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Showing posts with label chemical sensitivity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chemical sensitivity. Show all posts

Friday, October 29, 2010

The Chemical Unknowns

Only a tiny fraction of the compounds around us have been tested for safety

For as long as I know, in household, garden, personal, food, medicine, and cleaning products have never been tested for the combination of different ingredients.
The look into the chemical soup in cosmetics and personal care products has been a long time effort that truly became well knwon in the past few years.

Now this interesting "short" from Scientific American makes a salient point.

Learn more here and here 


Experts guesstimate that about 50,000 chemicals are used in U.S. consumer products and industrial processes. Why the uncertainty? The 1976 Toxic Substances Control Act does not require chemicals to be registered or proven safe before use. Because the Environmental Protection Agency must show, after the fact, that a substance is dangerous, it has managed to require testing of only about 300 substances that have been in circulation for decades. It has restricted applications of five.

The House Toxic Chemicals Safety Act of 2010 and the Senate Safe Chemicals Act of 2010 would require manufacturers to prove that existing and new chemicals meet specific safety criteria. Stricter scrutiny in Europe and Canada suggests that “10 to 30 percent of U.S. chemicals would need some additional level of control,” says Richard Denison, a molecular biochemist at the Environmental Defense Fund. That would be 5,000 to 15,000 chemicals, not five. 

Saturday, August 01, 2009

Creating More Chemical Sensitivity

For more information about how chemicals in substances such as perfumes can and do make people sick - MCSA

Perfume Spray Sends 34 to Hospitals
FORT WORTH, Texas (July 30) -- At first, fire officials suspected that carbon monoxide or some other toxic fumes had sickened almost 150 people at a Texas bank call center.

It turned out that perfume was to blame.

MedStar ambulance spokeswoman Lara Kohl says 34 people were taken to hospitals, 12 by ambulance, after reporting dizziness and shortness of breath Wednesday at a Bank of America call center in Fort Worth. An additional 110 were treated at the scene.

Fort Worth fire Lt. Kent Worley says the incident started with two people complaining about dizziness after a co-worker sprayed perfume. Others reported being sick when an announcement was made that anyone with similar symptoms should exit the building.

Investigators do not know what type of perfume was sprayed.