PERREAULT Magazine JAN | FEB 2016 | Page 70

Plastics, human health and environmental impacts: The road ahead.

No sector illustrates the inherent contradictions of plastic more than health care. A 2014 research review published in the Reviews on Environmental Health, “Plastics and Environmental Health: The Road Ahead,” notes that plastic is an ideal material for single-use disposable devices, because they’re “cost-effective, require little energy to produce, and are lightweight and biocompatible.” Yet the chemical compounds within plastic can damage human health. In their work, the scholars, Emily North and Rolf Halden of Arizona State University, summarize relevant research findings on the benefits, dangers, disposal of, and future innovative potential for plastics. The study received funding from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, a government research body.

Because of the omnipresence of plastics, the complexity of the substances that they release into the environment and the potential interaction of these substances, many questions exist on the safety of plastics for humans and the environment:

Detectable levels of bisephenol A (BPA) from plastics have been found in urine of 95% of adults in the United States. While the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approves the use of bisephenol A (BPA) for most food applications, in July 2012 the FDA amended its regulations to disallow the use of BPA in baby bottles, sippy cups and formula packaging. (Note: the reasons have a complicated regulatory and chemical industry-related backstory; the FDA, which continues to update its policies, notes that the “scientific field is evolving rapidly.”)

A 2010 study in the Annual Review of Public Health found that BPA has endocrine-disrupting properties. Tests indicate the possibility of health risks such as early sexual maturation, decreased male fertility and aggressive behavior. However, “the health risks of BPA are fiercely debated and, after more than 70 years of study, are still not fully understood. The stakes are high because exposure is ubiquitous and BPA-containing products are a multi-billion-dollar enterprise.”

di-(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate (DEHP), often used in polyvinyl chloride (PVC) products, leaches out easily and has been found to have a number of negative impacts: “Several rodent and human studies have found correlations between DEHP exposure and harmful health effects, including changes to the female and male reproductive systems, increased waist circumference and insulin resistance.”

Environmental exposure to plastic-related chemical compounds does not occur in isolation but as a “cocktail effect,” with unknown cumulative impacts. Components of plastics currently being studied for their health effects include polyhalogenated flame retardants, polyfluorinated compounds (known as PFOS or PFOA) and antimicrobial compounds such as triclosan and triclocarban.

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Sources: Rachael Stephens and Leighton Walter Kille

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