by Sarah Green Living
Like many of
you good little girls and boys out there trying to be responsible citizens of
Planet Earth, I’ve been buying recycled toilet paper for some time in an
attempt to be more environmentally conscious.
Alas.
I just found
out that my efforts to go green in the bathroom have been thwarted.
Recycled
toilet paper turns out not to be such a good idea after all. In fact, it is a
most decidedly BAD idea and here’s why.
Two recent
studies published in Environmental
Science & Technology have shown that BPA and cousin
chemical BPS used in “BPA free products” but also highly
estrogenic in nature, are much more pervasive in our common, everyday products
than we could have imagined.
Yeah, that
BPA free stuff is no better and will mess up your hormones just as much. But
then, you sensed that was the case already didn’t you? I know I did.
The term “safe
chemical” is kind of an oxymoron so if something uses chemicals, just
assume they are toxic unless proven otherwise.
How does all this relate to recycled toilet
paper?
The two new studies mentioned above involved examination of hundreds
of samples of paper from everyday items such as toilet paper, paper towels,
napkins, newspapers, magazines, tickets, and even business cards.
Most
of the paper samples tested contained the hormone disruptor BPA, BPS or both.
How and why the paper was so contaminated is a question that
requires further study to ascertain, but for now, the key is to avoid thermal paper as much as possible as
this is the worst offender.
Perhaps
because it is often recycled and may somehow become contaminated during the
recycling process. The ink may be involved in the contamination as well.
In fact, it
is best to avoid touching all recycled paper period as BPA and BPS absorb
readily through the skin – you don’t have to eat it to have them enter your
bloodstream.
If your job
involves handling thermal paper receipts, for example, best to wear gloves.
And, if you
can turn down receipts and instead rely on an online itemization of your
expenditures, that would be a good step as well.
As for your
backside, opt for toilet paper made from virgin pulp.
This is
an especially important area to protect from BPA and BPS as the skin in these
areas is thin and delicate and is in very close proximity to the reproductive
organs.
How to know
if it’s virgin pulp?
Simple. If
the paper is not identified as a recycled product, odds are very good that it
is made from virgin pulp.
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GS Series Submersible Pump |
Sarah, The Healthy Home Economist
Source: Bottom Line Publications, Toxic
Toilet Paper? You Got It
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