Know what is in your environment

May 28, 2010

Lead legally permitted in toothbrushes and other “consumer” products

Filed under: Health, News, Regulation — Tags: , , , , , , , , , — Seth Goldberg @ 10:22 am

Over 1000ppm of lead found in yellow colored bristles of a toothbrush.  This product is not in violation of the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act (CPSIA) which regulates lead in children’s products.

Do you know what a consumer product is?

Unfortunately, toothbrushes and other patented early intervention dental products which are designed or intended for children 12 years of age or younger are in fact, not “consumer products.”  Because these products are not “consumer products,” they do not fall within the definition of children’s products that require third-party testing. Thus the lead limits in the CPSIA do not apply to this product. 

This product is regulated by the Food & Drug Administration (FDA) and currently there are no specifications for levels of heavy metals in dental devices.

There are many products consumers would consider a “consumer product” which are in fact not “consumer products” and not regulated as a consumer product.  Many products fall into exemptions including; toothbrushes, toothpicks, dental floss, flatware (knives, forks, spoons, baby spoons, serving utensils, etc.), ceramics (plates, cups, bowls, etc), cutting boards, bulb syringes, surgical tubing and more. 

Each of these products can be directly used by children and pregnant women, yet none have to be tested for the regulation standards of a children’s product, which means they can contain more than 300ppm of lead legally.

Essco Safety Check is an environmental technology and software integration company; utilizing X-Ray Fluorescence (XRF) Analyzers (among other data collection devices) and a proprietary software platform to collect and analyze environmental data.  Essco Safety Check is now coordinating with both the CPSC & FDA on this issue.

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May 24, 2010

Do you know what a consumer product is? (Part 1)

Typical household consumables

Most people would think that the “products” you and your children use every day in your daily routine are “consumer products”, you know the things we cook, eat and drink with.  Most people would think that “products” put in your mouth, given to us or used on us by a hospital while we are patients, are tested for lead and other harmful chemicals.  Most people would think that the regulating agencies are fully protecting us and inspecting all “products.”  Most people would be wrong!

A “consumer product” is regulated by the US Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) and their definition of a consumer product is:

any article, or component part thereof, produced or distributed (i) for sale to a consumer for use in or around a permanent or temporary household or residence, a school, in recreation, or otherwise, or (ii) for the personal use, consumption or enjoyment of a consumer in or around a permanent or temporary household or residence, a school, in recreation, or otherwise;

There are some exemptions that we will get to in a moment. 

According to the CPSC, they are “charged with protecting the public from unreasonable risks of serious injury or death from thousands of consumer products and they are committed to protecting consumers and families from products that pose a fire, electrical, chemical, or mechanical hazard or can injure children.”  Essentially, the CPSC is working to ensure the safety of consumer products from harming the public.

Why are some “products” that consumer’s use on a regular basis not considered “consumer products”?  Why are these “products” not regulated or tested for heavy metals and chemicals as a children’s product would be?  Why are these “products” regulated by different governmental agencies?  And why do those agencies have different ways of testing and regulating for lead? 

Simply put, why do we permit lead and other harmful elements and chemicals into our “consumer” and “non-consumer products”? 

Why does the FDA, which regulates all food surface contact points, have a different testing regulation for lead than a child’s product?  Doesn’t a child eat off of a typical dinner plate, and drink hot chocolate out of a standard coffee cup?  Why is a product that we all put into our mouth, not tested for lead?

Because these “products” are not considered “consumer products” and ultimately not “children’s products” which means that they are not required to be tested for lead or phthalates.  You may want to ask your legislator!

Here are a few examples of items that you may think are “consumer products” but in fact are not considered “consumer products” and thus not regulated by the CPSC.  These “products” can all be used by children, all have a potential for direct epidermal contact or direct ingestion potential. In each case, these products are regulated by the Food & Drug Administration (FDA) and some have regulations for lead and others do not, but none are regulated for “total content” of lead and thus are all permitted to have more than 300ppm of lead (the legal amount of lead in a toy “children’s product”).

1. Toothbrushes
2. Toothpicks
3. Dental Floss
4. Band Aides
5. Bulb Syringes
6. Surgical Tubing
7. Flatware (Knives, forks, baby spoons, serving utensils, etc…)
8. Ceramics (plates, cups, bowls, etc)
9. Cutting boards
10. Pots, pans and other cooking utensils.

There whole crux of this is that there is no real definition of a “consumer product.”  Most people would think that a toothbrush is a consumer product and since children use toothbrushes, they would be inspected for lead.  Most people would be wrong!

