Trouble With a Capital B
Grist Magazine, May 15, 2007
Straight to the Source
You know how Tammy Wynette said sometimes it's hard to be a woman?
Well, it just got harder: a new report finds a potential link between
breast cancer and 216 chemicals, including 35 common air pollutants and
73 food or consumer-product ingredients. Racking up evidence from
hundreds of existing lab tests, researchers concluded that
environmental factors play a much larger role in breast-cancer
likelihood than family history and genes. "Overall, exposure to mammary
gland carcinogens is widespread," says the report, noting that 29 of
the identified toxics are produced in volumes of more than 1 million
pounds each year in the U.S. Here's what's scarier: only 1,000 of the
80,000 chemicals registered for use in the U.S. have been tested for
carcinogenic properties. As breast cancer is the leading killer of
middle-aged American women, we advise avoiding pesticides, dyes,
cosmetics, diesel exhaust, pharmaceuticals, food flavorings, and
chlorinated drinking water. Who wants to decorate the bunker?
straight to the source:
Los Angeles Times, Marla Cone, 14 May 2007
straight to the source:
The Oakland Tribune, Douglas Fischer, 14 May 2007
straight to the source:
Forbes, HealthDay News, 14 May 2007