Handwashing and house cleaning can reduce your contact with harmful chemicals such as flame-retardant chemicals. Flame retardant chemicals are commonly added to furniture and electronics to comply with fire safety standards.
- Washing your hands and cleaning your house regularly can help reduce your contact with harmful chemicals such as flame retardants
- Flame retardant chemicals are commonly added to furniture and electronics to comply with fire safety standards
- Use of new organophosphate flame retardants (OPFRs) in consumer products may lead to endocrine disruption, decreased fertility, and thyroid dysfunction in humans
- Both handwashing and house cleaning can protect you against harmful flame retardants
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) recommends practical steps like handwashing and housecleaning--dusting with a moist cloth, wet mopping, and vacuuming--to lower exposure to flame retardants.
To assess whether handwashing and house cleaning effectively reduced exposure, senior investigator Julie Herbstman, Ph.D., associate professor of Environmental Health Sciences, designed a twofold behavioral intervention and enrolled 32 women from CCCEH's Sibling-Hermanos birth cohort. Participants were randomly assigned to one of two interventions, house cleaning or handwashing, for the first week of the study.
The house cleaning intervention group was given microfiber mops, vacuums, and microfiber cloths and asked to increase the amount they cleaned their home that week. The handwashing group was given hand soaps and asked to focus on washing their hands more than they typically do, especially before meals.
During the second week of the study, all participants were asked to do both extra handwashing and housecleaning. Urine samples were collected from participants before the study began and following the first and second weeks of the intervention.
After the second week of the study, when participants were asked to do both housecleaning and handwashing, levels of Tris measured in urine fell 43 percent compared to baseline levels. Women with higher than average levels of exposure at baseline experienced the greatest decrease, with their levels of Tris falling 62 percent. Similar trends in exposure levels were seen for other OPFRs measured in this study.
"As people replace their old furniture, we've seen a reduction in exposures to the earlier generation of flame retardants, polybrominated diphenyl ethers, or PBDEs," says Herbstman. "Going forward, it's important that we continue to study new organophosphate flame retardants to understand what they do to our health and how to protect ourselves, both on an individual and population level."
Source-Eurekalert