Toothbrushes and other patented early intervention dental products which are designed or intended for children 12 years of age or younger are in fact, not “consumer products” and because these products are not “consumer products” they do not fall within the definition of children’s products that require third-party testing.  Thus the lead limits in the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act (CPSIA) do not apply to this product. 

Have you considered what is in your plates, dishes or your coffee cups?  Do you know that FDA regulates the food contact surface of a coffee cup and the CPSC regulates the exterior, non-food contact surface?

How is this protecting the public?  

Environmental Services & Solutions Corporation (Essco Safety Check) is here to help bring awareness and share information about environmental concerns.  Feel free to visit our website for more information www.essco-safetycheck.com 

Keep you eyes out for “Part 2″ of this story, more specific information on State and Federal regulations.

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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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May 6, 2010

Thoughts on consumer products, pregnant women and your kitchen

In reaction to what has been going on in the news and marketplace lately i have decided to post some thoughts based on providing consumer protection to mitigate potential harm. 

Are you aware that many OTC consumer products aren’t tested for heavy metals because they’re not considered consumer products?
Think toothbrushes, dental floss and other oral hygiene products.  Would you believe that they are not considered consumer products?  These items are considered medical devices and even thought they are designed or used by children, they do not fall within the definition of children’s products that require third-party testing for heavy metals as defined by the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act (CPSIA). 
 
Pregnant women & children absorb the same percentage of the toxins that they ingest.  Don’t you think that the products pregnant women use be regulated the same as a child’s product?
 “Pregnant women use all different types of consumer products, including medical devices.  Children and pregnant women absorb 30-50% of the lead they ingest while adults absorb only about 10% – this is because lead substitutes for calcium and the growing body needs more calcium.  One of the many reasons kids are more sensitive to lead exposure.”[1]

Contamination continues in the kitchen; do you know what is in your kitchen cabinets?
In my experience, the typical kitchen contains the most number of potentially harmful metals and toxins.  Lead and other heavy metals have been found in cutting boards, plates, coffee cups, serving utensils, pots and pans and other typical kitchen items.  If a ceramic has a chip or crack in the glaze, there is the potential that toxins could be leaching into the food or beverage that you ingest. 

                                                 ———————

My name is Seth Goldberg and I own an environmental testing and software company, Environmental Services & Solutions Corporation (Essco Safety Check).  We specialize in using X-Ray Fluorescence (XRF) analyzers and our own proprietary software to identify and analyze potentially harmful and regulated heavy metals (elements like lead, cadmium, mercury, arsenic and others) in consumer products, housing and various other materials.  Our clients include moms and dads, homeowners, businesses, industries and governments who want to “know what is in their environment.”  We have been providing these services since 2007 and have been involved in three national recalls, including taking part in an AP investigation about cadmium in children’s jewelry in January 2010. 

The recent recall in children’s OTC products, spurred my concerns that some typical consumer products which are purchased OTC and are routinely used by all consumers, including children and pregnant women, are not considered consumer products and thus are not subject to particular regulations that implore safety and mitigate harm.  I can supply specific data and links to all information mentioned above.

You can learn more about our company at www.essco-safetycheck.com 

Please let me know if you have any questions.

[1]  Steven Gilbert, PhD, DABT

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April 2, 2010

Autism Day! Autistic families are more aware of their environment!

Filed under: Health, News, viewpoint — Tags: , , , , , , — Seth Goldberg @ 12:46 pm

Today…on Autism Day, April 2, 2010 I wanted to repost a blog I’ve written about autistic families and their desire to know what is in their environment. I’m going to do that below, but the first thing I did today was post a comment on CNNs blog by Dr. Sanjay Gupta 

My goal of the post was not to scare anyone or sell my services; I simply want to provide knowledge and insight that I have obtained over the past two plus years of providing testing services. In all my testing, there has been one constant, when I test for parents of autistic children and they inform me of their children’s blood metals, I do find the same metals in the consumer products and items these children are exposed to and regularly use; to me this a big coincidence. As I said in my initial comment, I’m not saying that heavy metals are the cause of autism but I have found them in 100% of autistic homes I’ve tested. I suspect that these metals found in the blood of these autistic children are masking the ability to properly treat autism and until you remove these metals from these children’s environment, you may not even be able to treat autism properly. I apologize if you thought my intention was to scare or make money, I’d much rather be out of business because consumer products didn’t have potentially harmful toxicants. I really just wanted to add to the conversation and hope that potential studies can be done. I have data on consumer products and I want to help anyway I can, right now, information is what we provide so people and businesses can make educated decisions as to what is in their environment and ultimately what they are exposed to.

