If you choose “antibacterial” products because you trust
them to kill germs, think again. According to recent studies,
antiseptic ingredients added to numerous products are not effective and
may actually be harmful.
In 2005, a U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) panel
concluded that there is “no added benefit” from using antimicrobial
products over plain soap and water. There’s also toxicity to consider.
Researchers at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
discovered that one of the most popular antimicrobials, the pesticide
triclocarban (TCC), defies water treatment methods after we wash our
hands of it. Once it’s flushed down drains, about 75 percent of TCC
makes it through treatments meant to break it down, and it ends up in
our surface water and in municipal sludge. This sludge is regularly
applied to U.S. crop fields as a fertilizer, meaning the chemical could
potentially accumulate in our food, too.
According to Rolf Halden, assistant professor in the
Department of Environmental Health Sciences at Johns Hopkins and lead
author of the most recent study, TCC contaminates 60 percent of U.S.
streams. In addition, he says it is known to cause cancer and
reproductive problems in mammals, and blue-baby syndrome in human
infants.
Introducing an antimicrobial into the environment in
this way also has the unwanted effect of increasing pathogens’
resistance to clinically important antibiotics. The antiseptic triclosan
— another popular antimicrobial added to numerous products — is known
to promote the growth of resistant bacteria, including E. coli. In fact,
the American Medical Association (AMA) took an official stance in 2000
against adding antimicrobials to consumer products. The AMA has
repeatedly urged the FDA to better regulate these chemicals, advising
that they should be avoided “until the data emerge to show
antimicrobials in consumer products are effective at preventing
infection.”
Currently, there is no mandatory monitoring of TCC, but
approximately 1 million pounds of it are released annually in the United
States. Since 2000, about 1,500 new antibacterial products have hit
store shelves.
Halden says the irony of his research is two-fold: “First, to protect
our health, we mass-produce and use a toxic chemical which the FDA has
determined has no scientifically proven benefit. Second, when we try to
do the right thing by recycling biosolids, we end up spreading a known
reproductive toxicant on the soil where we grow our food.” He emphasizes
the importance of considering the full life cycle of the chemicals we
manufacture.Source : http://www.motherearthnews.com/natural-health/why-you-dont-need-antibacterial-soap.aspx
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