Showing posts with label Bisphenol A. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bisphenol A. Show all posts

Dismay over EU decision not to ban baby bottle chemical bisphenol-A

    Unlike Canada, for instance, the EU decides not to ban BPA – WHY?

    by Michael Smith (Veshengro)

    European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) says that there is no convincing evidence to cause it to ban or further restrict exposure to the controversial chemical bisphenol-A used in plastic bottles and containers.

    Health campaigners have reacted with dismay after EU officials decided against restricting or banning bisphenol-A (BPA), despite evidence of links to breast cancer and other health issues.

    BPA is a synthetic chemical used to make plastic drinking bottles, baby bottles and storage containers as well as the lining of some food and drink cans. It is applied as a coating to the insides of food cans, which can then be heated to kill off bacteria without the metal in the can contaminating the food contents.

    European food safety officials say the current evidence does not provide convincing evidence of the toxicity of BPA. It is amazing, however, that Canada banned it and other countries consider doing the same on the evidence the Canadians have. The Canadian government health department seems to be having evidence which the EU just tosses aside. Or is there more to this?

    Is there, maybe, just maybe, something else behind this. Could it be that the origins of BPA are found in one or the other EU member states and that big bucks are made by the chemical companies making it?

    The re-assessment came after new studies reported adverse effects on animals exposed to BPA at low doses, including on their nervous system, immune system and susceptibility to breast cancer.

    There have also been studies suggesting a link between exposure to BPA and coronary heart disease and reproductive disorders.

    Earlier this year, an alliance of groups, including WWF, Breast Cancer UK and The Health and Environment Alliance (HEAL) backed an open letter sent sent by 21 scientists to EFSA saying they feared exposure to BPA could damage health, particularly among vulnerable groups such as babies and pregnant women.

    The National Cancer Institute in the US has also recently called for the use of BPA in consumer products to be more tightly regulated.

    However, in a statement issued this week, Efsa said: 'These studies have many shortcomings. At present the relevance of these findings for human health cannot be assessed, though should any new relevant data become available in the future, the Panel will reconsider this opinion.'

    A spokesperson for HEAL said it was shocked and dismayed by Efsa's decision, which comes despite other countries such as Taiwan, Canada, Denmark, Sweden and France all pronouncing BPA as toxic and hazardous to health.

    Breast Cancer UK said it would be continuing to push for a ban on BPA being used in baby bottles.

    'We will continue our No More BPA campaign until this public health issue has been acknowledged and we call on the UK Government to ignore EFSA and take the initiative by banning the use of BPA in baby and toddler products throughout the UK,' said chair Claire Dimmer.

    It is astonishing that the European Union, generally always in the forefront of banning anything that just remotely could be a problem, has decided against banning BPA despite evidence to its dangers and other countries having banned the substance or intending to ban it. I smell something rather fishy in this here.

    © 2010

Post Title

Dismay over EU decision not to ban baby bottle chemical bisphenol-A


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2010/10/dismay-over-eu-decision-not-to-ban-baby.html


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Bisphenol A may make you stupid and depressed

    According to a new study BPA may interfere with learning and with memory and remembering

    by Michael Smith

    Bisphenol A, found in hard plastic containers, may interfere with how we learn and remember, researchers at the University of Guelph have discovered.

    Coinciding with the release of the National Toxicology Program report on BPA, a new study reports that researchers from the Yale School of Medicine and Guelph University exposed African Green monkeys on the Island of St. Kitts to low levels of Bisphenol A for a month. They found that even low doses of BPA slow down the synapses in the brain.

    "It dramatically impairs the formation of synapses in the regions of the brain important to learning," biomedical science professor Neil MacLusky of the University of Guelph said.

    "These findings are worrisome”, he said, “because BPA is one of the most widely-used chemicals in the world."

    Researchers say there is a possibility that BPA might be a factor in brain diseases such as Alzheimer's, depression and schizophrenia. Oh cheers, pal!

    According to Medical News Today, This synaptic loss may cause memory/learning impairments and depression, according to study results published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

    "Our primate model indicates that BPA could negatively affect brain function in humans," said study co-author Tibor Hajszan, M.D., associate research scientist in Yale Ob/Gyn. "Based on these new findings, we think the EPA may wish to consider lowering its 'safe daily limit' for human BPA consumption."

    Hajszan said that although daily exposure of an average person to BPA usually does not reach the level that was applied in this study, human exposure to BPA is not limited to a single month, but rather is continuous over a lifetime. "The negative effect of BPA may also be amplified when estradiol levels are naturally lower than in healthy adults. That is why exposure to BPA may particularly be risky in the case of babies and the elderly."

    BPA is used in plastic water bottles, some baby bottles, dental prostheses and sealers,
    the lining inside of food cans, and probably other applications we may not even aware of publicly as yet. The chemical can leak from the products and be absorbed through eating or drinking.

    At least, as far as water bottles are concerned there are now 100% BPA free ones available such as the “We Want Tap” water bottle recently reviewd in the pages of this journal.

    While the government of Canada has banned BPA, a move which forced Nalgene to remove all its sports bottles and other water bottles from the shelves, the US Federal Drug and Administration is perfectly happy with industry funded research that states that the chemical is safe and the FDA basically says that BPA is safe for babies and everyone else.

    The worrying fact is that despite more than 100 published studies by government scientists and university laboratories that have raised health concerns about a chemical compound that is central to the multibillion-dollar plastics industry, the Food and Drug Administration has deemed it safe largely because of two studies, both funded by an industry trade group. May one ask how much bung money has come the agency's way to accept such findings?

    So much for an organization that is supposed to be protecting the health of the nation. With organizations as reliable that them in place the American people sure do not need enemies.

    © M Smith (Veshengro), September 2008
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Post Title

Bisphenol A may make you stupid and depressed


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2008/09/bisphenol-may-make-you-stupid-and.html


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