On August 7th, 2010 make sure you visit the Jubilee Farm in Carnation for Washington’s 10th Annual Autism Day. We will be onsite providing free consumer product testing and if our grant from the EPA comes in, we will provide free blood lead screening to all participants.

Here is my reposted article:

“Autistic families are more aware of their environment”

I was recently asked, “Who are my biggest clients?” My business provides elemental information to a variety of different customer bases; consumers, businesses, industries and government. Each group has different reasons for the knowledge we provide. But there is one specific sub-group which seems to be most concerned about their environment, parents of autistic children.

The topic of autism and heavy metals is generally only discussed in a small circle of people. To be honest my knowledge of autism and environmental concerns, prior to 2007 and the start of my business (www.essco-safetycheck.com), was very limited about autism and about environmental concerns, “paper or plastic?” But my perceptions have changed dramatically, not only about autism and environmental concerns but how we can help people to improve lives with knowledge of your environment.

When I answered the question, of course I mentioned a few names of businesses, but when I thought about it I said that the one group of people who are my biggest clients and most concerned about the environment are families with autistic children.

I was asked “Why?” Now, I first want to emphasize that I am not a doctor or scientist, maybe I’m becoming a researcher, but this is just my insight and opinion.

For two years I have been to many consumers homes providing XRF testing, in-home assessments for potentially harmful elements in consumer products (toys, ceramics, jewelry, I want to test the things that you have a direct relationship to), housing, structures, soil, you name it and I’ve probably tested it. Dozens of these homes have been homes for families with autistic children.

These families have a desire to know what is in their environment. Their children have health and behavioral issues; in each and every home with autistic children (that I have been to), the parents also inform me that their children have heavy metals in their blood. Not just one metal, but several, in one home I was shown the child’s blood metals lab report and 12 or 13 different metals were present, including; lead, cadmium, arsenic, mercury, antimony, tin, chromium, copper, and others.

What I find interesting is that in each and every home with autistic children (that I have been to and provided XRF testing), I find the same metals in the consumer products that are used around the home, by the children, that the parents have informed me are in the children’s blood.

I am not saying that the metals in the consumer products are the cause of autism, but I have found the same metals in the consumer products in the home of the autistic child that the parents tell us are in their children’s blood. Is it coincidence? I’m not sure; I have had my beliefs formed from over two years of providing testing services to help people know what is in their environment.

I suspect we are all subjected to low levels of all of the elements we find. Maybe it is the lack or inability for these children to properly process, excrete these metals (and chemicals when you think of all that we are potentially exposed to) we are all bombarded with. Most people can process the metals, but for those that can’t?

If we can help to inform parents what is in their environment, these parents can potentially reduce or eliminate exposure to the same metals found in their children’s blood. If you remove the harmful metals from the child’s environment, will they eventually be removed from the child’s blood?

The parents of autistic children are concerned because even low doses of some of these metals can be very harmful to the health and wellbeing of their children. How are these metals getting into their children? I can’t exactly say, but we are here to help people know what is in their environment and reduce potential toxic element exposure.

Essco Safety Check

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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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January 16, 2010

The Individual, the item and the relationship!

Filed under: viewpoint — Tags: , , , , , — Seth Goldberg @ 12:31 pm

Earlier this week I was interviewed by Connie Thompson of ABC KOMO News 4 (about how my small company assisted with initial data that lead to an AP investigation about cadmium in children’s jewelry) and asked a question that I’ve been thinking about ever since.  Should parents be truly concerned about heavy metals in children’s products?

This is such a big question and every time I talk about this subject I try and emphasize a few points that I wanted to share.

First, the information we provide is potentially “scary” and it is not my intention to scare anyone, I simply want to provide information and knowledge about your environment.   We use X-Ray Fluorescence (XRF) Analyzers to look for heavy metals in virtually anything, and my company Essco Safety Check has been providing this knowledge for over two years.

With this knowledge you can make educated decisions as to what you and your children are exposed to. If you know what is in the consumer products you and your children use, you can mitigate harm by simply reducing exposure to that item.

I want to also emphasize that it would be my first choice to test and work with manufacturers, testing items before the enter stores or consumers homes; however, that is not always the case and many concerned families and businesses have contact us about our testing services.

Here are my thoughts about to try and answer the question, “what are parents and people in general suppose to do about potentially toxic metals in consumer products.”

There are several different attributes that add to this pending “equation” to answer what is a parent suppose to do, I’ve narrowed this discussion down to three main components: The individual, the item and the relationship to that item “use”.

All of these factors add up to a dizzying amount of questions of which are almost impossible to answer all of them.

