Trends in Exposure to Chemicals in Personal Care and Consumer Products

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Abstract

Synthetic organic chemicals can be used in personal care and consumer products. Data on potential human health effects of these chemicals are limited—sometimes even contradictory—but because several of these chemicals are toxic in experimental animals, alternative compounds are entering consumer markets. Nevertheless, limited information exists on consequent exposure trends to both the original chemicals and their replacements. Biomonitoring (measuring concentrations of chemicals or their metabolites in people) provides invaluable information for exposure assessment. We use phthalates and bisphenol A—known industrial chemicals—and organophosphate insecticides as case studies to show exposure trends to these chemicals and their replacements (e.g., other phthalates, non-phthalate plasticizers, various bisphenols, pyrethroid insecticides) among the US general population. We compare US trends to national trends from Canada and Germany. Exposure to the original compounds is still prevalent among these general populations, but exposures to alternative chemicals may be increasing.

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Calafat, A. M., Valentin-Blasini, L., & Ye, X. (2015). Trends in Exposure to Chemicals in Personal Care and Consumer Products. Current Environmental Health Reports, 2(4), 348–355. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40572-015-0065-9

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