In This Section
Donate Today!

Support our critical work and ensure a safer future for our children.

Support WTC

Get Your Puget Sound Community Card

Pesticide Free Zone

 

 

Get a Pesticide Free Zone sign for your yard.  Free for WA residents!

Safe Start For Kids
Safe Start For Kids

 
Safe Start for Kids is a resource for parents that will help you to choose safer products and create healthy environments for your children.

 
You are here: Home » Pressroom » Press Clips » Does plastics additive affect sexual development?*
Document Actions

Does plastics additive affect sexual development?*

By Robert McClure
Seattle PI September 16, 2008

Wow, what a big news day on the bisphenol A front. First, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is defending its decision of earlier this month that the stuff used in a variety of plastic products looks to be A-OK.

Wow, what a big news day on the bisphenol A front.

First, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is defending its decision of earlier this month that the stuff used in a variety of plastic products looks to be A-OK.
Picture
That comes as the Journal of the American Medical Association reports today on a study of BPA levels in nearly 1,500 Americans' urine that is the "first large-scale and high-quality population-representative (BPA) data set to become available," according to JAMA.

It found that people with the highest levels of BPA in their urine were most likely to have been diagnosed with heart disease and diabetes, and to have clinically abnormal concentrations of three liver enzymes. The study concludes:

Independent replication is now needed to confirm the associations reported. Because our analyses are based on urinary concentrations of BPA, which reflect recent exposure, studies based on repeat measurements over weeks, months, or even years would improve the assessment of longer-term exposure.

Here is a related JAMA editorial, also published today, by two leading critics of BPA.

And that's not all. In other developments:

  • The Investor Environmental Health Network is out with a new study that concludes consumers already are opting for BPA-free products, and industry is responding. Said Ivy Sager Rosenthal of the Washington Toxics Coalition:

    We hear a lot from parents and other consumers who are concernd about BPA in consumer products. There's definitely a public cry for safer products on store shelves. . . . It's encouraging not only that consumers are taking this into their own hands but (also) the marketplace has figured out that when consumers don't want this in their products, there are ways to come up with safer products.

  • Environmental Health News, which is expanding its role in journalism on toxics, is said to be releasing a new study this afternoon at a Senate Environment and Public Works Committee meeting. We'll try to update you on that if we can get more info.
  • At the same Senate hearing, the Government Accountability Office is said to be ready to release a report on how the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has performed on child-health issues.

    * Whoops. We forgot to mention that, previous to this latest finding on BPA corresponding with serious diseases, it's been strongly suspected as an endocrine disrupter, meaning it affects the development of the sexual reproduction system. And not in a good way, either.
    We should also mention that the industry has its own take on this subject.

  • Get Involved!

    Enter your e-mail address to stay informed and get involved.

    Events

    choices that can help you reduce your exposure to toxic chemicals

     Holiday Party Invite 2008

    Thursday December 4th
    in the Chapel at the GSC

    Employment

    Environmental Health Outreach Intern

    Environmental Advocacy Research Intern


     

    powered by Plone | site by ONE/Northwest and served with clean energy