
Are Your Beauty Products Killing You?
by Matt Wheeland,
AlterNet.org, July 4, 2002
If
you got out of the shower this morning, blow-dried your hair and gave
your 'do a spritz of VO5 hairspray, you've just poisoned yourself a
little bit. If you do this every morning as your regular routine, you
are accumulating these poisons by the bucketful.
But
it's not just VO5 that could make you sick. Try Secret Sheer Dry deodorant,
or the suitably named Poison, a perfume by Christian Dior. In fact,
52 popular cosmetics are now proven to have toxic components in varying
concentrations -- and they're all over the place.
A report
released jointly July 10 by Coming Clean, the Environmental Working
Group and Health Care Without Harm details the extent to which a toxic
family of chemicals known as phthalates (THAY-lates) are used in everyday
household products, especially beauty products like nail polish, lipstick
and perfumes.
The
report, titled "Not Too Pretty: Pthalates, Beauty Products and
the FDA," has its basis in a 1999 FDA study of toxins in the general
population of the U.S. From a sample of 1,029 people, every one of them
tested positive for phthalates in their blood or urine. Scientists at
the Centers for Disease Control singled out a subgroup of 289 people
with a particularly high incidence of phthalates: women of childbearing
age. These women were found to have daily exposures of phthalates ranging
from 2.5 to 22 times the normal for the rest of the general population,
with 5 percent showing levels of 75 percent or higher of the acceptable
daily amounts.
Judging
from the 5 percent of women with dangerously high test results, it can
be assumed that every day, as many as two million women of childbearing
age are exposed to toxic levels of phthalates.
Phthalates
have been shown to cause a wide array of health problems, from liver
and kidney failure to heart, lung and blood pressure problems. The most
worrisome aspect by far is the phthalates' effect on the reproductive
development of fetuses and infants, particularly the reproductive tracts
of males.
Phthalates
are metabolized in humans once ingested or absorbed through the skin.
In pregnant women, phthalates pass through the placenta to be absorbed
by the fetus. In nursing women, phthalates are found in breast milk,
which means infants are ingesting these chemicals as they develop. In
male fetuses -- and infants especially -- the phthalates have been shown
to cause testicular atrophy and a reduced sperm count, among other serious
health problems.
Dr.
Stephen Safe of Texas A&M University notes that some in the medical
community have expressed concerns about phthalate exposure and human
health. "It's hard to be specific until more medical data is available,"
Dr. Safe says, "but if people have concerns, they should limit
their use of these products."
The
HCWH report is the first to document and link the deleterious effects
of phthalates to male reproductive development. Women of childbearing
age were shown to be the most at-risk demographic, and it is reasonable
to attribute this in large part to one fact: the beauty industry. According
to Charlotte Brody, executive director of HCWH, "With all the variables
involved, the only one that doesn't apply on a large scale to both men
and women is the use of cosmetics."
Global
Pollutants
Phthalates
are plasticizers. In cosmetics, they are used to add texture and luster
to the product. Ninety percent of the world's plasticizers are used
to soften PVC (vinyl) and make it pliable. The other 10 percent have
been used in many kinds of manufacturing for 30 years, beginning with
medical products like IV bags, gloves and blood bags, but also paints,
lubricants, adhesives, toys, food containers, and, of course, cosmetics.
The
use of phthalates in manufacturing is widespread, and has such a long
history that phthalates have wormed their way into every corner of the
globe. Traces are present in virtually every person on the planet. The
phthalate DEHP has been found in Antarctica and in deep-sea jellyfish
3,000 feet below the ocean's surface.
Different
phthalates can be found in consumer products like shower curtains, umbrellas,
adhesives, children's toys, and countless other manufactured goods.
PVC, being incredibly cheap to produce, is the preferred product for
the world's manufacturers. With phthalates, you can easily turn PVC
into any number of products.
Turning
the Tide
Since
the FDA does not regulate the use of pthalates in cosmetics and beauty
aids, manufacturers are not required to disclose them as ingredients.
Says
the report: "Taken as a whole, the lab results indicate that a
substantial fraction of cosmetics companies may be hiding phthalates
on store shelves within the containers of their products, with no warning
for pregnant women who might want to avoid purchasing products that
contain chemicals linked to birth defects."
