Know what is in your environment

August 18, 2010

Lead is found in bounce homes children play in.

Filed under: Health, News, Regulation — Tags: , , , , , , , , — Seth Goldberg @ 10:08 am

For several years, Essco Safety Check has been providing X-Ray Fluorescence (XRF) testing services to moms and dads, businesses, industries and government.  We have first-hand knowledge to where lead and other potentially harmful heavy metals are found from our XRF testing.   Recently, the Center for Environmental Health (CEH) did an investigation, environmental testing, of bounce homes that children play in. 

Their investigation found lead; in one bounce home that was more than 70 times greater than the legal limit of lead in a child’s product.  They found a lead from a range of 5000 parts per million (PPM) to 29,000 PPM.  The legal limit for lead in children’s products is 90 PPM for painted surfaces and 300 PPM for all other parts of the product.

With all the testing that Essco Safety Check has done, we have tested bounce homes in the past and our findings are very similar to that of CEHs.  The issue with bounce homes is the material that the home is made of.  It is typically made of Polyvinyl Chloride (PVC) and PVC is a substrate that we have found to contain lead more than other typical substrates that children play with.  When PVC is manufactured, a stabilizer is added in production to prevent Hydrochloric Acid (HCl) from forming, unfortunately the manufacturers tend to use lead as a stabilizer.  This stabilizer does not bind well to the PVC molecule and can readily leach from the PVC material.

In some laboratory testing that Essco Safety Check has performed with several accredited laboratories in the Seattle, WA area, we have found that heat can play a factor in to the ability for lead to leach from PVC.  The hotter the temperature that the PVC is exposed to the more likelihood that leaching can occur.  The best thing for children to do after playing in a bounce home is to wash their hands and face, and avoid direct hands to mouth contact while playing in a bounce home.  This is more critical for children under the age of 6, as they are more susceptible to the exposure of lead.

Lead is a neurotoxin that can cause many problems including; learning disabilities, anemia, hypertension, infertility and death among other problems.  Children are more sensitive to lead exposure because of their size (mass) and greater absorption of lead.  It is best to avoid lead exposure as there is no level of lead that is considered safe.

Know what is in your environment and mitigate harm.

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Essco Safety Check

May 7, 2010

Consumer Products, Toxic Toys, Children and Pregnant Women

Essco Safety Check initially started in 2007 to help moms and dads “know what was in their environment.”   We wanted to provide in-home consumer product testing for moms and dads to help them make sure the toys and consumer products that their children routinely used were safe from toxicants.  Using X-Ray Fluorescence (XRF) analyzers and a software suite we developed for data collection and analysis looking for lead, cadmium, mercury and other heavy metals, we began providing those services. 

This was before recalls and regulations and since then the landscape has changed.  There are now state and federal regulations regarding lead and other toxicants in children’s products (Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act – CPSIA).  These regulations were passed with the emphasis on finding toxic toys at a time when several large national recalls were happening. 

Over the past several years of providing in-home inspections for consumers, assisting autistic families with knowledge about their environment and providing testing services to businesses about the products they manufacture or sell, we have become experts in understanding the relationship between consumer products, the end-user and the regulations of those products.  This knowledge base and relationships we have developed with toxicologists, lawmakers, consumers and businesses has given us a unique perspective of the entire marketplace and market cycle.

With the knowledge that we have gained, we’ve become aware that not all products that you and I believe are consumer products are in fact, consumer products.  Certain products are exempt from heavy metal testing, because these products are considered medical devices.  Both children and adults use these products and they are sold everywhere without restrictions.  Some of these products are even put directly into the mouth, why are these products exempt from certain regulations?

Understanding the relationship between a product someone uses and what that product is made of, can easily mitigate harm.  Just because a product is not considered a children’s product does not mean that a child will not use that product.  There are some good uses for lead, but not in a toy or a coffee cup or a toothbrush. 

What about pregnant women?  In a discussion I had with Steve Gilbert (he is an expert in the field of toxicology, PhD, DABT) he has shared his knowledge with me and I’m here to share it with you.

Did you know that a child and a pregnant woman absorb 30-50% of the lead they ingest.  A typical adult only absorbs about 10%.  This is because lead substitutes for calcium and the growing body needs more calcium.  This is one of the reasons that kids are more sensitive to lead exposure. Pregnant women use all different types of consumer products, including medical devices.  Do you think that they should be exposed to lead and other potentially harmful metals during pregnancy?

Know what is in your environment and mitigate harm.

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Essco Safety Check

March 21, 2010

Healthy Kids & Green Parenting Fair

Filed under: About the business, Events, News — Tags: , , , , , , , — Seth Goldberg @ 8:32 am
Healthy Kids & Green Parenting Fair Tacoma, WA 3-20-10

Healthy Kids & Green Parenting Fair Tacoma, WA 3-20-10

The Healthy Kids & Green Parenting Fair was held yesterday in Tacoma, WA.  Hundreds of people attended some to have their toys and consumer products tested for heavy metals, others brought their children to have their blood screened for lead, all came to browse the 30 or so venders and learn about new “organic” products.

Essco Safety Check provided free consumer product testing using X-Ray Fluorescence (XRF) analyzers.  Toys were tested, children’s plates and cups, children’s jewelry, parents wedding rings and women’s handbags. 

Lead and cadmium were both found in some of the items, but overall the children’s products tested were found with little if any lead or cadmium.  However, a woman’s handbag strap was found to be made with PVC as well as over lead over 1200 PPM.   In one woman’s wedding ring, cadmium was found over 1000 PPM.

Essco Safety Check is proud to help people and businesses know what is in their environment.  If we can help you understand your environment, you can make educated decisions as to what you and your children are exposed to or about the products you sell. 

Over the years of providing testing services, we have collected a variety of samples of products that contain harmful heavy metals. 

Here are some of the items that have lead, cadmium, arsenic and mercury.

Products we've found with harmful heavy metals (Lead, Cadmium, Arsenic & Mercury)

Products we've found with harmful heavy metals (Lead, Cadmium, Arsenic & Mercury)

If a consumer product that you or your children use regularly has heavy metals in it, it does not mean that that product will harm you or your children, however, there is the potential for harm.  With knowledge you can mitigate harm. 

Know what is in your environment.

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