The Individual

Every person is slightly different; we all have different characteristics.  We are all different heights and body masses.  Some people can run a marathon; others can sit at a computer desk for hours.  We all have different immune systems and this is really the point I want to talk about with the individual. 

Some people never get sick and always have energy; other people always get sick and never feel like they have enough energy.  Some people are allergic to a variety of different things; other people appear not to be allergic to anything.  We all react differently to different things; Heavy metals and chemicals are a part of those things.

It could be as simple as what genome type are you?  (Let me also add, I’m not a doctor, these are just my opinions) I remember as a child playing with mercury, and yet I appear to be fairly normal.  I suspect it is because I can process these metals and chemicals that we come in contact with.  Maybe there is a specific genome that just has this inability of processing these metals and chemicals we are routinely exposed to.

This is also where I begin to think about autism and specifically autistic children.  In my experience of providing XRF testing services I’ve been to dozens of homes with autistic children and meet dozens and dozens of families a various community events.  All the parents of these autistic children tell me that their children have heavy metals in their blood, and coincidence or not, when I test at their homes, I find the same heavy metals in the consumer products that these children use regularly.

This is why the individual is a very hard part of the equation.  When asked what to do with children’s products specifically (children 6 and under are at the most critical time to reduce toxic element exposure) I generally suggest to mitigate exposure to certain heavy metals as much as possible, those include; Lead, cadmium, arsenic, mercury and others depending on a variety of things including individual situations (like autistic children). 

If you can reduce your contact with these heavy metals, you are mitigating exposure and preventing potential harm to your children, you, your pets and others.

The Item

Everything we use in our lives is made from a variety of different elements.  Water is a combination of hydrogen and oxygen, steel is typically a combination of iron and a variety of other metals.  All consumer products are made from the same variety of elements.  The items we all use are slightly different depending on what they are manufactured with, when they are manufactured and where they are manufactured.

In over two years of testing I have unfortunately found harmful heavy metals in a variety of children’s products and general consumer products.  It is generally a random find and in my opinion is simply from the raw materials that are used in the production of these items.  I’m sure there are a few cases where there are intentional uses of harmful metals (for cost purposes), but for this discussion I’m talk about random finds.

The item part of the equation is fairly simple, what is the item made with?  If it is not made with any potential toxicants, then there is really no worry regardless of the individual part.  But, if the consumer product does contain a potential toxicant, like lead or cadmium, there are definitely more questions to ask.

What’s in the item?  How much? Is it on the surface, like paint? Or is it integrated in the coloring of the entire product?

The relationship “use” of the item

Here is where all of this is combined.  Once again, if you have a consumer product that doesn’t have any toxicants, besides harm of swallowing or various other safety concerns, regarding heavy metals, I’m going to tell a parent not to be concerned.  If the item in question has harmful toxicants present, then we have some concerns and questions to ask.

How is the item used?  How often?  Is a child putting it in their mouth?  If so, I’d try and stop that immediately.

Is the item painted?   If so, is the paint the problem? If so, what is the condition of the paint?

What is the item made of?  If the item is made of PVC I’m going to have more concerns because of the greater potential for the harmful toxicants to leach out.  Is the item jewelry and made of metal?  There are concerns about sucking on these types of items.  Is the item of natural fibers? 

There are just so many questions, but ultimately, how that product is used is an important question to answer if the item has a harmful toxicant.  Is this item something that just sits around and never gets interacted with? Or is it something used often?  I’m concerned about the items that have a direct use relationship with people.

I’m not overly concerned about a picture frame on your wall, which has lead, unless that picture frame is painted and that paint is cracking and chipping.   That picture frame has very little interaction with you and your family in your environment.

Now the things that your children play with, the things that you and your children eat off of and you drink out of I am concerned about.  These are the items that I want to understand how they are used, what they are made of, what environmental conditions are these items exposed to (different heat)?

Do you take your children’s toys, the plastic ones (PVC) and sanitize them in the dishwasher? If so, they can be exposed to a variety of different heats, as great as 360 F.  When you go to the beach do you leave toys in the car that are exposed to direct sunlight?  Do you use something to cook with that goes from the oven to the dishwasher to the freezer?

When you start to add up this equation, it is fairly long and very hard to answer.

Here is my simple thought. 

Why are children’s products and the items we cook with, eat off of and drink out of permitted to have these harmful toxicants?  I’m not suggesting that these elements don’t have certain good uses; they do, just not in these items.

Until that day comes, it is potentially a good idea to know what is in your environment. 

I hope that this helps in your understanding.

Don’t live your life in fear, just be aware and mitigate harm with knowledge.

