Cosmetics and Breast Cancer

 

Because testing is voluntary and controlled by the cosmetic manufacturers, many ingredients in cosmetic products are not tested for safety. The Environmental Working Group's report Skin Deep states that 89% of ingredients used in personal care products have not been evaluated for safety by the Cosmetic Ingredient Review (CIR) panel, the FDA, nor any other publicly accountable institution (FDA 2000, CIR 2003). The absence of governmental oversight for this $35 billion industry means that companies routinely market products with ingredients that are poorly studied, not studied at all, or worse, known to pose potentially serious health risks. It's time to protect consumers.
Many cosmetics contain chemicals known as parabens and phthalates, which recent studies indicate may be linked to cancer development.


Many cosmetic companies argue that the level of a harmful chemical in any one product is not enough to harm you, based on studies of chemical exposure in adults. However, science is finding the timing of exposure is crucial, and that even a very small dose of some chemicals can have serious consequences in children and young women who are still developing.

And we are rarely exposed to a chemical just one time. We may use the same product every day, several days a week, for months or years. In addition, we use dozens of personal care products daily, not just one. So while exposure from one product on one day may be small, the fact is we use numerous products a day for extended periods of time. As a result, scientists are finding chemicals such as parabens and phthalates accumulating in our bodies.

Many diseases like cancer, asthma, birth defects and learning disabilities are on the rise, and there is growing evidence that these health problems are linked to the chemicals we are exposed to in our air, water, food, and everyday products. It's time we start acting to protect human health. The Precautionary Principle, a common sense approach to chemical use, says "an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure".

List of Paraben-Free Cosmetics Companies


If you don't see your cosmetics company here you can:

 

List of Phthlate-Free Cosmetics Companies

 

The Difficulty in Avoiding Phthalates

All US cosmetics and personal care products are required list their ingredients in order of their relative quantity, with the most frequently used ingredient listed first. However, any ingredients used in fragrances or mixtures are considered trade secrets and are exempt from these requirements. Phthalates are frequently components of fragrance, which often contains dozens of chemicals. The entire mixture simply appears as “fragrance” on the ingredient list. Thus, reading labels cannot assure there are no phthalates in a product.
This fragrance and trade secret loophole gives consumers little power to avoid phthalates when purchasing their personal care products.  E-mail or call the company to ask them if your product contains phthalates.
After extensive research, BCA was able to find some natural cosmetic companies that make products without phthalates, but this is not meant to be an exhaustive list of all companies that are phthalates-free.

 

© 2010, Breast Cancer Action
Articles on detection and treatment do not constitute endorsements but are intended solely to inform.
Call or email for permission before reprinting. Requested annual donation is $50, but no one refused for lack of funds.
“Breast Cancer Action” and the BCA logo are the registered trademarks of Breast Cancer Action. All rights reserved. Not to be used without express written permission.