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What We Carry Toxic chemicals and our body's burden. What is Body Burden?. The total amount of chemicals present in the human body at a given point in time. Every person alive today carries an average of at least 700 contaminants in his/her body. What is Biomonitoring?.
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What is Body Burden? • The total amount of chemicals present in the human body at a given point in time. • Every person alive today carries an average of at least 700 contaminants in his/her body.
What is Biomonitoring? • Biomonitoring is the direct measurement of people’s exposure to environmental contaminants by measuring substances or their metabolites in blood, urine, or other specimens. • Biomonitoring has become the standard for assessing people’s exposure to toxic substances and for responding to serious environmental public health problems.
Who does the testing? • Centers for Disease Control • Various Nonprofit organizations (Environmental Working Group, Commonweal, and others) • California passed SB 1379 in 2006
What’s in us? • Pesticides • Solvents • Perchlorate • Plasticizers • Flame retardants • Heavy metals (lead, mercury)
Example: Brominated Tris Flame Retardant Tris (2,3-dibromopropyl) phosphate • Used to treat children’s sleepwear from 1975 to 1977 in the US • Up to 10% of the weight of fabric • Padded on to fabric, not attached • Absorbed in children’s bodies; metabolite found in their urine • Science paper, January 1977 • Tris banned April 1977 Courtesy Green Science Policy Institutewww.greensciencepolicy.org
Potential Negative Health Impacts • Halogenated chemicals are often persistent, bioaccumulative and have been shown to cause a range of health impacts in animal studies, including: • Reproductive: Abnormal gonadal development, reduced number of ovarian follicles, reduced sperm count • Neurological: Decreased memory, learning deficits, altered motor behavior, hyperactivity • Interference with thyroid hormone action • Obesity and diabetes • Babies are born with such chemicals in their bodies and receive an additional dose from their mothers’ milk
Multiplying the effects • BIOACCUMULATION occurs when a compound is absorbed, or taken into the body and stored at a faster rate than it is metabolized (broken down) or excreted. • BIOMAGNIFICATION occurs when chemicals that persist in the environment become more concentrated as they move up the food chain and concentrate in tissues or internal organs. Each step in a typical food chain results in increased bioaccumulation, and therefore, biomagnification.
Who’s Most at risk? • Children are especially vulnerable. • Over 200 chemicals found in cord blood. • Exposure can result in changes to DNA that affect future generations.
Family Portrait • In 2004, the Hollands became the first intact nuclear family in the United States to undergo body burden testing. Rowan, at just 1½ years old, became the youngest child in the U.S. to be tested for chemical exposure.
The Cost to Our Health • Miscarriage and infertility are on the rise. • Girls are maturing earlier. • Disease and birth defects on the rise.
Reducing our burden • Some chemicals are long-lived, where others are more transient. • Protect against future exposures. • Support body’s natural defenses to eliminate built-up toxins.
What’s being done about it? • Recent bans on chemicals, in Canada, CA, and other states. • KSCA reform
What about breast milk? • Many chemicals are lipophilic (fat loving) and settle into the fat on our bodies and in our breast milk. • Nursing babies can be exposed to chemicals through breast milk.
Is Breast Still Best? • Absolutely! Despite the presence of toxic chemicals in breast milk, it is still the best milk for babies. • Studies show that breast milk can work to reverse damage from exposure to contaminants in the womb. • Breast milk is a natural resource, like our air, food, and water, that needs to be protected.
Minimizing babies’ exposure • Don’t fret about past exposure. You can’t undo what’s done. • Breastfeed your baby to provide a strong immune system that will help protect him/her from future exposures. • Eliminate sources of continued exposure in moms & baby’s environment. • Lose weight slowly. Chemicals stored in body fat can be “dumped” into breast milk and increase exposure in nurslings. • Increase your body’s ability to detoxify naturally by supporting your liver, kidneys, and elimination systems.
What YOU can do • Be aware of hazards in your home and your community. • Identify solutions to exposures and make changes in behavior. • Use the power of your pocketbook to support companies using safer chemicals. • Raise your voice to demand legislation for regulating chemicals to ensure safety.
About MOMS • Founded in 2005 by four nursing mothers in the Bay Area. • Has members in 50 states and 4 Canadian provinces. • Breast milk is the best milk—let’s keep it that way!
What We Do • Educate consumers • Support Progressive Legislation • Change Corporate Behavior
Recommended Reading • Having Faith, by Sandra Steingraber • Not Just a Pretty Face, by Stacy Malkan • The Body Toxic, by Nena Baker - • The Complete Organic Pregnancy, by Deidre Dolan and Alexandra Zissu • The New Breastfeeding Diet Plan, by Dr. Robert Roundtree • Our Stolen Future, by Theo Colborn, Diane Dumanski, and John Peterson Myers
How to get involved • Visit WWW.SafeMilk.ORG – We’re the nonprofit, not the company selling filters for breast pumps!! • Take action online, or in the street! • Donate time/resources – we can use all the help we can get!
Helpful Resources • GoodGuide (http://www.goodguide.com – Provides information on the health, environmental, and social impacts of products and companies. • SkinDeep (http://www.cosmeticsdatabase.com) – Rates personal care products based on their level of toxicity. • LactMed (http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov/cgi-bin/sis/htmlgen?LACT) – Database of substances and their effects on lactation. • Healthytoys.org (http://www.healthytoys.org) – Database of children’s toys rated for safety. • Scorecard (http://www.scorecard.org ) – Identify sources of pollution in your community.
Resources Cont’d • Our Water Our World (ourwaterourworld.org ) – Offers advice on how to treat pests without the use of harmful pesticides. • Pots, Pans, and Plastics (http://www.ewg.org/node/27686) - A Shopper's Guide to Food Safety. • Local Water Quality (http://www.epa.gov/safewater/dwinfo/index.html) - Find out what contaminants might be in your local water supply. • Seafood Watch (http://www.montereybayaquarium.org/cr/cr_seafoodwatch/content/media/MBA_SeafoodWatch_WestCoastGuide.pdf) - Pocket guide of highest and lowest contaminant fish. • Pesticides in Produce (http://www.foodnews.org/) – Pocket guide to the best and worst fruits & veggies in terms of pesticide contamination.