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Monday, February 16, 2015
Phthalates are everywhere, and the health risks are worrying. How bad are they really?
Published in The Guardian by Amy Westervelt, Feb. 10, 2015
Phthalates
are everywhere, and a tidal wave of new research has documented their
wide-ranging negative health impacts, but what are the real risks?
Phthalates are used as binders and plasticizers in everyday items,
including cosmetics. How safe are they? Photograph: Tom Jenkins/the
Guardian
Lately, it seems like a new study on the health impacts of phthalates
comes out every week. The chemicals are everywhere: they’re used in
everything from household cleaners to food packaging to fragrance,
cosmetics, and personal-care products.
The CDC recommended that the chemicals and their effect on human
health be studied further, a recommendation that helped unlock funding
for dozens of studies focused on phthalates, resulting in a tidal wave
of recently published reports that largely indicate the CDC’s concern
was warranted.
The CDC’s warning on phthalates also caught the attention of senators
Barbara Boxer and former US representative Henry Waxman, who included
the class of chemicals in their Consumer Product Safety bill, passed in 2008.
That bill banned the use of some phthalates in children’s products,
passed an interim ban on others, and required that the Consumer Product
Safety Commission take a close look at the chemicals.
The resulting report on phthalates – the Chronic Hazard Advisory Panel (Chap) on Phthalates
(pdf) – was finalized in late 2014, and despite the chemical industry’s
efforts to soften the commission’s recommendations, public health
advocates are largely pleased with the effort, a rarity when it comes to
government-penned reports on chemical safety.
With academic studies and policy reports consistently voicing concern
over the health impacts of phthalates, and consumers beginning to sit
up and take notice, regulation may not be far behind.
“The Chap report is the first major regulatory document in the
federal government that’s highlighting the extent of the new science on
the risks of phthalates,” says Erik Olson, senior strategic director of
food and agriculture and health programs for the Natural Resources
Defense Council. “The fact that the commission is looking both at
phthalates as a group and at the toxicology of individual phthalates is
really important,” he says.
Olson was the deputy staff director for the US Senate’s environment
and public works committee when the Consumer Product Safety Bill was
written and passed. Between the Chap report, a National Academy of Sciences report
looking at phthalates as a class and what he calls “the tidal wave of
research that’s been coming out fast and furious” in the past year or
so, he said, “we’re getting past the phase of complete denial from the
industry – they can no longer claim that there’s no risk at all with
phthalates.”
What’s the harm?
Name a major public health concern over the past two decades and there’s likely some link to phthalates exposure.
In the past few years, researchers have linked phthalates to asthma, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, breast cancer, obesity and type II diabetes, low IQ,
neurodevelopmental issues, behavioral issues, autism spectrum
disorders, altered reproductive development and male fertility issues.
While phthalates is a huge class of chemicals and nowhere near every
chemical in the class has been studied, several have been shown to have
negative health impacts: butyl benzyl phthalate (BBzP), dibutyl
phthalate (DnBP), di-2-ethylhexyl phthalate (DEHP), diethyl phthalate
(DEP), di-butyl phthalate (DBP), benzyl butyl phthalate (BBP),
diisobutyl phthalate (DiBP), diisononyl phthalate (DiNP), di-n-octyl
phthalate (DnOP), dipentyl phthalate (DPP), di-isobutyl phthalate
(DiBP), di-isononyl phthalate (DiNP), di-n-octyl phthalate (DnOP),
di-isohexyl phthalate, dicyclohexyl phthalate (DcHP), and di-isoheptyl
phthalate.
Enough distinct phthalates have been studied to indicate that
companies should proceed with caution when using any chemical in the
phthalate class, particularly in products for pregnant women or young
children, whom the research has indicated are the most vulnerable to the
effects of phthalates.
One of the first phthalates to raise a red flag, DEHP, was replaced
in hundreds of consumer products with DiNP, only for researchers to
discover a few years later that exposure to DiNP is correlated to male genital birth defects and impaired reproductive function in adult males.
Public health advocates hope to learn from the mistakes made in
regulating bisphenol A (BPA) as momentum gathers behind the regulation
of phthalates, and ensure that one harmful phthalate isn’t just replaced
with another over and over again.
BPA was singled out as the sole chemical of concern in the bisphenol
group, and regulated as such. Manufacturers largely replaced BPA with
bisphenol S (BPS), which researchers are now discovering is equally as problematic as BPA.
With phthalates, the research has come before any sort of regulation –
companies are not even required to list phthalates on consumer product
labels – and legislators are already looking at the entire class of
chemicals, as well as any particularly bad ones.
‘Milking machines use a lot of
plastic and DEHP is free and very lipophilic (fat soluble), and milk is
full of lipids, so it just pulls the DEHP out of the plastic tubing and
into the milk,’ explains Robin Whyatt, professor of environmental health
sciences at the Columbia University Medical Center.Photograph: Gary Roebuck/Alamy
No escape
Both because of their ubiquitous usage and because they are not
listed on product labels, phthalates are next to impossible to avoid.
They are in household items (vinyl flooring), personal care products
(hair care, body wash, some cosmetics), fragrance, household cleaners,
and food. Even for those who either avoid these products or buy
phthalate-free variations, phthalates lurk in unexpected places.
