Healthy Living

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Should you avoid toxic plastics?

You probably know by now that certain kinds of hard plastic are bad for you. Bisphenol-a, a chemical used to make polycarbonate plastics, has been linked to breast cancer and neurological disorders, among other health problems. You'll find BPA in the cute neon pink Nalgene bottle you take to the gym, or the sippy cup your daughter uses every day. Well, the Canadian government recently announced plans to classify BPA as toxic.

The apparent toxicity of BPA relates to endocrine disruption, or altering the normal balance of hormonal effects in the body. This, in turn, could alter developmental patterns, such as the timing of
puberty, or fertility. But the potential toxicity is based on animal studies, rather than any clear evidence of harm in humans.

Seemingly in response to the upcoming action by the Canadian government, and the possibility of a similar judgment by the United States Food and Drug Administration, Nalgene Outdoor Products, the largest producer of polycarbonate plastic bottles, will stop using BPA.

This is probably a good thing, but we should be careful what we wish for. Since neither we, nor manufacturers, will give up a penchant for plastics any time soon, abandoning one variety means using another. Polycarbonate seemed perfectly harmless at first. There is no reason to think some new plastic that looks innocent now won't be dangerous later. Only time will tell if the latest, greatest plastic is a step forward, or a step back.

I do think concerns about BPA are valid and important. There are many conditions plaguing our population for which the cause seems uncertain, from earlier puberty, to chronic fatigue, to various pain syndromes, to ADHD, and even depression. Foreign chemicals to which our bodies haven't adapted could certainly be an explanation. The process of proving such associations will be difficult and slow, for reasons related to research methodology that go beyond the scope of this blog. You'll have to take my word for it!

Given the options, our best bet seems to be a careful consideration of trade-offs and thorough toxicological testing of new products. The testing won't prove that products are completely safe, but will at least help establish the probability of any toxicity. We then should weigh the benefits of new products, made with new chemicals, against what history has taught us: potential harms may emerge over time, despite good intentions.

For now, stop using any hard plastic that makes you nervous, and instead opt for aluminum and glass wherever you can.

What do you think about this news? Do you have a personal story to share about how BPA may have affected you? Do you love your Nalgene and refuse to give it up? Sound off here and let me know how you're dealing with this news in your household!


More Ways to Stay Healthy
Rid the Garage of Hidden Dangers
Avoid These Deadly Beauty Treatments
Protect Yourself From Mold
Syndication:

From the Community…

Comments 11-17 of 17
  • __A_YAHOO_USER__'s Avatar
    Posted by __A_YAHOO_USER__ Fri Apr 25, 2008 2:31pm PDT

    I wonder about the early puberty issue. I have a friend whose daughter is 8 and started having periods shortly after her 8th birthday. The child is normal otherwise and we wonder is this is hormones from Chicken or beef, but the new plastic concern is crazy. Everyone has been using sippy cups and plastic bottles for at least 20 years now.

    Her doctors don't have an explanation because all other health and history is normal. I worry about my 3 year old daughter, I will be buying stainless steel cups for car trips and even everyday use from now on.

    Report Abuse
  • skept79's Avatar
    Posted by skept79 Mon Apr 28, 2008 5:58pm PDT

    There is very little evidence to support the ideas presented in this article. Mostly this is just fear mongering. Looking through the comments you can see people creating anecdotal links between the medical problems of their children and plastics. I understand the frustration confronting a parent whose child has an illness with a poorly understood cause, but throwing out unsupported ideas won't help. Now everytime a child gets sick the parents will be trying to remember if they were drinking out of a plastic container. This only leads to confirmation bias.

    We have become spoiled by modern medicine's ability to understand and treat so many diseases. But is it really reasonable to expect there will be no problems that we don't fully understand. We understand and effectively treat more diseases today then we ever have in the past and one day we will better understand the causes of earlier puberty, chronic fatigue, various pain syndromes, ADHD, depression, etc. Until then let's not go around guessing, let's focus on progressing though proper study. Right now we don't even no if these diseases have genetic causes, environmental causes or both. Throwing out ideas without evidence just wastes resources (resources that we need to make real progress) and misinforms the public.

    Report Abuse
  • traveler's Avatar
    Posted by traveler Thu May 1, 2008 5:42am PDT

    The article recommends using aluminum bottles instead. Whatever happened to the scare about aluminum causing Alzheimer's disease? I have avoided using aluminum around food and drink for years because of similar scares.

    http://www.rense.com/general37/alum.htm

    Report Abuse
  • skept79's Avatar
    Posted by skept79 Mon May 5, 2008 9:32am PDT

    traveler: There is no good evidence for a link between aluminum and Alzheimer's. Early studies suggested that there might be a link but followup studies have not confirmed that any link exists and have suggested that the early evidence probably resulted from contamination in the lab. This is the problem with publicizing early theories, people make choices based on the early evidence and then the followup is never publicized so people just continue on even if the early theories turn out to be wrong. (I think this plastics article is doing the same thing, scaring the public with a theory that is based on very little evidence). As for your link I wouldn't take medical advice from a website touting chemtrails, conspiracy theorists rarely make good and objective doctors.

    From WebMD:

    "One of the most publicized and controversial theories concerns aluminum, which became a suspect in Alzheimer's disease when researchers found traces of this metal in the brains of patients with Alzheimer's disease. Many studies since then have either not been able to confirm this finding or have had questionable results.

    Aluminum does turn up in higher amounts than normal in some autopsy studies of Alzheimer's patients, but not in all. Further doubt about the importance of aluminum stems from the possibility that the aluminum found in some studies did not all come from the brain tissues being studied. Instead, some could have come from the special substances used in the laboratory to study brain tissue."

    http://www.snopes.com/movies/actors/valentino.asp (more aluminum info here)

    Chemtrails:

    http://www.skeptics.com.au/journal/2007/2.pdf (page 11)

    http://www.nmsr.org/pilotsvu.htm

    Report Abuse
  • skept79's Avatar
    Posted by skept79 Fri May 9, 2008 12:02pm PDT

    Looks like you updated the article to be much more cautious in your recommendation to avoid BPA. Happy to see a more balance view presented.

    Report Abuse
  • hannahz's Avatar
    Posted by hannahz Fri May 30, 2008 1:37pm PDT

    If you would like some further reading on potentially toxic plastics, you should check out the Pitch newspaper out of Kansas City. They recently had an article about MU scientists researching this and the chemical companies trying to shut them up. Check it out at the Pitch

    Report Abuse
  • Rose's Avatar
    Posted by Rose Tue Jul 22, 2008 11:25am PDT

    what about BPA in things like your shower curtain or other areas of close proximity?

    Report Abuse
Comments 11-17 of 17

leave your comment

You must sign in to post a comment

Sign In for personalized information

New User? Sign Up

Health Byte

Who doesn't want to look hot at all those holiday parties? ExerciseTV shares how to get in skinny jeans-shape -- and quickly!