DEHP,
the primary phthalate found in medical supplies, has been found toxic
in studies of patients who spend considerable amounts of time in hospitals,
mainly newborns and the elderly. But other phthalates, including DEP,
DBP, BBP, DCP, DOP and DINP, were last studied nearly 20 years ago.
According
to FDA spokesperson Kimberly Rawlings, "Phthalates were shown to
be safe for topical use in 1984, and there have been no further studies
by the FDA on this subject since then."
In
a recent Dallas Morning News story on phthalates and the cosmetics industry,
Rod Irvin, a spokesman for the American Chemistry Council's Phthalate
Esters Panel, said that "[p]hthalates are among the most-studied
products out there. They have a long record of safe use, with no reports
or evidence of harm to human health." Additionally, the industry
group has spent "millions" studying the compounds and has
found no reason for concern.
In
November 2000, the Environmental Working Group released a report that
stated, "Phthalates are recognized as toxic substances under environmental
law, but companies are free to use unlimited amounts in cosmetics."
The
FDA in the past has considered each of these phthalates separately when
studying their toxicity. If you're a dialysis patient, then you're at
risk for poisoning because you're getting twice the amount of DEHP recommended
with each visit. That's bad. But if you're a dialysis patient and you
wear a lot of makeup and spend a lot of time playing with your grandchildren
and their toys, your exposure could be deadly.
Not
in the many-faceted eyes of the FDA, though. Its consideration of disparate
exposure to phthalates is the main loophole manufacturers use to claim
that phthalates are safe. Without recognizing that all members of the
phthalate family accumulate to cause the same health problems, phthalate
manufacturers are able to claim that each individual chemical is not
harmful at the documented levels.
HCWH
tested 72 of the following kinds of cosmetics: Nail polish, fragrances
(perfumes, body oils, etc.), hairsprays, deodorants and lotions. Fifty-two
of these contained phthalates as ingredients, though none were listed
on the labels. Most of the pthalate-containing products are household
names: Aqua Net Professional Hair Spray; Degree Original Solid Deodorant;
Nivea Créme lotion; Elizabeth Arden's Red Door fragrance; Calvin
Klein's Eternity perfume.
As
Brody of HCWH points out, this is just the beginning: "It's impossible
to know without testing which products contain phthalates. Just because
some of the lotions we tried tested negative doesn't mean [all lotions
are] clean." Until the manufacturers are required to label phthalates,
there's no way to know for sure.
Early
Warnings
This
is only the latest in a long series of warnings about the dangers of
phthalates, which have been used extensively since the early 1970s.
The biggest commotion over phthalates came in 1998, when the Danish
government issued a well-publicized ban on toys containing phthalates
because of concern that children were being exposed to toxic chemicals
when they put toys in their mouths. Lego, the Danish toymaker, quickly
responded by reformulating its toy factories to phase out the use of
phthalates in production of its toys.
Since
then, there has been steadily growing awareness of the dangers of phthalates.
Network news programs have discussed the dangers in toys, cosmetics
and beauty products, and even in fish that live in polluted waters.
Despite all this, the battle against phthalates has been a stalemate:
The EU continues to extend its temporary ban on toys for children aged
3 and under, but European manufacturers are lobbying to institute a
voluntary reporting system for all other products similar to what is
in place in the U.S.
Stacy
Malkan of HCWH is urging people to distribute the lists of phthalate-containing
products far and wide, to discuss the topic of phthalates in cosmetics
and medical supplies with their health care provider, and to contact
the FDA to demand an industry-wide ban on phthalates in cosmetic products.
In addition, the groups releasing the report are preparing to launch
a national ad campaign.
As
the report makes clear, non-toxic alternatives are readily available:
"The limited testing done for Not Too Pretty reveals that the same
big companies that produce phthalate-laced beauty products, also make
similar products without phthalates ... L'Oreal markets Jet Set nail
polish without DBP but puts the phthalate in its Maybelline brand."
Without
public pressure, however, there will be no incentive for the $20 billion-a-year
cosmetics industry to phase out all phthalates. And women who continue
to douse themselves in Christian Dior's Poison may be helping the perfume
live up to its name.
For
more information and the complete list of tested products, go to: http://www.NotTooPretty.org
Matt
Wheeland is an editorial intern at http://www.AlterNet.org
Source:
http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=13530
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