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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
CONTACT: Food & Water Watch and Beyond Pesticides Kate Fried, Food & Water Watch: (202) 683-2500 Jay Feldman, Beyond Pesticides: (202) 543-5450 |
Popular Pesticide Triclosan Found to Carry Numerous Health and Environmental Risks
Food & Water Watch and Beyond Pesticides File Petition to FDA to Ban Triclosan for Non-Medical Uses
WASHINGTON - July 14 - Food & Water Watch, a national consumer advocacy organization, in partnership with the public health and environmental activist group Beyond Pesticides, today submitted an amended petition to the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) requiring that the agency ban the use of the controversial pesticide triclosan for non-medical applications on the basis that those uses violate the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetics Act. Strong scientific evidence suggests that pervasive use of triclosan poses imminent threats to human health and the environment.
"Numerous scientific studies and reports clearly indicate that in addition to its human health and environmental dangers, triclosan is not effective for many of its intended benefits and may actually be doing consumers more harm than good," said Wenonah Hauter, executive director of Food & Water Watch. "Even worse, is that current regulations on triclosan haven't been updated since 1994 and much of the science used by the FDA to regulate the pesticide dates back to the late 1970s and early 1980s. The agency's inconsideration of new scientific research on triclosan represents an egregious failure to properly protect the public against this dangerous pesticide."
Regulated by both the FDA and the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), triclosan is commonly found in hand soaps, toothpastes, deodorants, laundry detergents, fabric softeners, facial tissues, antiseptics, fabrics, toys, and medical devices. Scientific studies indicate that widespread use of triclosan causes a number of serious health and environmental problems.
Chief among those issues is resistance to antibiotic medications and bacterial cleansers, a problem for all people, but especially vulnerable populations such as infants and the elderly. Triclosan is also a known endocrine disruptor and has been shown to affect male and female reproductive hormones, which could potentially increase risk for breast cancer. Further, the pesticide can also interact with other chemicals to form dioxin and chloroform, thereby exposing consumers to even more dangerous chemicals.
Due to the fact that many products containing triclosan are washed down the drain, triclosan also shows up in water systems and sewage sludge. Accumulation of the pesticide in waterways and soil has been shown to threaten ecosystems and produce hazardous residues in fish and food crops.
"Triclosan's growth to a nearly $1 billion consumer market is indicative of the failure of the FDA to regulate unnecessary, ineffective products that are toxic to both people and the environment," said Jay Feldman, executive director of Beyond Pesticides. "The marketing of triclosan preys on consumer fears regarding bacterial-born illness, despite the fact that scientific findings show triclosan to be no more effective than soap and water, and may actually cause more harm than good in advancing bacterial resistance."
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2 Comments so far
Show AllThe big question is this: When the chemical companies have finished with their mass killing spree, will their CEO's be listed among the dead?
It is always the propaganda. We Americans fall for it hook line and sinker. All of the sudden corporations tell us we need bacterial killer in our soap? Since it is on a comericial we must need it right? Yikes!
Did anyone ask if it is killing the bacteria what is it doing to us?
the closer we come to what is produced naturally from the earth the better off we are.