(Washington, DC) -- A study of products designed for newborns, babies, and toddlers – including car seats, breast feeding pillows, changing pads, crib wedges, bassinet mattresses and other items made with polyurethane foam – were found to contain multiple toxic chemical flame retardants, according to a peer-reviewed study published in Environmental Science & Technology Journal.
Flame retardants are considered some of the most dangerous chemicals on the market, because they are persistent in the environment and bio-accumulate in people and wildlife. Adverse impacts of these chemicals can include: mutagenic damage to DNA, cancer, neurological toxicity, reproductive toxicity, developmental toxicity, and immune system damage, among others.
These hazardous substances are not regulated under current federal chemicals policy -- the 1976 Toxic Substances Control Act. However, the pending “Safe Chemicals Act of 2011” would overhaul this law and ensure that these toxic chemicals were phased out and replaced with safe alternatives. The proposed legislation designates chemicals that persist in the environment and build up in people’s blood and tissue as “Priority 1” chemicals. EPA would be required to identify chemicals with these properties and restrict their use to the maximum extent feasible. The flame retardants studied would clearly meet the criteria.
“These are the worst kind of chemicals, and they are a potent symbol of the complete breakdown in chemical management in this country.” said Andy Igrejas, Director of Safer Chemicals, Healthy Families. “You bring them into your home hidden in consumer products that seem benign. But they get out of products and into your bloodstream where they begin to damage your health. The government doesn’t do anything about it and that needs to change.”
Stronger electrical codes and modernized building and fire codes, as well as increased use of smoke detectors, sprinkler systems, and self-extinguishing cigarettes, will all continue to help prevent fires without using toxic chemicals. These measures, plus an overall decrease in cigarette smoking in the U.S., have helped reduce fire deaths by 60% since 1980, making increasing use of chemical flame retardants unwise and unnecessary.
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The Safer Chemicals, Healthy Families coalition represents more than 11 million individuals and includes parents, health professionals, advocates for people with learning and developmental disabilities, reproductive health advocates, environmentalists and businesses from across the nation. For more information visit our website at www.saferchemicals.org.