Skip to main content Fire Safety in the Residence Halls What it means to be a Buff ‹ PREVIOUS NEXT › Important Move-In InformationCaroline Cox displays a red wallet purchased by her daughter in 2008, which contains unsafe levels of lead. A few years ago, Caroline Cox was reading the newspaper when a yellow purse in an ad caught her eye. “We should test that for lead,” she thought. Soon after, she noticed the bright handbag carried by a woman who came into her office for a job interview. Then she saw the brand new red wallet her daughter just purchased on a shopping trip in San Francisco. Cox, who is the research director at an Oakland-based non-profit advocating the reduction of toxic chemicals, decided to test the bags. All of them showed unsafe levels of lead, kicking off an investigation that found handbags containing up to 90 times more lead than federal regulations allow in paint. And so fashion accessories became the latest item in a long list of everyday objects that Cox’s organization, the Center for Environmental Health, tests for the toxic heavy metal.
The group has also found lead in items like children’s bounce houses, artificial turf, poker chips, baby bibs, jewelry, vinyl diaper bags and kids’ beanbag chairs. The center, which was founded in 1996 by Michael Green, advocates to reduce the use of chemicals like Bisphenol-A and phthalates that are commonly found in household products, but the group’s primary work is investigating products that could expose children and pregnant women to lead. Lead is especially toxic to children. According to the Centers for Disease Control, exposure can impair children’s cognitive and behavioral development, and when pregnant women are exposed to lead, their babies can also suffer developmental problems. People are exposed to lead by inhaling it—often by breathing the dust from chipping lead paint—or by consuming it—typically through a process called “hand-to-mouth exposure.” For example, a child could be exposed by putting a lead-tainted toy in her mouth, or a pregnant woman could handle her lead-contaminated purse and then eat a sandwich.
Why is lead in purses? Adding lead to vinyl products is one way to help them withstand high temperatures, Cox said. It is also sometimes used in vinyl pigments, which is why the yellow purse first caught Cox’s eye. The Center for Environmental Health tests jewelry and kids’ products on behalf of the California Attorney General to ensure they adhere to state and federal standards. The center then uses lawsuits to force the companies that sell the products to make them safer. Last year, the center sued more than 40 retailers to limit the use of lead in handbags and other fashion accessories, and the companies agreed to set new industry standards for lead use in their products as part of a $1.7 million legal settlement. Since the agreement, Cox said, the problem of lead in accessories has been improving. But as she showed me a holiday Toy Story-themed tote bag from Safeway that had recently tested positive for lead, I wasn’t feeling very secure. Specifically, my own brown vinyl purse was looking especially suspicious.
Staring down at it sitting beside my chair, I wondered if there was any lead in it. Cox was kind enough to check it out for me. She removed one strap from a zipper pull and placed it in the x-ray florescence analyzer machine. In about 30 seconds, the machine shot an x-ray beam into the sample and scanned how many atoms of heavy metals were in the scrap from my purse. A readout came up on a computer screen. The news was good: No lead. Cox reattached the little strap to my bag and I breathed a sigh of relief. To learn more about lead in kids’ products, search a database of thousands of items to learn more about the chemicals in them. If you are concerned about lead in an item you own, you can arrange for the CEH to test it by calling 510-655-3900. To learn more about lead exposure, check out The Centers for Disease Control’s fact sheets on lead exposure and pregnancy and childhood lead exposure. Filed under: Environment, Front, Health Tagged: Bisphenol-A, Caroline Cox, lead, phthalates, the Center for Environmental Health, toxic chemicals
Action FiguresVideo GamesBikes & Ride-onsElectronicsBuilding SetsLearningGames & PuzzlesOutdoor PlayVehicles, Hobby & R/CPretend PlayArts & CraftsPreschoolMusical InstrumentsStuffed AnimalsCooking for Kids Hot WheelsMinecraftLEGOStar WarsTransformersTeenage Mutant Ninja Turtles we got what's hot! select name from list other, add new name below The "Big Bean" chair. es in 8 fun colors. Measurements: approx 40" in diameter and 130" in circumference Ideal for a child, or petite adultWhen we hear the phrases “feel at home” or “make yourself at home,” we like to envision comfortable places, safe places, where our feet might incidentally make it onto a coffee table or, on a lazy Sunday afternoon, we might dose off for an hour or two on the couch. More or less, we all want home to be this way, which is why choosing the right furniture is important. Unfortunately, comfort is not the only consideration for choosing home furnishings. Health has become a priority as well.
Some materials in modern furniture are actually dangerous and release harmful toxins into those soothing spaces we’ve worked so hard to create. Specifically, for those homes with plastic and veneer furniture, it might be time to redecorate. Veneer — very common in cheap shelving units, cabinets and tables — is often laced with formaldehyde, a recognized carcinogen used in the glues that bind particleboard and the veneer laminates. When the materials heat up, they release damaging gases into the environment, and if that environment is a small room, well, that’s not a good thing. Note: Formaldehyde is in a number of other household products like upholstery fabrics, cleaning products (make them yourself!) and cosmetics. Keep an eye out. Toxic plastic is something that is already on most of our radars to some extent. We know to use alternatives for plastic water bottles and to avoid plastics #1, #3, #6 and #7. (Those numbers are located somewhere on all plastic stuff.)