2008 Holiday Gift Guide
a discovery company

Detox Your Home: Keep it PVC Free

Jasmin Malik Chua, Jersey City, USA

Jasmin Malik Chua

By Jasmin Malik Chua
Jersey City, NJ, USA | Sun Mar 23 17:21:00 EDT 2008

rubber-duckie.jpg


Unknown.

READ MORE ABOUT:
Babies | Cancer | Green Home | Health | Kids | PVC | Plastic | Recycling | Toys | Water

From shower curtains to sippy cups, products made from polyvinyl chloride, also known as vinyl or PVC, are ubiquitous. Dubbed the "poison plastic," PVC poses great environmental and health hazards from manufacture to disposal. That new plastic shower curtain or new PVC toy smell? You've got a nose for the phthalates-a class of chemicals known to cause a host of reproductive and developmental defects-volatilizing from the PVC, which can migrate and leach into our air, water, and bodies.

For starters, cancer-causing dioxins, as well as other persistent pollutants, are spewed from factories wherever PVC is being manufactured, resulting in chronic and severe health problems such as cancer, neurological damage, endometriosis, neurological damage, and birth defects, as well as liver and kidney damage. Over the decades, dozens of vinyl fabricators have succumbed to the exceedingly rare angiosarcoma of the liver.The dioxin exposure of the average American far exceeds the usual standard for acceptable risk; dioxins also concentrate in breast milk, with babies now receiving high doses at orders of magnitude greater than those of the average adult.

A 1999 study by the National Institute of Public Health in Norway found that the risk of children developing bronchial obstruction-an asthma symptom-"increased in relation to the amount of plasticizer-emitting materials in the home." According to the authors, children exposed to PVC flooring and wall coverings in nurseries, bedrooms, and other rooms have an 89 percent higher risk of developing bronchial obstruction than kids who pitter-pattered in PVC-free homes.

And because PVC cannot be easily recycled, it's either landfilled, where it leaches chemicals or incinerated, releasing dioxin and heavy metals again.

Look for the recycling code #3 or V to spot PVC products before they enter your home. And remember that P-V-C is B-A-D.

Difficulty level: Easy to moderate

 
  • email
  • digg
  • share
  • print
helpful article? vote for it
{ }
close window

CLOSE X

 

comments on this article

view all post a comment

 
 

from our partners

 
 
 

how to go green

View All

Votes

How to Go Green: Home Electronics
  COMMENTS

{}

How to Go Green: Home Buying
  COMMENTS

{}

How to Go Green: Home Heating
  COMMENTS

{}

How to Go Green: Electricity
  COMMENTS

{}

How to Go Green: Rental Properties
  COMMENTS

{}

How to Go Green: Weddings
  COMMENTS

{}

 
Greensburg image
 

tv schedule

view all

On Now

On Tonight

 
Channel Finder Planet Green
 

buying guides

View All

Votes

Buy Green: East Coast Beer
  COMMENTS

{}

Buy Green: Thanksgiving Turkey
  COMMENTS

{}

Buy Green: Desktop Computers
  COMMENTS

{}

Buy Green: Laptop and Notebook Computers
  COMMENTS

{}

 

today on planet green

view all

Votes

recent
discussed

Throw a Green Cookie Exchange Party
POSTED  3 Dec 2008.  COMMENTS

{ }

World's Greenest Homes Episode: Eco Manor
POSTED  9 HOURS AGO.  COMMENTS

{ }

Emeril Green Episode: A Meal to Remember
POSTED  10 HOURS AGO.  COMMENTS

{ }

Stuff Happens: No Butts for Mother Nature (Video)
POSTED  11 HOURS AGO.  COMMENTS

{ }

How to Go Green: Cocktails
POSTED  11 HOURS AGO.  COMMENTS

{ }

Go Paperless for Thanksgiving Dinner
POSTED  25 Nov 2008. 4 COMMENTS.

{2}

Buy Green: East Coast Beer
POSTED  18 Nov 2008. 3 COMMENTS.

{3}

World's Greenest Homes Episode: Chicago House
POSTED  25 Nov 2008. 9 COMMENTS.

{13}

Pass Up Fast Food on Road Trips
POSTED  24 Nov 2008. 3 COMMENTS.

{3}

Replace Risky Hot Dogs with Grass-Fed Franks
POSTED  19 Nov 2008. 2 COMMENTS.

{5}

 
 
 

Ads by Google