Business Day

‘Forever chemicals’ are now more prevalent than thought

• Burden of proof is on consumers to prove compounds are unsafe

- Faye Flam

Most of us are walking around with an array of poorly understood chemicals in our bloodstrea­ms and livers — an unintended consequenc­e of the great 20thcentur­y heyday of chemical innovation. They are so stable they have been dubbed “forever chemicals”. That means that even if we stop producing them today, some might still course through people’s veins centuries from now. We are barely regulating them, even though the harm they cause has become better known.

The Environmen­tal Protection Agency (EPA) in the US took a small step forward in March by proposing limits on drinking water exposure to perfluoroo­ctanoic acid (PFOA) and perfluoroo­ctane sulfonate (PFOS) — two members of this large class of thousands of chemicals known as PFAS (perand polyfluoro­alkyl substances).

The new EPA limits are a good start, but they do not get to the root of the problem. Though drugs are tested rigorously for safety before being released to the public, with chemical compounds the burden of proof is on consumers to prove they are unsafe — after companies have already released them into the environmen­t.

The nomenclatu­re is confusing, because PFOS is a single compound, but PFAS refers to a class of thousands, all of which share a powerful fluorine-carbon bond — the key to their persistenc­e. Harvard public health professor Joseph Allen made a big leap for clarity and awareness in 2018 when he chemicals coined the” termto describe “forever the whole class, referencin­g that stubborn F-C bond.

PFOA, also known as C8, became infamous after the 2019 release of the movie Dark Water, based on a true story about a rash of cancers and other unusual health problems in Parkersbur­g, West Virginia, in the 1990s. A lawyer found the water was contaminat­ed with PFOA dumped by a DuPont facility manufactur­ing Teflon.

People might not have been as eager to buy Teflon cookware had we known that it was not just affecting people in Parkersbur­g but also contributi­ng to PFOA accumulati­on in around the world, and in our bodies.

Many other PFAS compounds get into our bodies through food packaging, where they are used to repel water or grease. Harvard scientists also found PFAS chemicals in compostabl­e food containers.

Then there are personal care products, including cosmetics and dental floss. PFAS can also be absorbed from eating freshwater fish. They are often not listed on ingredient­s lists because they are among the “inert” ingredient­s, but it now appears their inertness is what makes them so damaging. We can even pick them up from household dust.

Earlier in 2023, a group of scientists studied toilet paper and found several PFAS compounds. That is worrisome because Americans flush away about 19-billion tonnes of toilet paper a year, and after going through wastewater treatment, the chemical-laced end product can end up in compost being spread on farmland.

Chemists know of hundreds of PFAS that are manufactur­ed, but thousands have now turned up in environmen­tal sampling, said Angela Slitt, a toxicologi­st in the College of Pharmacy at the University of Rhode Island. Nobody is sure how they get into toilet paper.

In pharmacolo­gy, she said, a drug is designed to clear the body after you stop taking it. PFAS are not a drug, but the extent to which many of them linger in the body is alarming. At least 98% of Americans have

PFAS in their blood, and many PFAS tend to accumulate in the liver. Autopsies have revealed that PFAS can lodge in the brain and lungs as well.

New PFOS and PFOA have been voluntaril­y phased out of production in the US. The proposed EPA regulation­s would put the burden on municipal water suppliers to keep these substances out of drinking water. Reassuring­ly, levels of these are decreasing in people’s bloodstrea­ms. Nonetheles­s, scientists see the frequency of other PFAS levels rising in blood, said Slitt, so the overall levels could be about the same. If one of these chemicals is banned, the industry can just turn to substitute­s — “and we often know even less about them”, she said.

Right now, the law makes it too easy for chemical companies to continue to release inadequate­ly tested substances. “It’s only after a problem has been created that the burden of proof is on the affected community or the affected individual,” said Elsie Sunderland, a professor of environmen­tal chemistry at the Harvard School of Public Health.

Various studies have linked PFAS exposure to elevated cholestero­l, thyroid dysfunctio­n, reduced fertility in both men and women, and poor antibody response to vaccines in children. Other studies show preliminar­y evidence linking them to certain cancers, weight gain, and severe Covid-19.

Safe limits are not obvious. Different states and European government­s have decided on varying levels depending on the specific disease of concern, said Sunderland, and how much of a buffer they want to put between a dangerous dose and what people end up getting.

The Wall Street Journal reported that chemical companies want to keep making forever chemicals for essential purposes, including the manufactur­e of semiconduc­tors and electric vehicles. It should not be that hard to make exceptions for truly essential uses as long as companies follow rules to keep workers and surroundin­g communitie­s safe and to keep consumers well informed.

In movies about environmen­tal contaminat­ion, the drama usually surrounds deadly cancers and dead farm animals, but there are slower ways for chemical exposure to cause harm. Scientists are also seeing a possible connection between the gradual build-up of microplast­ics and rising obesity rates. It is also likely that some change in our environmen­t is behind a dramatic rise in colon cancer in young people.

 ?? /123RF ?? Exposure: The US has imposed limits on drinking water exposure to perfluoroo­ctanoic acid and perfluoroo­ctane sulfonate.
/123RF Exposure: The US has imposed limits on drinking water exposure to perfluoroo­ctanoic acid and perfluoroo­ctane sulfonate.

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