January 10, 2010

AP IMPACT: Toxic Metal in Kids’ Jewelry From China

Here is an article written January 10th, 2010 by Justin Pritchard, Associated Press Writer, that my company is mentioned in.

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via AP IMPACT: Toxic Metal in Kids’ Jewelry From China – ABC News.

Barred from using lead in children’s jewelry because of its toxicity, some Chinese manufacturers have been substituting the more dangerous heavy metal cadmium in sparkling charm bracelets and shiny pendants being sold throughout the United States, an Associated Press investigation shows.

The most contaminated piece analyzed in lab testing performed for the AP contained a startling 91 percent cadmium by weight. The cadmium content of other contaminated trinkets, all purchased at national and regional chains or franchises, tested at 89 percent, 86 percent and 84 percent by weight. The testing also showed that some items easily shed the heavy metal, raising additional concerns about the levels of exposure to children.

A spokesman for the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, which regulates children’s products, said Sunday that the agency “is opening an investigation” and “will take action as quickly as possible to protect the safety of children.”

Cadmium is a known carcinogen. Like lead, it can hinder brain development in the very young, according to recent research.

Children don’t have to swallow an item to be exposed — they can get persistent, low-level doses by regularly sucking or biting jewelry with a high cadmium content.

To gauge cadmium’s prevalence in children’s jewelry, the AP organized lab testing of 103 items bought in New York, Ohio, Texas and California. All but one were purchased in November or December.

The results: 12 percent of the pieces of jewelry contained at least 10 percent cadmium.

Some of the most troubling test results were for bracelet charms sold at Walmart, at the jewelry chain Claire’s and at a dollar store. High amounts of cadmium also were detected in “The Princess and The Frog” movie-themed pendants.

“There’s nothing positive that you can say about this metal. It’s a poison,” said Bruce A. Fowler, a cadmium specialist and toxicologist with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. On the CDC’s priority list of 275 most hazardous substances in the environment, cadmium ranks No. 7.

Jewelry industry veterans in China say cadmium has been used in domestic products there for years. Zinc, the metal most cited as a replacement for lead in imported jewelry being sold in the United States, is a much safer and nontoxic alternative. But the jewelry tests conducted for AP, along with test findings showing a growing presence of cadmium in other children’s products, demonstrate that the safety threat from cadmium is being exported.

A patchwork of federal consumer protection regulations does nothing to keep these nuggets of cadmium from U.S. store shelves. If the products were painted toys, they would face a recall. If they were industrial garbage, they could qualify as hazardous waste. But since there are no cadmium restrictions on jewelry, such items are sold legally.

The CPSC has cracked down on the dangers posed by lead and products known to have killed children, such as cribs, it has never recalled an item for cadmium — even though it has received scattered complaints based on private test results for at least the past two years.

There is no definitive explanation for why children’s jewelry manufacturers, virtually all from China in the items tested, are turning to cadmium. But a reasonable double whammy looms: With lead heavily regulated under the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008, factories scrambled for substitutes, just as cadmium prices plummeted.

That law set a new, stringent standard for lead in children’s products: Only the very smallest amount is permissible — no more than 0.03 percent of the total content. The statute has led manufacturers to drastically reduce lead in toys and jewelry.

The law also contained the first explicit regulation of cadmium, though the standards are significantly less strict than lead and apply only to painted toys, not jewelry.

To determine how much cadmium a child could be exposed to, items are bathed in a solution that mimics stomach acid to see how much of the toxin would leach out after being swallowed.

The jewelry testing for AP was conducted by chemistry professor Jeff Weidenhamer of Ashland University in Ohio, who over the past few years has provided the CPSC with results showing high lead content in products that were later recalled. His lab work for AP assessed how much cadmium was in each item. Overall, 12 of the 103 items each contained at least 10 percent cadmium. Two others contained lower amounts, while the other 89 were clean.

Ten of the items with the highest cadmium content were then run through the stomach acid test to see how much would escape. Although that test is used only in regulation of toys, AP used it to see what hazard an item could pose because unlike the regulations, a child’s body doesn’t distinguish between cadmium leached from jewelry and cadmium leached from a toy.

“Clearly it seems like for a metal as toxic as cadmium, somebody ought to be watching out to make sure there aren’t high levels in items that could end up in the hands of kids,” said Weidenhamer.

The CPSC reacted swiftly to the AP story. Agency spokesman Scott Wolfson said: “CPSC will open an investigation into the products tested by Professor Weidenhamer, who we have worked closely with before.” He said CPSC would study Weidenhamer’s results, attempt to buy the contaminated products content and “take appropriate action as quickly as possible.”

