Ingredients in many baby foods, including some organic fare, are contaminated with heavy metals like arsenic, lead and cadmium at levels that are far higher than those allowed in products like bottled water, congressional investigators said Thursday.
Environmentalists are urging EPA to consider regulating certain uses and exposure pathways of 1,4-dioxane under TSCA even though the Trump administration excluded them from its controversial evaluation of the substance, arguing that the benefits that accrue from such rules could justify any regulations.
Congressional investigators have reported that ingredients in many popular baby foods are laced with heavy metals like lead, cadmium, and arsenic. According to the reports released on Feb. 4, 2021, these toxic levels are found to be much higher than those allowed in other products — such as bottled water.
Ingredients in many baby foods, including some organic fare, are contaminated with heavy metals such as arsenic, lead, and cadmium at levels that are far higher than those allowed in products such as bottled water, congressional investigators said Thursday.
Testing found high levels of arsenic, lead and cadmium in some ingredients, congressional investigators said.
Over the past few weeks, you may have heard about the class action lawsuits filed against Tresemmé for its shampoo containing formaldehyde-releasing preservative DMDM hydantoin allegedly causing hair loss. Switching to products without formaldehyde is a great start, but it's not the only ingredient worth paying attention to in your beauty products.
Understanding of the relationship between chemicals and pollutants and reproductive health is advancing rapidly—and now you can have access to leading experts to stay on top of the latest science and ways to improve your health.
Wendy Hartley, whose son Kevin died at age 21 after using a toxic paint stripper, met with ex-EPA chief Scott Pruitt two years ago to urge him to ban a chemical in the stripper that has killed people since 1947.
This week, Erik and I were communicating with a friend and colleague who is an expert technical consultant for TSCA risk evaluations. Specifically, we were exchanging emails on how EPA interprets conditions of use. Our “virtual” conversation prompted me to look this morning at the PV 29 updated risk evaluation – comments are due on EPA’s update to this document by the end of the month.
Former top Obama administration officials, academics and public health groups have crafted a comprehensive set of science and risk-based recommendations for the incoming Biden administration which they say would make EPA’s TSCA program more health protective, including for chemical evaluations, environmental justice and other policy areas.
A new paper by researchers at the University of California San Francisco (UCSF) charges that EPA’s methods for ranking studies for use in its TSCA and other chemical evaluations discard studies based on quality factors that may not be appropriate and that other review approaches do not use, resulting in fewer studies being used to answer key questions.
The recent spate of wildfires across Northern California has caused a new concern for expectant parents already dealing with worries over the COVID-19 pandemic: Could exposure to toxic smoke and ash have a lasting impact on babies’ and mothers’ prenatal and postnatal health?
Environmental health researchers are raising concerns that EPA could adopt all or parts of a chemical industry risk assessment for a siloxane chemical after the agency accepted the industry’s request to evaluate the substance under TSCA, the third such request EPA has accepted from manufacturers but the first to contain an industry assessment.
A university researcher is suggesting the agency redo a core component of its risk analysis for methylene chloride, which causes non-cancer effects to the nervous system, in a way that it usually assesses cancer risks -- an approach that could bolster any cost-benefit analysis the agency conducts to justify its upcoming risk management rules under TSCA.
Studies have linked certain per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) to adverse birth outcomes in rodents, such as pregnancy loss, reduced growth, and pup death.