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The Perils of
Plastic: Your Cling Wrap Could be Leaching Chemicals
September-October 2003
Melisso Knopper
E Magazine
Open the refrigerator in a typical American home and you'll
find milk, orange juice and plenty of plastic. Every day,
we reach for individually wrapped cheese slices, dip spoons
into plastic yogurt cups and offer babies sips of milk from
plastic bottles.
If used with common
sense, plastics and food can be a safe combination, experts
say. But certain types of plastic are made with chemicals
that may cause health problems if they leach into food.
For example, meat defrosting in the microwave could pick
up chemicals from a styrofoam tray that starts to melt from
the high heat.
Beware of Plasticizers
In general, the
more flexible the plastic, the more likely it is to contain
plasticizers called phthalates, which make it more pliable.
While some phthalates are harmless, others may cause cancer.
Clear rigid plastic made of polycarbonate (used to make
baby bottles) also may leak the hormone-disrupting chemical
bisphenol A.
So think twice
before heating that takeout container in the microwave,
says Suzanne Snedeker, associate director of the Breast
Cancer and Environmental Risk Factors (BCERF) Program at
Cornell University. Plasticizers can leach into food at
high temperatures, Snedeker explains. "Some plasticizers
can mimic the effects of certain hormones-they're chemical
messengers in the body," she says.
Bisphenol A, used
in rigid polycarbonate plastics, mimics estrogen, which
is known to affect breast cancer risk. Bisphenol A is also
found in plastic cutlery, water bottles, tooth fillings
and the plastic coating inside canned fruits and vegetables.
Animal experiments have linked bishphenol A to an increased
risk for breast and prostate cancer, low sperm counts and
female infertility at very low levels of exposure.
Environmental health
advocates from Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth and the
National Environmental Trust are calling on the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration (FDA) to keep chemicals like bisphenol
A out of food containers, particularly baby bottles. Environmental
groups also want the FDA to require companies to disclose
the use of phthalates and compounds that mimic hormones
on plastic container labels.
"We should
be attempting to minimize our exposure to these things,"
says Tom Natan, a toxicologist and research director of
the National Environmental Trust. "In order to do that,
we have to know they are there."
Industry Assurance
So far, the FDA
and representatives from the plastics industry have resisted
these requests, arguing compounds like bisphenol A do not
leach out of plastic containers at high-enough levels to
pose any health threat. "We did a ton of testing and
supplied our results to the FDA," says Jerome Heckman,
general counsel for the Society of the Plastics Industry
(SPI). "They are satisfied it is not a problem."
But other scientists
and environmental groups say the FDA needs to take a closer
look at bisphenol A. For example, Frederick vomSaal, a University
of Missouri biologist, says the FDA should use independent
studies instead of industry data for its analysis of the
health risks associated with bisphenol A.
Data from bisphenol
A animal studies are significant, vomSaal says. So far,
about 50 research papers have shown harmful effects-everything
from an increased risk for diabetes to deformed genitals
in males. "It has been shown in birds, mammals, frogs,
fish, flies and snails," vomSaal says. "The reproductive
system of every type of animal is damaged by this chemical
in incredibly similar ways."
The FDA has not
yet required labels on plastic containers, but some companies
are taking steps to reassure customers their products are
safe. For example, the Clorox Company, which makes Glad
cling wrap and plastic containers, says none of its products
contain harmful phthalates. Instead, the company uses a
safer type of plastic-polyethylene-that does not require
additives for flexibility.
Clorox spokesperson
Jennifer Barnhart says consumers are too quick to assume
all plastic wrap brands are identical. And contrary to an
incorrect e-mail that has been circulating, she says, cling
wraps do not leach dioxin. "The bottom line is not
all plastics are the same," she says.
Another popular
brand, Saran Original, contains chlorine and plasticizers,
but not phthalates, according to manufacturer S.C. Johnson
& Sons. The company points to a Harvard research study
that shows the plasticizer used-acetyl tributyl citrate
(ATBC)-does not cause any health problems.
Gerber executives
did not respond to questions about the contents of their
plastic baby bottles. A call to its consumer hotline reveals
that its clear plastic bottles are made of polycarbonate.
A customer service employee said the company will not take
them off the market or mention polycarbonate on the label
until the FDA requires it.
Due to negative
publicity about phthalates, plastic wrap manufacturers are
now using a new class of plasticizers called adipates, says
Ted Schettler, science director of the Science and Environmental
Health Network. "We don't know as much about adipates
as we do about phthalates because they haven't been studied
as carefully yet," Schettler says.
Recommendations
Until scientists,
industry and government regulators settle their debates
over the issue, and until manufacturers start including
ingredients on their labels, shoppers will be left in the
dark about plastic food products, Schettler says. To help
consumers make safe decisions, Schettler and other environmental
health experts shared these common-sense tips:
Only buy plastic
wrap labeled "microwave safe" and keep it an inch
or two above food when heating. In general, wraps made of
polyethylene are safer than polyvinyl chloride (PVC) film.
Use non-plastic coverings to prevent splattering, such as
a glass or ceramic lid, wax paper or a cloth napkin.
Flexible margarine tubs or whipped topping containers will
warp or melt and leach chemicals in the microwave. Only
use plastic containers labeled "microwave safe."
Avoid PVC containers marked with the #3. Polycarbonate containers
are marked with #7. Polyethylene terephthalate (PET) #1,
polypropylene #5 and high density polyethylene (HPDE) #2
are less likely to have harmful additives.
Opt for glass or ceramic bowls and plates designed for microwave
use instead of plastic containers.
Call the manufacturer to find out if your clear, hard plastic
baby bottles are made of polycarbonate. If they have been
repeatedly boiled or washed in the dishwasher more than
20 times, or are badly scratched, throw them out.
"Do not put polycarbonate bottles in the microwave
to warm milk or formula, as this could cause bisphenol A
to leak into the liquid.
To be safe, trade polycarbonate bottles for colored or opaque
bottles made of safer plastics such as polyethylene. Evenflo
also makes shatter-resistant glass baby bottles. With all
of the uncertainty surrounding the safety of plastic containers,
some consumers feel they are better off avoiding them. "Most
people feel if a product is on the shelf it has been thoroughly
tested-but that simply is not the case," Schettler
says. "Given that political reality, why not try to
find safer alternatives?"
MELISSA KNOPPER is a Colorado-based
freelance writer.
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