Weidenhamer’s test results include:

— Three flip flop bracelet charms sold at Walmart contained between 84 and 86 percent cadmium. The charms fared the worst of any item on the stomach acid test; one shed more cadmium in 24 hours than what World Health Organization guidelines deem a safe exposure over 60 weeks for a 33-pound child.

The bracelet was purchased in August 2008. The company that imported them, Florida-based Sulyn Industries, stopped selling the item to Wal-Mart Corp. in November 2008, the firm’s president said. Wal-Mart would not comment on whether the charms are still on store shelves, or how many have been sold.

Sulyn’s president, Harry Dickens, said the charms were subjected to testing standards imposed by both Wal-Mart and federal regulation — but were not tested for cadmium.

In separate written statements, Dickens and Wal-Mart said they consider safety a very high priority. “We consistently seek to sell only those products that meet safety and regulatory standards,” Wal-Mart said. “Currently there is no required cadmium standard for children’s jewelry.”

As was the case with every importer or retailer that responded to AP’s request for comment on the tests, neither Sulyn nor Wal-Mart would address whether the results concerned them or if the products should be recalled.

— Four charms from two “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer” bracelets sold at a Dollar N More store in Rochester, N.Y., were measured at between 82 and 91 percent cadmium. The charms also fared poorly on the stomach acid test. Two other charms from the same bracelets were subjected to a leaching test which recreates how much cadmium would be released in a landfill and ultimately contaminate groundwater. Based on those results, if the charms were waste from manufacturing, they would have had to be specially handled and disposed of under U.S. environmental law. The company that imported the Rudolph charms, Buy-Rite Designs, Inc. of Freehold, N.J., has gone out of business.

— Two charms on a “Best Friends” bracelet bought at Claire’s, a jewelry chain with nearly 3,000 stores in North America and Europe, consisted of 89 and 91 percent cadmium. The charms also leached alarming amounts in the simulated stomach test. Informed of the results, Claire’s issued a statement pointing out that children’s jewelry is not required to pass a cadmium leaching test.

“Claire’s has its products tested by independent accredited third-party laboratories approved by the Consumer Product Safety Commission in compliance with the commission’s standards, and has passing test results for the bracelet using these standards,” the statement said. Those standards scrutinize lead content, not cadmium.

— Pendants from four “The Princess and The Frog” necklaces bought at Walmart ranged between 25 and 35 percent cadmium, though none failed the stomach acid test nor the landfill leaching test. The Walt Disney Co., which produced the popular animated movie, said in a statement that test results provided by the manufacturer, Rhode Island-based FAF Inc., showed the item complied with all applicable safety standards.

An official at FAF’s headquarters did not respond to multiple requests for comment when informed of Weidenhamer’s results; a woman at the company’s office in southern China who would not give her name said FAF products “might naturally contain some very small amounts of cadmium. We measure it in parts per million because the content is so small, for instance one part per million.” However, the tests conducted for AP showed the pendants contained between 246,000 and 346,000 parts per million of cadmium.

“It comes down to the following: Cadmium causes cancer. How much cadmium do you want your child eating?” said Michael R. Harbut, a doctor who has treated adult victims of cadmium poisoning and is director of the environmental cancer program at the Karmanos Cancer Institute in Detroit. “In my view, the answer should be none.”

Xu Hongli, a cadmium specialist with the Beijing office of Asian Metal Ltd., a market research and consultancy firm, said test results showing high cadmium levels in some Chinese-made metal jewelry did not surprise her. Using cadmium alloys has been “a relatively common practice” among manufacturers in the eastern cities of Yiwu and Qingdao and the southern province of Sichuan, Xu said.

“Some of their products contain 90 percent cadmium or higher,” she acknowledged. “Usually, though, they are more careful with export products.”

She said she thought that manufacturers were becoming aware of cadmium’s dangers, and are using it less, “But it will still take a while for them to completely shift away from using it.”

The CPSC has received dozens of incident reports of cadmium in products over the past few years, said Gib Mullan, the agency’s director of compliance and field operations. Though the CPSC has authority to go after a product deemed a public danger under the Federal Hazardous Substances Act — the law used in lead-related recalls several years ago — there have been no enforcement actions.

“We are a small agency so we can’t do everything we think would be a good idea. We have to try to pick our spots,” Mullan said. At most, the agency can investigate 10 percent of the tens of thousands of reports filed by the public each year, he said.

With the help of an outside firm, the CPSC has started a scientific literature review of cadmium and other heavy metals, including how the substances fare in leaching tests, according to spokesman Wolfson. “If there has a been a shift in manufacturing to the use of cadmium, CPSC will take appropriate action.”

