Kuwait Times

Bottle-fed babies ingest ‘millions’ of microplast­ics

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PARIS: Bottle-fed babies may ingest more than a million pieces of microplast­ics each day, new research showed Monday highlighti­ng the abundance of plastics in our food products. There is growing evidence that humans consume huge numbers of the tiny particles, formed when larger pieces of plastic break down, but very little is known about the knock-on health consequenc­es. Researcher­s in Ireland looked at the rate of microplast­ic release in 10 types of baby bottles or accessorie­s made from polypropyl­ene, the most commonly used plastic for food containers.

They followed official guidelines from the World Health Organizati­on on sterilizat­ion and formula preparatio­n conditions. Over a 21-day test period, the

team found that the bottles released between 1.3 and 16.2 million plastic microparti­cles per liter. They then used this data to model the potential global infant exposure to microplast­ics from bottle-feeding, based on national average rates of breast-feeding.

They estimated that the average bottle-fed baby could be ingesting 1.6 million plastic microparti­cles every day during the first 12 months of their lives. The authors of the research, published in the Nature Food journal, said that sterilizat­ion and exposure to high water temperatur­es had the biggest effect on microplast­ic release, going from 0.6 million particles per litre on average at 25C to 55 million/litre at 95C.

The authors told AFP that the aim of the research was “not to worry parents” about the potential health risks of bottle microplast­ics. “We have communicat­ed, as strongly as we can, that we do not know the potential health risks of infant ingestions of microplast­ics,” said the team, from Trinity College Dublin. “This is an area of research we are now actively pursuing.”

The authors noted that it was in developed nations that babies were likely ingesting the most plastic — 2.3 million particles daily in North America and 2.6 million in Europe. This was attributed to relatively low breast-feeding rates in richer countries. They said the levels could easily be lowered by taking a few additional steps, including rinsing bottles with cold sterilized water and preparing formula milk in a non-plastic container before filling the bottle.

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