It’s up to us
to keep children safe from toxics
Children in the world
today are exposed to thousands of environmental toxics, and these toxic
chemicals are making our children sick.
More than 85,000 new
chemicals have been brought to market by the chemical manufacturing industry
since 1950.
These are chemicals that never before existed on earth. They can be found today in vast numbers of consumer products that include soaps, shampoos, children's clothing, toys, car seats, chemical herbicides, neurotoxic insecticides, blankets and baby bottles.
These are chemicals that never before existed on earth. They can be found today in vast numbers of consumer products that include soaps, shampoos, children's clothing, toys, car seats, chemical herbicides, neurotoxic insecticides, blankets and baby bottles.
Many have become
widespread in the environment. They are in air, water and soil and in our
homes, schools and communities. They can be found in even the farthest corners
of the planet—in the deep trenches of the Pacific Ocean and the Arctic and
Antarctic ice caps.
Environmental toxics get
into people. Biomonitoring studies conducted by the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (the CDC) routinely find many dozens of toxic chemicals in the
bodies of all Americans of all ages—in blood, in urine, in the umbilical cord
blood of newborn infants, and in the breast milk of nursing mothers.
Environmental toxics
cause disease, and children are exquisitely sensitive to disease caused by
chemicals.
Exposures in early development—during pregnancy and in the first years after birth are especially dangerous. Early-life exposures to air pollution cause asthma, which has tripled in frequency since 1980 and become the leading cause of pediatric hospitalization and school absenteeism.
Exposures in early development—during pregnancy and in the first years after birth are especially dangerous. Early-life exposures to air pollution cause asthma, which has tripled in frequency since 1980 and become the leading cause of pediatric hospitalization and school absenteeism.
Prenatal exposures to
phthalates cause birth defects in the reproductive organs of baby boys.
Prenatal exposures to organophosphate insecticides, brominated flame
retardants, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), phthalates and bisphenol-A damage
children's brains to cause disorders of neurobehavioral development such as
dyslexia, mental retardation, attention deficit/ hyperactivity disorder and
autism.
Prenatal exposures to benzene and pesticides can cause childhood cancer, especially leukemia and brain cancer.
Prenatal exposures to benzene and pesticides can cause childhood cancer, especially leukemia and brain cancer.
The federal government
is not doing a good job of protecting our children against environmental
toxics. Many members of Congress and the leadership of the Environmental
Protection Agency have been corrupted by the chemical manufacturing industry,
and the power of this industry has never been greater.
Chemicals are simply
presumed to be safe, are given a free pass and brought to market with no
evaluation of their safety or toxicity
Then time and again these chemicals have been found to cause disease in children. Even when toxic chemicals have been proven to cause harm to children's health, government agencies refuse to take action.
Then time and again these chemicals have been found to cause disease in children. Even when toxic chemicals have been proven to cause harm to children's health, government agencies refuse to take action.
We are seeing this
happen today with refusal by EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt to ban the toxic
insecticide chlorpyrifos, despite the finding by scientists in his own agency
that this chemical can injure the brains of unborn babies in the womb.
Earlier
this year, the EPA rejected a petition to ban the pesticide chlorpyrifos, which
poses big health risks to children. But the health threats posed by toxins go
way beyond chlorpyrifos, explains leading researcher @BrucePLanphear http://ow.ly/onyk30gD2dI
Fortunately, all of us
who care about children—parents, grandparents, teachers, doctors and
nurses—have great power. We can educate ourselves about the environmental
toxics that harm our children, and armed with that knowledge we take action to
protect our children's health.
First, we can act within
our own homes. Every parent is the CEO of their home and has the power to
decide which products to buy and which to avoid, what to bring into the home
and what to leave outside.
Buying organic is a very smart move. Families who eat a mainly organic diet have 90 percent less pesticides in their bodies than families who eat conventionally grown foods.
Buying organic is a very smart move. Families who eat a mainly organic diet have 90 percent less pesticides in their bodies than families who eat conventionally grown foods.
Another effective action
is to avoid or at least minimize pesticide use. Instead of routinely spraying
your kitchen or your lawn with chemical pesticides, read up on Integrated Pest
Management and use pesticides as a last resort rather than a first line of
defense.
School is another place
where you can take action to protect your children. Children spend many hours
of each day in school and day care. Talk with your school principal or local
elected officials about creating a child-safe school environment. Make sure
that your child's school has no asbestos and no lead paint. Be wary of
synthetic turf fields. Insist on child-safe art supplies.
Finally, you can take
action on the political stage—in your city or town, in your county or state, or
even nationally. We have come to learn that the people we elect to office can
make an enormous difference for the health of our children—for better or for
worse. We have been reminded that democracy is not a spectator sport.
Effective democracy that
protects the health of our children demands that we all become involved. We all
need to vote, some of us need to join advisory committees, and some of us may
even want to run for public office.
Children are our most
precious resource and they are our future. They are ours to protect.
Dr. Philip J. Landrigan is a pediatrician,
epidemiologist and Dean for Global Health at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount
Sinai. Mary Landrigan is a public health educator. They recently
co-authored Children and Environmental Toxins:
What Everyone Needs to Know.