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By the time you walk out the door in the morning, after
slathering, and spritzing yourself with toner, moisturizer, eye cream,
foundation, blush, eye shadow, eyeliner, mascara, lipstick, gloss and perfume,
you may have put enough chemicals onto your body to be hazardous to your health.
Many of the chemicals in makeup have been linked to cancer, hormone imbalances
and skin irritation.

 

According to the Environmental Working Group, a nonprofit
environmental research organization, which conducted an assessment of more than
1,000 cosmetic brands, less than 1 percent are made from ingredients that have
all been evaluated for safety. “Some products contain carcinogens, reproductive
toxins and other chemicals that may pose health risks,” notes the group’s
website.

 

The Food and Drug Administration does not review cosmetic
ingredients for their safety before they come to market, nor does it have the
authority to recall hazardous products.

"Women face daily and widespread exposure to hundreds of
chemicals linked to breast cancer, and reducing – or even understanding – this
environmental contamination might do as much as screening or treatment to reduce
a woman’s risk of getting the cancer,"  says a report in the journal Cancer
by Susan G. Komen for the Cure and the Silent Spring Institute. (May 2007)

 

According to the Campaign for Safe Cosmetics, a program
that helps raise awareness about cancer-causing chemicals in cosmetics, the
average consumer (including teens) uses 15 to 25 cosmetic and personal-care
products a day. These contain about 200 chemicals that have been added to
preserve, dye and emulsify the products. Some are the same chemicals used in
industrial manufacturing to soften plastics, clean equipment and stabilize
pesticides.

 

One widely used group of synthetic chemicals, parabens, are
used as antimicrobial preservatives in more than 13,000 cosmetic products. The
Environmental Protection Agency states that all parabens — methyl, propyl, and
butyl — have been proved to interfere with the function of the endocrine
system, and these endocrine disruptors are stored in our body’s fatty tissues.
The Center for Children’s Health and the Environment at Mount Sinai School of
Medicine in New York says endocrine disruptors have been suspected of
contributing to reproductive and developmental disorders, learning problems and
immune system dysfunction in children.

 

This is especially alarming considering that young girls
are starting to use cosmetics earlier and more often. According to a 2004
cosmetic industry report by market research firm Mintel International Group, 90
percent of 14-year-old girls say they use makeup. The survey revealed that 63
percent of 7- to 10-year-olds now wear lipstick; more than 2 in 5 girls in that
same age group wear eye shadow or eyeliner, and almost 1 in 4 uses mascara.

 

The European Union recently passed a law banning the use of
suspected CMRs — carcinogens, mutagens or reproductive toxins — in any
cosmetics sold in the 25-member EU. The major U.S. cosmetics companies that sell
abroad have to reformulate their products to conform to EU safety guidelines,
but most haven’t changed the formulas they sell here. Avon, the self-proclaimed
“company for women,” hasn’t yet signed the Compact for Safe Cosmetics, a pledge
to remove carcinogens and other harmful ingredients from beauty products.

 

However, last September, bowing to pressure from
environmental groups and European lawmakers, Orly International and OPI
Products, two top beauty-salon brands, started selling reformulated nail
polishes without the chemicals dibutyl phthalate (DBP, a plasticizing ingredient
used to increase flexibility in nail polishes), formaldehyde and toluene, which
have been linked to cancer and birth defects.

 

Health advocacy groups say that when it comes to chemicals
that affect human health and the environment, better safe than sorry should be
the guiding principle.

 

Reading labels won’t always help you avoid these chemicals
because the beauty industry doesn’t always disclose every ingredient in its
products. For example, phthalates are rarely mentioned on labels, so there’s no
way to tell whether they’ve been used. Phthalates keep your mascara from
running, stop your nail polish from chipping and help fragrances linger. There’s
evidence that exposure to phthalates can harm the development of fetuses and
children. According to the Breast Cancer Fund, hundreds of animal studies have
shown that phthalates can damage the liver, kidneys, lungs and the reproductive
system, primarily of male offspring.

 

Health Care Without Harm, an umbrella organization of
dozens of environmental and health groups, lab-tested 72 cosmetics by major
brands such as Revlon, Calvin Klein, Christian Dior and Procter & Gamble and
found phthalates in 52 of their products.

The best way to protect yourself is to read labels (use a
magnifying glass if necessary!) and be suspicious: Words like “natural” or
“hypoallergenic” look reassuring, but they’re basically meaningless. The FDA has
no control over these labels. Products called “natural,” for instance, may
include synthetic dyes and fragrances. “Hypoallergenic” just means that the most
common irritants are left out, but other problematic chemicals might still be in
the mix.

 

“Fragrance-free” or “unscented” means a product has no
odor, but synthetic ingredients are often added to mask odors. Products without
the word “fragrance” on their label should be OK. Cosmetics labeled “organic”
must contain 70 percent or more organic ingredients (grown without the use of
pesticides), but read the ingredient list carefully. It’s important to choose
products from trusted cosmetic and body care companies that use natural,
certified organic, nontoxic and non-synthetic ingredients.

 

Look for these companies in your local health food store,
or online: Juice Beauty, Grateful Body, Max Green Alchemy (MGA), Dr. Hauschka,
Jurlique, Iredale, PeaceKeeper Cause-metics, Gabriel, Zuzu, Burt’s Bees, Lavera
and Pomega5.

 

While chemicals in any one product are unlikely to cause
harm, here’s the bottom line: We are repeatedly exposed to synthetic chemicals
from many sources each day. So even a small change, like switching to a nontoxic
lipstick, might make a difference in your health.

 

According to the Safe Cosmetics Campaign, avoid the
following chemicals in cosmetics whenever possible:

Butyl acetate

Butylated hydroxytoluene

Coal tar

Cocamide DEA/lauramide DEA

Diazolidinyl urea

Ethyl acetate

Formaldehyde

Parabens (methyl, ethyl, propyl and butyl)

Petrolatum

Phthalates

Propylene glycol

Sodium laureth/sodium laurel sulfate

Talc

Toluene

Triethanolamine

 

About the Author:

 

Beth Greer, "Super Natural
Mom" is former President of The Learning Annex, the largest private alternative
education company in the U.S.  She has conquered a tumor without drugs or
surgery, using alternative methods of healing and lives in Mill Valley with her
husband and 10-year-old daughter. Contact Beth at  beth@supernaturalmom.com.

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