There's increasing concern about the risks of chemicals in personal care products. The Independent reports that the growing use of cosmetics and toiletries, which contain many known toxic or untested chemicals, may be harming children who will develop cancer and fertility problems as adults.
In recent years, research has connected health problems with untested chemicals regularly used in products such as nail polish, shaving gels and lotions. Because health studies are not required, most personal care products in the United States contain ingredients that have never been tested for safety. Little is known about the health effects of repeated exposures to small doses of untested chemicals over a consumer's lifetime.
An EWG investigation of beauty products reported that scientists are finding high levels of a chemical called dibutyl phthalate in women of reproductive age, placing them at possible risk of birth defects. EWG's investigation pushed several cosmetics companies to phase out this chemical.
Related News
Continue Reading
States, not the FDA, are now the front lines of food safety
Evidence keeps mounting about the health risks of common food chemicals. At the same time, Americans are waking up to the fact that the federal government not only doesn’t vet the chemicals used in...
If Trump won’t ban glyphosate, he can at least reduce kids’ exposure to it
Last week, President Donald Trump invoked the Defense Production Act to boost the American supply of glyphosate-based herbicides, declaring the controversial weedkiller essential to national security...
How a new House bill could gut state protections from harmful chemicals
State bans on toxic chemicals – including cancer-causing formaldehyde in children’s products and the “forever chemicals” known as PFAS in clothing and other consumer products – are under threat from...
Scalp exposure: New study finds harmful chemicals in almost all hair extensions
More than nine in 10 hair extensions sold in the U.S. contain chemicals linked to serious health harms, including cancer and hormone disruption, a new peer-reviewed study finds.
The study raises...