Meanwhile, the CPSC’s Mullan cites “a trend upward” in cadmium reports the agency has received — and private-sector testing AP reviewed shows cadmium is showing up more frequently.

Two outfits that analyze more than a thousand children’s products each year checked their data at AP’s request. Both said their findings of cadmium above 300 parts per million in an item — the current federal limit for lead — increased from about 0.5 percent of tests in 2007 to about 2.2 percent of tests in 2009. Those tests were conducted using a technology called XRF, a handheld gun that bounces X-rays off an item to estimate how much lead, cadmium or other elements it contains. While the results are not as exact as lab testing, the CPSC regularly uses XRF in its product screening.

Much of the increase found by the Michigan-based HealthyStuff.org came in toys with polyvinyl chloride plastic, according to Jeff Gearhart, the group’s research director. Both lead and cadmium can be used to fortify PVC against the sun’s rays. Data collected by a Washington-based company called Essco Safety Check led its president, Seth Goldberg, to suspect that substitution of cadmium for lead partly explains the increase he’s seen.

Rick Locker, general counsel for the Toy Industry Association of America, and Sheila A. Millar, a lawyer representing the Fashion Jewelry Trade Association, said their industries make products that are safe and insisted cadmium is not widely used.

Millar said jewelry makers often opt for zinc these days. “While FJTA can only speak to the experience of its members,” Millar wrote in an e-mail, “widespread substitution of cadmium is not something they see.”

December 27, 2009

What I would want to test in your home?

Over the past two years of providing in-home, XRF testing services to moms and dads, I have been asked to test everything from diapers and personal care items to toys and jewelry, mattresses and bathtubs to cutting boards and spices.  I have tested the outside of homes, play areas inside and outside, I have been in crawlspaces, and in the corners of basements.  What I’m searching for are heavy metals, potential toxic elements. 

Each family has slightly different reason for having this search performed, some have autistic children; these children (I have been informed by the parents) have heavy metals in their blood, and in most cases, when searching the home, I find the same heavy metals found in the child’s blood, in the consumer products that they use regularly.  Some parents are just environmental conscious; they want to ensure that their children are not exposed to potentially harmful products.  Some people are purchasing homes; others are getting ready to do a remodel.

In each case, our goal is to identify these potentially harmful elements by utilizing X-Ray Fluorescence (XRF) analyzers to help people know what is in their environment.   With knowledge of your environment, you can mitigate potential harm.  Mitigating harm doesn’t mean not using the items found with heavy metals, but the knowledge means how you use them, or your children use them can be altered to reduce potential harm.

There are four components to each and every interaction with consumer products, items found in your personal environment; the individual, the item, the relationship between the individual and the item, and how the item is used. 

Each and every person has different characteristics; we are all of different sizes or body mass, some people rarely get sick, yet others get sick often and thus we have different immune systems.  Some people are allergic to things, yet others aren’t allergic to anything.  We are all different in many ways.

The items we all use are different depending on what they are manufactured with, when they are manufactured and where.  But for the sake of this discussion, we will presume that if a product/toy is manufactured in China or the US, bought in Los Angeles or New York, that product is made exactly the same. 

Now the next two are somewhat related, the relationship and use of an item.  How do you use the items around you and how do they interact with your in your environment.  Do you put them in your mouth?  Do they get abused and used or do they just sit there and not do anything? Are they exposed to a variety of different heats (sunlight, microwave, dishwasher, oven, etc)?

When I go to homes and provide XRF testing services, parents often ask me what to test (click here to see our typical findings).  It is hard for me to tell a person, I don’t know what they use often or how they use the things in their home?  But I can tell you that I am most concerned with the things that have a direct relationship to you and your children. 

I want to test the toys that your children play with, the things that they may put in their mouths.  I want to test the items that you cook with and eat or drink off of.  I want to test the things that you may wear, like jewelry.  I want to test your painted items that are cracking and flaking.  I want to test the things that you interact with in your personal environment.

If I am at your home testing, I am happy to test anything you want me to test, honestly it is your dollar and if you want to know what something is made of, I will tell you.  However, if you ask me to test a picture frame that is hanging on the wall, I am going to ask you “how is that picture frame interacting with your environment?” 

I want to test things that have a direct interaction with you or your children’s personal environment.  Now, if that picture frame is painted and that paint is cracking and chipping, of course I would want to test it because the dust from the paint chips directly interacts with your environment. 

Now I have to stress, the information we share can be scary, it is not intended to be.  We are simply informing people about the environment, and this information can positively impact lives.  I should also mention that when we test and find something potentially harmful, like lead, it does not mean that it is going to harm you, but it is present in your environment.