In food, for example, even milk packaged in glass may have passed
through plastic tubes on its way from the cow to the bottle, taking DEHP
along with it. “Milking machines use a lot of plastic and DEHP is free
and very lipophilic (fat soluble), and milk is full of lipids, so it
just pulls the DEHP out of the plastic tubing and into the milk,”
explains Robin Whyatt, professor of environmental health sciences at the
Columbia University Medical Center and the lead author on several
landmark phthalate studies. “So my guess would be that milk is a pretty
important source of dietary exposure to DEHP.”
Spices are another surprising source of phthalate exposure. A 2013 study,
published in the journal Nature, compared the phthalate levels of two
groups, one eating their regular diet but armed with a handout of
recommendations for ways to reduce BPA and phthalate exposure in their
diet, and the other eating a catered diet consisting solely of local,
organic fare, none of which had touched plastic packaging.
The study
authors were shocked to find that DEHP levels in the local, organic
group jumped 2,377% over the course of the experiment. Determined to
figure out why, the researchers tested all of the foods consumed by the
group and found high levels of the phthalate in dairy products and
various organic, imported spices.
“The fact is you can’t know if a food has phthalates in it – you can
suspect, but it’s almost impossible to know,” Olson says. “That makes
them hard to avoid, which is why you need a regulatory framework.”
Phthalates are used as binders and
plasticizers in everything from household cleaners to food packaging to
fragrance, cosmetics, and personal care products.Photograph: Nickolas Muray/Getty Images
What now?
Regulation of consumer products moves slowly in the US, and that has
proven to be especially true when it comes to chemicals. Despite the
recent movement on phthalates, Olson says it is likely to be a long time
before we have the sort of wide-reaching framework that would
adequately protect the public from harmful exposure.
That doesn’t mean all is lost in the meantime. State and federal
regulations have already eliminated the chemicals from some products,
and that list is likely to grow. California’s Proposition 65 now
includes four phthalates – DINP, DEHP, DBP and BBP – under its labeling
requirements, and the state’s Office of Environmental Health Hazard
Assessment (OEHHA) recently proposed changes
to Prop 65’s warning requirements, which would require manufacturers to
list specific chemicals in their warnings and make those warnings more
detailed (currently the warnings are vague, stating only “this product
[or building] contains substances known by the state of California to
cause cancer”).
“Prop 65 will be a driving force for change on phthalates,” Olson
says. “Companies don’t like to put warning labels on their products.”
Consumers can also take matters into their own hands by avoiding
products packaged in “recycling-code-3” plastic, products that include
the vague ingredient “fragrance” on their label, and purchasing organic
products packaged in glass as much as possible.
Whyatt also recommends that consumers remove any food packaged in
plastic from its packaging and place them in glass. “DEHP continues to
leech over time, so you do actually reduce exposure by changing the
storage container, even if it’s been in plastic before you bought it,”
she says. “All the DEHP has probably not come out yet by the time you
get it home. And if there’s still DEHP in there, it’s probably still
leeching out, so you can at least reduce your exposure some extent.”
“If we start by addressing the products where we know there’s
significant exposure to phthalates, and we start with the most
vulnerable communities – pregnant women and children – we can make a
real difference,” Olson said. “We could take care of a lot of food
exposure through FDA regulation and toys through the Consumer Product
Safety Commission, and that’s a lot. It’s not all, but it’s a good
chunk.”
‘We could take care of a lot of
food exposure through FDA regulation and toys through the Consumer
Product Safety Commission, and that’s a lot. It’s not all, but it’s a
good chunk,’ says Erik Olson of the Natural Resources Defense Council. Photograph: Alamy
Retailers could also play a significant role, as they have with other chemicals of concern. Target and Walmart both launched initiatives to reduce or eliminate toxic chemicals
from their shelves last year. Both retailers have said they will make
evidence-based purchasing decisions to protect their customers’ health.
With a mountain of scientific evidence piling up on phthalates, it can’t
be long before consumers begin to put pressure on retailers and
retailers in turn push their suppliers to find both alternatives to
phthalates and ways to remove the chemicals from their products
altogether.
Phthalates can fairly simply be removed altogether from products,
with no replacement, according to “green” chemist Bruce Akers. It’s when
the chemicals are used to create tubing or packaging that eliminating
them becomes tougher: “If you want soft, squeezable plastic, you’re
using phthalates,” Akers says.
But according to Whyatt, companies could be using flexible polymers
instead. “There are flexible polymers that don’t require a plasticizer –
they exist,” she says. “They haven’t been studied really, so we need to
know more, but they probably do not leech the way phthalates do. The
problem with phthalates as plasticizers is that they’re free floating,
they don’t attach to the polymer, so they leech easily. If you have a
flexible polymer that shouldn’t happen.”
Despite the size of the issue, Olson remains positive. “We’ve turned a
corner on the regulation of phthalates,” he says. “They’re extremely
widely used in the economy and it won’t be overnight that we’ll see
widespread phase-outs, but clearly we’ve crossed the river and we’re now
at the point of debating exactly which uses need to go and where we can
use alternatives.”
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