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Chemicals of concern in personal care products used by women of color in three communities of California

Health and Fitness

Chemicals of concern in personal care products used by women of color in three communities of California

P. I. Johnson, K. Favela, et al.

Discover the alarming presence of hazardous chemicals in personal care products used by Black, Latina, and Vietnamese women in California. This research from Paula I. Johnson and colleagues reveals that many products contain concerning ingredients linked to serious health risks, highlighting the urgent need for transparency in consumer health.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Personal care products (PCPs) may contain chemicals associated with adverse health effects. Prior studies found differences in product use by race/ethnicity and suggest some women are disproportionately exposed to chemicals of concern (CoCs). OBJECTIVE: We quantified chemicals linked to cancer, reproductive or developmental harm, or endocrine disruption in PCPs used by women of color. METHODS: We documented PCPs in stores frequented by Black, Latina, and Vietnamese women in their communities in California and CoCs on ingredient labels of 546 unique hair, skin, makeup, nail, deodorant/perfume, and intimate care products. Community partners chose 31 products for a combined targeted and suspect screen two-dimensional gas chromatography time-of-flight mass spectrometry (GCxGC-TOFMS) analysis to detect chemicals not on ingredient labels. RESULTS: We found that 65% of labels included CoCs, and 74% of labels had undisclosed ingredients listed as "fragrance." The most prevalent chemicals were parabens, cyclosiloxanes, and formaldehyde releasers. GCxGC-TOFMS found additional CoCs, including fragrances, solvents, preservatives, ultraviolet filters, and contaminants. SIGNIFICANCE: These findings contribute to awareness of potentially hazardous chemicals in PCPs, can help estimate disparities in chemical exposure, and complement research on health inequities due to chemical exposures from various contributors. IMPACT STATEMENT: This study is one of the first detailed assessments of CoCs in varied PCPs used by several racial/ethnic groups. Over half of the 546 products contained ingredients linked to cancer, reproductive or developmental harm, or endocrine disruption. Laboratory analysis identified additional chemicals in a subset of products, including unlabeled fragrance chemicals and contaminants. Elucidating exposures to chemicals in PCPs is important for risk assessment and health inequity research.
Publisher
Journal of Exposure Science & Environmental Epidemiology
Published On
Nov 02, 2022
Authors
Paula I. Johnson, Kristin Favela, Jennifer Jarin, Amy M. Le, Phyllis Y. Clark, Lisa Fu, April D. Gillis, Norma Morga, Caroline Nguyen, Kim G. Harley
Tags
personal care products
chemical exposure
health risks
disparities
cancer
endocrine disruption
fragrance
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