I was at a home a few years ago testing; this family had beautiful ceramic dishes that they would use every day and eat off of.  They were in very good condition and there appeared to be no major blemishes, cracks or chips, and the glaze was intact.  But the dishes were found to contain over ten percent lead.  The mom started to get upset, and considering they were a family heirloom, she didn’t want to part with the dishes. 

I made a few suggestions.  Can you make them a display piece in your home? How about this, instead of using them every day, you only use them on special occasions like birthdays.  When all was said and done, this family’s potential exposure of lead was dramatically reduced from 365 days a year to about 5. 

Just because a product has something harmful, doesn’t mean it will harm you, but it does mean that it contains something that potentially can and this is where the relationship and use of the item are important. 

I believe that each individual will react differently to what is in their environment, just like someone who is allergic.  Some people will be constantly exposed to smoke and never develop lung cancer, yet others will never smoke and develop lung cancer.

My goal is to help people and businesses know what is in their environment so that simple, educated decisions can be made that can positively affect lives, help businesses, create jobs and impact society.

Do you have any questions for me about items you would want tested?

November 5, 2009

What are some of our unusual findings when we test consumer products?

Filed under: About the business, News — Tags: , , , , , , — Seth Goldberg @ 10:10 am

What do you think you may find in your home?  What potentially harmful elements exist in your favorite coffee cup, earrings, or child’s toy?  I’m not writing to scare anyone, that is not my objective as a person or as a business owner.  If anything, as a person and a business owner I simply what to provide information about your environment. 

“Know what is in your environment!”

Over the past two-years of providing XRF testing services to moms and dads, businesses and industries, I have almost become numb to our findings.  At first I was startled with the results, but as time progressed, the simple randomness of what I was finding has me realize this; we all have a variety of heavy metals in our homes, at daycare centers and schools, doctor’s offices and community centers, and are all most likely exposed to some degree or fashion.

Randomness of what we find, still amazes me, but no longer shocks me.  How in a world with such amazing technologies and desire to help others, prevent harm, keep children safe, do we still permit harmful metals in our consumer products? 

I’m definitely not saying that these harmful metals I find are causing any specific harm, but they are present in many different consumer products found in the typical home. 

As for what I’ve seen…

Lead, cadmium, arsenic, mercury…and more.
 
Where have I seen these elements?

In just about every consumer product possible!  I’ve seen harmful metals in toys, ceramics, jewelry, plastics, housing/structure, soil and other substrates.

I have seen Lead in all types of ceramics, paints, children’s products, toys, jewelry, cutting boards, mattresses, infant’s products and many other consumables, soil, plastics and other substrates.  The highest levels (from our data) appear to be in the things we cook with, eat off of and wear.

I have see Cadmium in all types of ceramics, paints, children’s products, toys, jewelry, plastics and other substrates.  The highest levels (from our data) appear to be in the things we cook with, eat off of and wear.

I have seen Arsenic in some ceramics, children’s products, toys, plastics and other substrates.

I have seen mercury in some ceramics, children’s products, toys, plastics and other substrates.

I’m not saying that just because your child’s favorite toy or your favorite coffee cup has something potentially harmful in it that you or your child are going to be harmed.  I’m just stating what I’ve seen, and if you can reduce your exposure, and especially your child’s exposure to these potentially harmful metals and thus certain items/consumer products/housing (paint), this simple act of reduction in exposure can help to mitigate some potential harm.

Here is an example.  About a year ago, I was in a home providing our services.  The home owner asked me to test their dishes, the ones that they used every day.  They were beautiful, colorful, and in very good condition (there appeared to be no chips, cracks or blemishes in the glaze).  However, they also appeared to contain about 10 percent lead. 

The home owner was deeply concerned about this finding, wondered what to do, and also said that they could not get rid of the dishes, they were a family heirloom. 

My response, first let’s note that the condition of the glaze appears to be fine (the most critical factor according to a toxic elemental specialist I spoke with at the FDA).  Second, do you have other dishes you could use, I asked?  They said yes.  Can you make these dishes a display piece for your home I asked?   They said yes.  How about this, if you want to use these dishes, can you limit the use to birthday’s and special occasions (Thanksgiving and Christmas dinner)?  They said yes. 

Result of this knowledge, their potential exposure to lead from this set of dishware was reduced from 365 times per year to less than 10 times per year, a reduction of close to 40 times.

Besides the question of why are harmful metals in consumer products, the ones we eat off of, cook with, wear, our children play with, is for another blog.

Knowledge can lead to prevention! Prevention to mitigation!  Mitigation can improve lives!

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