Las últimas investigaciones muestran cómo los plásticos afectan a nuestra salud
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If this week’s Barbie movie debut has “Life in plastic, it’s fantastic!” singing through your brain, you have our cranky solidarity. But the hard truth? Plastics are everywhere. There’s plastic bags and bottles, of course. And the mounds of plastic recycling we’re hoping get transformed—but suspect they’re often not.
Then there’s the plastic in our cosmetics, medications + food. And the microplastics that can linger in our air and water supply for centuries. These have huge health impacts for our bodies and the planet. Since we’re midway through Plastic Free July, let’s review the latest plastic + health research, dig into the plastics hiding in detergent sheets + breeze through beautiful plastic-free food products that can help you be an active part of the solution.
- The Checkup: sunny days + sunny products
- Plastic + health + laundry + upgrades
- Healthcare: otc birth control + aspartame + good Covid-19 news
The Checkup
- Find out which sunglass lens color is best for your eyes
- Sugar doesn’t feed cancer cells. But it's part of cancer care
- Drew Barrymore on her sunny, sustainable cleaning products
- Banned in 2000, a study finds PFAS in 45% of our tap water
- 7 vital endometriosis takeaways highlighted in this new film
- If you have a really itchy butt, here are 13 possible causes
- A guide to enjoying vacation while also hydrating + eating well
- Flavored vapes are illegal. Why + how are kids getting them?
- How to have a healthy relationship with your fitness tracker
Plastic pollution + public health
Despite recent headlines, Salon promises you’re not eating a credit card’s worth of plastic weekly.
Plastics from manufacturing wastewater do sneak into our drinking water. Microplastics slink into our skin via cleaning + beauty products. And plastic pollutants have been found in meat, fish, milk + produce!
Two decades of studies on 2,000+ chemicals found in plastic production make hard-core plastic + health connections tricky. But studies have linked plastics to increase health risks for conditions like IBD, stomach cancer, endometriosis, breast cancer + heart disease. Click on those links for the big picture. And if you’re ready to make one small shift…
Sunscreen questions answered!
Well + Good rounded up some eco-friendly laundry tips. But an ingredient in newly-popular detergent sheets is a part of the plastics puzzle—polyvinyl alcohol.
Listed as PVA, PVOH and PVAL, this plastic creates the thin film around soap pods + detergent sheets. PVA is dissolvable. But it needs a specific combo of water, microbes + time to break down into a single molecule that can biodegrade. No wastewater plant in the U.S. lets laundry runoff stew long enough with those microbes, so PVA can linger in water for years (or decades).
Think of it like salt dissolved in water. You can’t see the salt. But you can taste it, so you know it’s there. Still, detergent sheets reduce excess water + plastic bottles, cutting down transportation + recycling footprints.
Want truly plastic-free detergent? Check out Meliora, Ingredients Matter and Blueland.
5 plastic-free food upgrades
Reusable bags + bottles are nothing new. But some companies have updated designs to make stunning, sustainable products we want to use over and over again in our quest to reduce plastic waste. To upgrade your current sustainable routine—or if you’re just starting to reduce your single use plastic consumption—try these options:
- Grocery bags: Lotus Trolley Bags extend over grocery cart rims, making it easy to load groceries into designated cooler bags, egg holders + more. Their reusable produce bags in various sizes are also stellar.
- Snack bags: Plastic sandwich bags are so
- This blog reviews top compostable options. Even better? Try reusable snack bags.
- Water bottles: Old-school company Stanley went TikTok viral with their Quencher stainless steel mugs. They come with straws, handles + lovely color options. Not a follower? Try these alternatives.
- To-go containers: Tupperware gets a major style upgrade with the sleek, eye-catching options reviewed in Architectural Digest.
- Dish soap: Grove comes in recyclable aluminum, Clean Cult in 90% reduced-plastic cartons + tiny Elcove packets = major foam potential.
Healthcare 411
F.D.A. approves first U.S. over-the-counter birth control pill (NY Times). Opill will soon eclipse condoms + spermicides as the safest OTC birth control option. We don’t know how much it will cost. But Dr. B can help you get birth control pills with a $15 consultation.
WHO says aspartame is a 'possible carcinogen.' The FDA disagrees (NPR). Will that diet soda kill you? Only if you constantly guzzle it. But there’s still cause for alarm. If you love diet anything, read this article.
A Positive Covid Milestone (NY Times). Excess deaths from Covid-19 have dropped to an almost unreportable low. People are still dying from it. (Primarily, those who are unvaccinated.) And long Covid is a huge, unfixable problem. But this low is a welcome turning point.
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