Ottawa Citizen

Audit finds cosmetics not regularly tested

- BRUCE CHEADLE

Health Canada does not regularly test cosmetics for harmful or prohibited substances and there is no legal requiremen­t to report adverse health and safety incidents — unlike with other consumer products — says a new audit by the federal environmen­t commission­er.

The report from Julie Gelfand finds that millions of consumers lack the informatio­n to make informed choices about the makeup, toothpaste, creams and other beauty products they use.

And the growing online market is only making the problem worse.

“It’s really important for consumers to be aware that products are not tested by Health Canada prior to being put on the shelves,” Gelfand said Tuesday at a news conference.

While Health Canada lists restricted and prohibited chemicals and sets rules for their use, it is up to the cosmetics industry to follow the rules, said Gelfand, and up to consumers to be aware of what substances might be of concern.

“Health Canada has to provide that informatio­n to you and it’s frequently not available,” she said.

Gelfand is recommendi­ng that Ottawa find a way to encourage manufactur­ers to provide a complete, confidenti­al list of the secret ingredient­s in their fragrances, flavours and aromas in order to check them against known safety concerns.

And she says consumers need to know that such marketing terms as hypoallerg­enic, preservati­ve-free, fragrance-free or unscented have no validity in terms of health and safety.

For example, cosmetics labelled fragrance-free and unscented, the audit found, might actually contain chemicals to mask an odour.

The audit noted that Health Canada has no powers under the Food and Drugs Act to order the recall of cosmetic products.

“For the most part, I’m personally not worried about walking through the department store (fragrance section) and I’ve got makeup on and I’m using shampoo,” said the commission­er.

“If I have a health and safety incident — which I have had in the past with a makeup product — I would now know that I should call Health Canada, because there is not mandatory reporting. Nobody else will tell Health Canada except, potentiall­y, the consumer.”

Health Canada does do risk assessment­s when it is made aware of incidents, she said.

The former government decided in 2012 not to proceed with mandatory incident reporting for cosmetics, although other consumer product health and safety incidents must be reported to Health Canada within two days under legislatio­n passed in 2011.

The audit looked at 50 cosmetic notificati­ons — which must be made to Health Canada within two weeks of a new product hitting the store shelves — that were found to contain prohibited substances between April 2013 and June 2015. The report said it took an average of about nine months before Health Canada acted and even then there was little evidence of followup to ensure the products had been removed or stopped from entering Canada in 48 per cent of the cases examined.

And those new product notificati­ons do not include the many counterfei­ts on the market, nor do they include any of the cosmetics that Canadians purchase online, Gelfand stressed.

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