The Daily Item, Sunbury, PA

News

June 17, 2008

Plastic risks: Both real and otherwise

Experts say there are bigger dangers out there

Plastic — we freeze our ice cubes in it, heat our leftovers in it, squirt our dish soap from it and wear it when it rains. It’s all around us. We use it every day. We cannot escape from it.

But is it safe?

The stories of the danger of dioxin leeching plastic have been around for years. The warning screams: “No plastic containers in the microwave! No water bottles in the freezer! No plastic wrap in the microwave!” Every time you freeze in it, or reheat in it, you’re warned — it’s leeching, dripping and oozing toxic dioxins into the contents of your container.

Exposure to dioxins have been linked to cancer, reproductive and developmental problems, can damage the immune system, interfere with hormonal systems, and are said to be a contributing cause of birth defects, endometriosis, diabetes, learning disabilities, immune system suppression, lung problems, skin disorders and more.

Is it true? And do we even care?

“With all the other toxins out there, including the one where people think it’s OK to disregard the Constitution, we don’t worry much about plastic bottles leaking harmful chemicals,” Walter Brasch, of Bloomsburg, said.



Can’t live without it

Nancy Smith, of Sunbury, uses numerous numbers of plastic things because convenience sells.

“I couldn’t live without Saran Wrap, though I don’t put it in the microwave anymore,” Smith said. “I do, however, double-wrap those breads I bake and put in the freezer. Nothing else keeps them as fresh or protects against freezer frostbite like that plastic wrap.” Is she fearful of those products?

“I would prefer to think there’s not as much danger in our plastic things than there is in the air we breathe or the water we drink,” Smith said. “But I don’t put my head in the sand, either. I don’t know that there’s a truly safe product this side of heaven’s gate.

“I pay attention and heed the warning on every product we use,” Smith added, “and I’m always on the lookout for safer products than those which we now use. Safer, that is, until a research lab discovers cancer-inducing agents in that safer product, too.”



Watch and learn

Paying attention and heeding the warnings on labels is exactly what the FDA recommends you do to assure consumers that products are safe.

The FDA states that microwave-safe plastic wraps, wax paper, cooking bags, parchment paper and white microwave-safe paper towels are safe to use. The FDA advises consumers to use products as intended including: use plastic containers only for their intended purpose; don’t reuse carry-out containers, margarine tubs and other containers not specifically designed for the microwave or freezer; discard single use microwave containers after you use them; and make sure microwave-safe plastic wrap is placed loosely over food so that steam can escape and it does not come in direct contact with your food.

Substances used to make plastic can indeed leech into your food, but the FDA has assessed the minute levels were found to be within a safe level, and those levels don’t include leeching dioxin. Dioxins are not in food-safe plastic or in plastic wrap and are not formed in the microwave.



Hormonal mimics

But there may still be reason to fear that leeching plastic, even if it isn’t leeching dioxin.

“Several European studies found that many plasticizers migrated from plastic containers and wraps into foods as they were heated in microwave ovens. Some of the chemicals were absorbed in high quantities (several hundreds of milligrams per kilogram food),” Dr. Rolf Halden, assistant professor in the Department of Environmental Health Sciences and the Center for Water and Health at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, said in an interview with The Office of Communications and Public Affairs. “The amount of chemical absorbed by the food depended on the temperature of the container and food, the duration of the heating, the type of plastic used and its initial plasticizer content, as well as the type of food being heated.

“As a general rule, the fattier the food, the more of the chemicals potentially can be absorbed and retained by it.”

The chemicals in question are phthalates “which are environmental contaminants that can exhibit hormone-like behavior by acting as endocrine disruptors in humans and animals,” Dr. Halden said. “These ‘synthetic hormones’ may pose a special risk to susceptible populations such as children, who are more vulnerable because they are still developing. But again, it’s not clear how much exposure to these chemicals is occurring.”

So should we be worried?

“In general, most studies of the kind are based on very high concentrations and/or very levels of exposure that simply cannot occur within the real world setting (i.e., no one can actually consume 50,000 ounces of water each day from water bottles left out in the sun),” assures Dr. Richard Dowell, a neuropsychologist at Evangelical Community Hospital. “The studies simply identify the potential negative impact of a material by exaggerating the dose. However, the actual risk to humans is rarely, if ever, known because exposures are so (relatively speaking) small.

“So, while there may be a risk,” Dowell added, “it is very small. You probably would be better served to worry about being injured in a motor vehicle accident, about dying from use of alcohol while driving, about the negative effects of cigarette smoking, about being killed or having your child killed in Iraq, about the senseless $12 billion a month we spend on the war in Iraq while our gas prices climb and our country is less safe than four years ago.”

If you’re still concerned and you want to minimize your exposure to these chemicals, the solution is simple: Recycle the plastic and use glass, ceramics and stainless steel containers instead.

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