
According to a new analysis, plastic products marketed for infants or labeled "microwave safe" (including those stamped with "safe" plastic numbers 1, 2, and 5) leached out potentially toxic levels of a chemical called bisphenol-A (BPA) when heated in a microwave. BPA is an endocrine disruptor, meaning that it mimics or interferes with human hormones; endocrine disruptors have been linked to reproductive, neural, immune, and developmental abnormalities. BPA exposure has also been found to correlate with obesity, heart disease, adult-onset diabetes, and blood abnormalities in liver function tests in adults.
According to the analysis:
The amounts detected were at levels that scientists have found cause neurological and developmental damage in laboratory animals. The problems include genital defects, behavioral changes and abnormal development of mammary glands. The changes to the mammary glands were identical to those observed in women at higher risk for breast cancer.The newspaper's test results raise new questions about the chemical and the safety of an entire inventory of plastic products labeled as "microwave safe." BPA is a key ingredient in common household plastics, including baby bottles and storage containers. It has been found in 93% of Americans tested.
The newspaper tests also revealed that BPA, commonly thought to be found only in hard, clear plastic and in the lining of metal food cans, is present in frozen food trays, microwaveable soup containers and plastic baby food packaging.
The highest level of leaching was found in a container of Enfamil liquid baby formula and a Rubbermaid storage container.
Who did this important analysis? Not the FDA—the government agency responsible for making sure the foods and drugs we consume are safe. They think BPA is fine for human consumption—a finding that earned the agency a strong rebuke from a panel of independent scientists earlier this year. No, the analysis was done by two investigative journalists for the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel. Although the FDA is "reevaluating" its declaration that BPA is harmless, it's unlikely much will happen under the current administration—just another reason to hope that Obama replaces the heads of our regulatory agencies with people who actually care about regulating industry, not just coddling it.
Comments (30) RSS