Presidential bets dared vs toxic cosmetics
On the eve of International Women's Day, environmentalists campaigned in Manila to urge presidential bets to protect maternal and child health against toxic chemicals, particularly those in cosmetics. Members of the EcoWaste Coalition said the candidates should make a commitment to protecting maternal and child health from such harmful chemicals. âWe need a new leader who will keep toxic chemicals under tight control to safeguard womenâs health and their ability to bear, nurture and uphold life," said Ines Fernandez of the EcoWaste Coalition and the Save Babies Coalition. Women members of EcoWaste and the Save Babies Coalition dressed like pregnant women, donned headgear of mock cosmetics, and paraded from Binondo Church to Sta. Cruz Church in Manila. Volunteers in purple shirts distributed leaflets advising retailers and consumers not to sell, buy or use beauty products containing mercury and other harmful chemicals, according to an entry on EcoWaste's blog site. âThese chemicals are so invasive that even a motherâs belly, which we thought should be a safe place for the fetus to grow and develop, is contaminated with chemicals of concern, including many used in common consumer products such as cosmetics and personal care products," Fernandez said. "PATOK" Members of the group called anew for a âPangulong PATOK" (âPangulong Ayaw sa Toksik" or âPresident Against Toxics"). Actor-environmentalist Roy Alvarez, the newly-elected president of the EcoWaste Coalition, particularly called for protection from toxic chemicals in cosmetics and other products. "The spate of government-issued recall and seizure directives on mercury-tainted cosmetics is a clarion call for chemicals policy reforms that our political leaders should genuinely heed," he said. Representatives of Alaga LAHAT, Angkan ng Mandirigma, Ang NARS, Arugaan, Buklod Tao, Global Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives, Kupkop Kita Kabayan Foundation, and Zero Waste Philippines also took part in the event. EcoWaste noted the Food and Drug Administration on February 9 and 18 this year ordered the recall and seizure of 12 China-imported facial creams and skin whitening products that were found to contain high levels of mercury, an extremely toxic metal. Dermal absorption is deemed the most significant route of mercury exposure in cosmetics since most cosmetics are applied to the skin. Mercury is then absorbed through the skin and into the bloodstream, causing allergic reactions, skin irritation, or adverse effects on the nervous system. To illustrate how chemicals affect women, the EcoWaste Coalition cited the report âEarliest Exposures," a biomonitoring study by the US-based Washington Toxics Coalition (WTC) of nine pregnant women, which shows that chemicals found in a wide variety of consumer products contaminate mothersâ bodies, and babies enter the world already exposed to known toxics. Released in November 2009 by the WTC, Commonwealth and the Toxic-Free Legacy Coalition, the report detected 13 foreign chemicals in the blood and urine of pregnant women who participated in the study. Specifically, the pregnant women tested positive with mercury, bisphenol A, and âTeflon chemicals," which can cause birth and reproductive disorders, cancer, disrupt hormonal functions and damage brain development. A âPangulong PATOK" can make a huge difference in pushing Congress as well as the industry in ensuring that only the safest chemicals are used in products and sold in the country, the EcoWaste Coalition and the Save Babies Coalition said. New policies The next president can initiate policies that will keep toxic substances away from pregnant women and the developing fetus, which is most vulnerable, the groups said. These policies, according to the groups, can include: * A national chemical safety policy framework and action plan based on the Strategic Approach to International Chemicals Management (SAICM) to improve public health and the environment, particularly maternal and child health. * A ban on toxic chemicals of concern as well as a ban on products containing these chemicals, particularly those that can cause cancer and reproductive harm, or lead to learning disabilities. * Mandatory product information labeling that will disclose all the chemical contents of products and their potential health and environmental effects as well as provide guidance on handling and waste management. - KBK, GMANews.TV