The chemicals in everyday household cleaning products are a poorly scrutinised health hazard. Fortunately, more of us are rediscovering the natural cleaning methods our great-grandparents once used.
Supporting a global industry worth tens of billions of dollars, our quest for sparklingly clean, sweet-smelling homes has spawned a vast array of products. But dig beneath the familiar, friendly packaging and marketing claims so many of us inherently trust and you’ll find a scourge of chemical irritants, toxins and carcinogens. Ranging from petrochemical surfactants and solvents to antibacterials, fungicides and synthetic fragrances, most of these ingredients are unlisted and untested. As they say, out of sight, out of mind.
An unregulated industry
There’s no legal requirement for the ingredients in cleaning products (technically classified as industrial chemicals) to be listed on the container, says Jo Immig, co-ordinator of the National Toxics Network. “It may tell you some generic chemical class but won’t specifically list all the ingredients,” she says.
Highly toxic products like bleach might have a warning label on them, but with some 30,000 chemicals in Australia never having been assessed by the regulator, it’s important to be cautious, Immig advises. There’s actually no regulation of individual cleaning products. “No one is regulating the product, just some of the individual chemical ingredients in it,” she says. “We don’t know exactly what happens in terms of longterm health impacts when you put them all together in a product.”
Telltale warning signs might include words like “corrosive”, “danger”, “poison”, “may cause burns”, “flammable”, or “vapours harmful”. Other helpful labels include “phosphate-free”, “no solvents” and “plant-based ingredients”.
Health hazards
This story is from the WellBeing #180 edition of WellBeing.
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This story is from the WellBeing #180 edition of WellBeing.
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