Nicholas Kristof gets it!
Nicholas Kristof had an editorial in the New York Times on February 25, 2018. This is a reproduction of his editorial:
Our bodies are full of poisons from products we use every day. I know – I’ve had my urine tested for them. Surprised? So was I when I had my urine tested for these chemicals. (A urine or blood test is needed to confirm whether you have been exposed.)
Let me stress that mine should have been clean.
Almost a decade ago, I was shaken by my reporting! on a class of toxic chemicals called endocrine disruptors. They are linked to cancer and obesity and also seemed to feminize males, so that male alligators developed stunted genitalia and male smallmouth bass produced eggs.
In humans, endocrine disruptors were linked to two-headed sperm and declining sperm counts. They also were blamed for an increase in undescended testicles and in a birth defect called hypospadias, in which the urethra exits the side or base of the penis rather than the tip. Believe me, the scariest horror stories are found in urology journals. If you’re a man, you don’t wring your hands as you read; you clutch your crotch.
So I’ve tried for years now to limit my exposure to endocrine-disrupting chemicals. Following the advice of the President’s Cancer Panel, I eat organic to reduce exposure to endocrine disruptors in pesticides. I try to store leftover meals in glass containers, not plastic. I avoid handling A.T.M. and gas station receipts. I try to avoid flame-retardant furniture.
Those are all common sources of toxic endocrine disruptors, so I figured that my urine would test pristine. Pure as a mountain creek.
Here are 12 chemicals found in everyday products:
Chemical | Details | Found in products like: |
Antimicrobials | Can interfere with thyroid and other hormones | Colgate Total toothpaste, soap, deodorant |
Benzophenones | Can mimic natural hormones like estrogen | Sunscreen, lotions, lip balm |
Bisphenols | Can mimic natural hormones like estrogen | Protective lining for canned goods, hard plastic water bottles, thermal paper register receipts. |
1,4-Dichlorobenzene | Can affect thyroid hormones and my increase risk of cancer | Mothballs, toilet deodorizers |
Parabens | Can mimic natural hormones like estrogen | Cosmetics, personal care products like shampoos, hair gels, lotions |
Phthalates | Can disrupt male reproductive development and fertility
|
Vinyl shower curtains, fast food, nail polish, perfume/cologne |
Fragrance Chemicals | Can exacerbate asthma symptoms and disrupt natural hormones. | Perfume/cologne, cleaning products, dryer sheets, air fresheners |
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) | Can affect hormones, immune response in children, and may increase risk of cancer. | Scotchgard and other stain-resistant treatments, fast-food wrappers. |
Flame Retardants | Can affect neurodevelopment and hormone levels, and may increase risk of cancer | Nail polish, foam cushioning in furniture, rigid foam insulation. |
The Silent Spring Institute near Boston, which studies chemical safety, offers a “Detox Me Action Kit” to help consumers determine what harmful substances are in their bodies. Following instructions, I froze two urine samples (warning my wife and kids that day to be careful what food they grabbed from the freezer) and Fed-Exed them off for analysis.
By the way, the testing is for women, too. Men may wince as they read about miniaturized alligator penises, but endocrine disruptors have also been linked to breast cancer and gynecological cancers. The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists warns women that endocrine disruptors can also cause miscarriages, fetal defects and much more.[1]
As I waited for the lab results, I continued to follow the latest research. One researcher sent a bizarre video of a mouse exposed to a common endocrine disruptor doing back flips nonstop, as a kind of nervous tic.
Finally, I heard back from Silent Spring Institute. I figured this was a report card I had aced. I avoid all that harmful stuff. In my columns, I had advised readers how to avoid it.
Sure enough, I had a low level of BPA, best known because plastic bottles now often boast “BPA Free.” But even a diligent student like me failed the test. Badly. I had high levels of a BPA substitute called BPF. Ruthann Rudel, a toxicologist who is the head of research at Silent Spring, explained that companies were switching to BPF even though it may actually be yet more harmful (it takes longer for the body to break it down). BPF is similar to that substance that made those mice do back flips.
“These types of regrettable substitutions — when companies remove a chemical that has a widely known bad reputation and substitute a little-known bad actor in its place — are all too common,” Rudel told me. “Sometimes we environmental scientists think we are playing a big game of whack-a-mole with the chemical companies.”
Sigh. I thought I was being virtuous by avoiding plastics with BPA, but I may have been causing my body even more damage.
My urine had an average level of an endocrine disruptor called triclosan, possibly from soap or toothpaste. Like most people, I also had chlorinated phenols (perhaps from mothballs in my closet).
I had a high level of a flame retardant called triphenyl phosphate, possibly from a floor finish, which may be “neurotoxic.” Hmm. Whenever you see flaws in my columns, that’s just my neurotoxins at work.
My lab results: high levels of FOUR chemicals were found
CHEMICAL | DETAILS |
1,4- DICHLOROBENZENE | Can affect thyroid hormones and may increase risk of cancer |
ANTIMICROBIALS | Can interfere with thyroid and other hormones |
BISPHENOLS | Can mimic natural hormones like estrogen |
FLAME RETARDANTS | Can affect neurodevelopment and hormone levels, and may increase risk of cancer |
BENZOPHENONES | Can mimic natural hormones like estrogen |
PARABENS | Can mimic natural hormones like estrogen |
Notes: Benzophenones and parabens were also found, but in lower levels than in most Americans. Tests for phthalates and fragrance chemicals were not included.
Will these endocrine disruptors give me cancer? Make me obese? Make my genitals fall off? Nobody really knows. At least I haven’t started doing random back flips yet.
The steps I took did help, and I recommend that others consult consumer guides such as at ewg.org to reduce their exposures to toxic chemicals. Likewise, if I had downloaded the Detox Me smartphone app, I would have known to get rid of those mothballs, along with air fresheners and scented candles. (Science lesson: A less fragrant house means cleaner pee.)
Yet my takeaway is also that chemical industry lobbyists have rigged the system so that we consumers just can’t protect ourselves adequately.
“You should not have to be a Ph.D toxicologist to be safe from so many of the chemicals in use,” Dr. Richard Jackson of U.C.L.A. told me. “So much of what we are exposed to is poorly tested and even less regulated.”
The Trump administration has magnified the problem by relaxing regulation of substances like chlorpyrifos, Dow Chemical’s nerve gas pesticide. The swamp has won.
So the saddest lesson is that even if you understand the peril and try to protect yourself and your family — as I strongly suggest you do — your body may still be tainted. The chemical companies spend tens of millions of dollars lobbying and have gotten the lightest regulation that money can buy.
They are running the show, and we consumers are their lab mice.
[1] “Exposure to Toxic Environmental Agents”, The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, University of California San Francisco Program on Reproductive Health and the Environment.
One thought on “Nichlos Kristof gets it!”
jkaybay says:
April 25, 2018 at 2:35 am
Thanks for sharing this. The chemicals used in agriculture (like chlorpyrifos) are quite disturbing. I spent a solid month researching the evidence on the effects of neonics and other pesticides on bees and other insects. https://greenstarsproject.org/2017/05/15/bumble-bees-neonics-fungicides-pesticides-allee/
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