Guest guest Posted December 29, 2007 Report Share Posted December 29, 2007 At 05:12 PM 12/29/07, you wrote: >GROUP SAYS INFANT FORMULA CANS POSE HEALTH RISK > >By Russell J. Dinnage, E & ENews PM reporter > >Major U.S. manufacturers of infant formula line their packages with >material that contains unsafe levels of a chemical linked to >reproductive problems, an advocacy group said in a report released >today. > >The Environmental Working Group said Nestle, Ross-Abbot, MeadJohnson >and PBM admitted using the chemical, bisphenol A, as an epoxy resin to >line cans of popular brands Good Start (Nestle), Similac (Ross-Abbot) >and Enfamil (MeadJohnson). > >And Ross-Abbot, MeadJohnson, PBM and Hain-Celestial use bisphenol A- >based linings on metal portions of their powdered formula cans, the >group said. Nestle did not provide the Washington-based group with >information on whether the chemical is used to line packages of its >powdered formula brands. > >The companies provided information about their use of bisphenol A in a >recent survey conducted by the environmental group. The survey asked >the companies about whether they use the chemical in packaging for >both liquid and powdered formula products. Among the questions: " Do >you use bisphenol A in cans of liquid and powdered formula? " And " Do >you test for bisphenol A in your products? " > >The report advises parents who use formula to choose the powdered >version because bisphenol A is more easily absorbed from the container >into liquid formula. Tests by both the EWG and Food and Drug >Administration show " 1 of every 16 infants fed [liquid] formula would >be exposed to the [bisphenol A] at doses exceeding those that caused >harm in laboratory studies, " the report says. The chemical is in every >brand of liquid formula in varying amounts, it says. > >The report also advises parents to buy formula in plastic containers >because non-metal packaging contains lower levels of leachable >bisphenol A. Also, parents should use formulas that require dilution >because adding water reduces the amount of the chemical entering a >baby's body. > >Bisphenol A is used in water and food containers, shatter-resistant >baby bottles and dental fillings. There is particular concern about >the chemical's effect on very young children. San Francisco passed a >ban on bisphenol A in toys last year over concerns about its potential >to harm reproductive systems. > >Scientists generally agree that bisphenol A, which is used in the >manufacturing of polycarbonate plastics, can cause reproductive >problems by blocking testosterone and mimicking estrogen. > >But the Food and Drug Administration maintains that small doses of the >chemical via food are not harmful to human health. > >The EWG findings follow past group studies that found that bisphenol A >is present in plastic baby bottles and that parents can best protect >their infant's health by using glass bottles. > > " Many parents have switched to [bisphenol A]-free bottles for their >infants. They certainly should have access to [bisphenol A]-free >formula as well, " EWG analyst Sonya Lunder said. " U.S. manufacturers >of infant formula and baby bottles can and should do the right thing >and remove this harmful chemical from their products. " ****** Kraig and Shirley Carroll ... in the woods of SE Kentucky http://www.thehavens.com/ thehavens 606-376-3363 --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.859 / Virus Database: 585 - Release 2/14/05 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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