaches who can live off of garbage. It is silly that people use bug spray in nature because bug spray is made of nasty chemicals that kill the natural world. Did you know bug spray can cause brain damage? You didn’t? You’re still using it? That could mean you already have brain damage. Pretty soon you will be as dumb as the people who make bug spray. Do you want people to make fun of you because you’re as stupid as a corporation? Then tell your Off spray to bug off! Also, there is NO SMOKING at Camp Nostink. Cigarettes were invented by the Snuggle bear.

Even the EPA knows that fragrances are bad! Check out this link to The Health Risks of Twenty Most Common Chemicals Found in Thirty One Fragrance Products By a 1991 EPA Study

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Fabric Softener = Chem Warfare?

January 29, 2011

A Chemical Primer from:

Parents Against Everyday Poisons (P.A.E.P.)

parentsagainsteverydaypoisons@live.ca

Making Tomorrow Safe for OUR Children!

Hello Parents, Grandparents & Friends:

If you barely had time to skim the newspapers this weekend, you could have easily missed this important news article (below). The Federal Ministries of Health and Environment in Canada are considering the redesignation of the chemical – Di-ethyl Sulfate – as a Toxic Substance. Since this substance has been identified as a possible carcinogen by the European Commission and has been used in the past as a Chemical Warfare Agent, it would seem to be a prudent decision.

What is less clear is why this chemical is presently permitted for use in our homes in Fabric Softeners, Pharmaceuticals and Fragrances.

———————————————–

 

Ottawa suggests adding chemical to toxic list

MARTIN MITTELSTAEDT

From Saturday’s Globe and Mail

January 24, 2009

Health Canada and Environment Canada are recommending adding a former chemical warfare agent, diethyl sulphate, to the country’s list of toxic substances.
Although the substance isn’t a household name, it can be used to make fabric softeners or flocculants in wastewater and sewage sludge control, and in the production of pharmaceuticals, fragrances and dyes.
The government is concerned about diethyl sulphate because a number of foreign jurisdictions, including the European Commission, consider it a possible cause of cancer.

You can view the rest of this story at the following site:

www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20090124.wtoxic24/BNStory/National/

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Harmful Fragrances

January 29, 2011

Synthetic Fragrances

Common Synthetic Fragrances Found to Harm Wildlife, Humans

http://leas.ca/Synthetic-Fragrances.htm

STANFORD, California — November 1, 2004 (ENS) — When they are washed down the drain, synthetic fragrances in soaps and shampoos are damaging the ability of aquatic wildlife downstream to eliminate toxics from their systems, according to a new Stanford University study published by the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

The first study to show that some personal care products in water have an effect, even in low concentrations, suggests that humans may be harmed too. The synthetic fragrances can block the ability of human cells to clear themselves of other substances that could be much more toxic than the fragrances.

California mussels exposed to synthetic musks – chemicals used to enhance the smell of detergents, soaps, shampoos, air fresheners, deodorants, cosmetics and other personal care products – cause biological damage that is long lasting and may be irreversible, the scientists demonstrated.

“Synthetic musks can be easily produced and are very cheap,” said Stanford postdoctoral fellow Till Luckenbach, lead author of the study. “They get into the environment through sewers and drains, but wastewater treatment plants are not equipped to handle them.”

Till Luckenbach conducted this experiment at the Epel Lab at Hopkins Marine Station. These chemicals are found in aquatic environments where they are persistent and accumulate in the organisms. Luckenbach and Stanford biologist David Epel tested six synthetic musk compounds used by industry to determine if these artificial fragrances affected the animals’ “xenobiotic defense system,” a biochemical process that allows cells to get rid of poisons and other foreign substances.

“This is the first line of defense used by all cells,” said Epel, a Stanford professor of marine sciences. “It consists of a special protein, called an efflux transporter, that’s embedded in the cell membrane and pumps out toxins that get into the cell.”

For the experiment, described in the NIH journal “Environmental Health Perspectives,” gills were sliced from living mussels and placed in water containing very low concentrations of synthetic musks – 300 parts per billion or less. After two hours, the gills were removed and washed.

To see if this short term exposure affected the animal’s defense system, the gills were placed in musk free water with a red fluorescent dye.

Usually, an efflux transporter will recognize the dye as a foreign substance and remove it. But if something interferes with the transporter, the dye will accumulate inside the cell, which causes it to appear brighter. The researchers found that even two days after the mussel gills had been washed clean, they could not remove the dye.

“What we found is that musks are harmful in the sense that they compromise the defense system and let other chemicals in that could be more harmful,” Epel said.

“The amazing thing is that, even if you wash the chemical fragrance away, there’s a long term effect up to 48 hours after removal,” he said.

These results indicate that even short term events, such as chemical spills and stormwater runoffs, could have long term effects, Luckenbach said.

Human health is also at risk, the scientists believe. “People have these same transporters in the blood-brain barrier, the placenta and the intestines,” Luckenbach said.

“Perhaps exposure to chemical fragrances could compromise the transporters, making it easier for pollutants to enter the brain, for example,” he suggested.
One problem for consumers trying to avoid synthetic fragrances is that only the word “fragrance” appears on the label as a rule. The actual chemical compound is rarely listed.

“One of the assumptions about these chemicals is that they are regarded as environmentally low risk compared to pesticides and oil products,” Epel observed.
“This is the first study to show that some personal care products in water do have an effect, even in low concentrations. Our results indicate that the effects on the first line of defense might be irreversible or continue long after the event. It’s a warning sign. It’s a smoking gun. Are there other chemicals out there that have similar long-term effects? Could these be harming these defense systems in aquatic organisms? And could they be having similar effects in humans?”

“The musks are an example, but this group of pharmaceuticals and personal care products consists of thousands of different chemicals,” Luckenbach said.

The experiment was conducted in Epel’s laboratory at Stanford’s Hopkins Marine Station in Pacific Grove, California and was funded by the German Academic Exchange Service, the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration, the California Sea Grant College and the California State Resources Agency.
Worldwide production of synthetic musks increased from about 7,000 to 8,000 tons a year between 1987 and 1996, the authors wrote.

Concerns about the environmental impact of synthetic fragrances first surfaced about 10 years ago in Japan and Europe. “They were picking up pharmaceutical and personal care products in the wastewater flowing into rivers,” Epel said. “In Japan they found them in mussels and fish and discovered they are somewhat persistent – they don’t break down.”

Use of musk xylene, the most common industrial fragrance, was banned in Japan several years ago after traces of the compound were found in human body fat, breast milk and blood.

Germany has placed a voluntary ban on musk xylene, although it is still widely used in the United States, except in lipsticks and other products that are applied orally.

These findings extend those of a National Research Council report commissioned by the EPA and published in July 2002 that reassesses the environmental disposition of sewage biosolids, particularly odorants, such as synthetic musk.
“For odorants,” the NRC report states,” the need for further evaluation is driven by he high level of public concern, as well as very limited characterization of the odorants present in biosolids and their toxicity.”

“For odorants commonly present in biosolids, the NRC committee wrote, “EPA should move aggressively to develop acute toxicity values for use in assessing the risks posed by these chemicals and should support research on the interaction between these chemicals and pathogens in causing human disease.”

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has information about exposure to chemicals in personal care products at the National Exposure Research Lab site at:
http://epa.gov/nerlesd1/chemistry/pharma

National Research Council report: “Biosolids Applied to Land: Advancing Standards and Practices,” Committee on Toxicants and Pathogens in Biosolids Applied to Land, National Research Council (NRC), 2002.” is online at: http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10426.html

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