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Dear EarthTalk: Ive read that human breast milk contains toxins from pollution and other causes. How serious is this and what affect will it have on my baby? -- Skylar S., New York, NY
Researchers
have found that those of us living in developed countriesmen,
women and children alikecarry around quite a toxic burden
in our bodies from the constant exposure to various chemicals
in our urban, suburban and even rural environments. If this
werent alarming enough, the fact that these chemicals end
up in breast milk and are in turn passed along to newborns
is even more troubling.
According to writer Florence Williams, whose groundbreaking
2005 article in the New York Times Magazine opened
many womens eyes to the environmental health issues
with breastfeeding, breast milk tends to attract heavy metals
and other contaminants due to its high-fat and protein content.
When we nurse our babies, we feed them not only the
fats, sugars and proteins that fire their immune systems,
metabolisms and cerebral synapses, she reports. We
also feed them, albeit in minuscule amounts, paint thinners,
dry-cleaning fluids, wood preservatives, toilet deodorizers,
cosmetic additives, gasoline byproducts, rocket fuel, termite
poisons, fungicides and flame retardants.
In the wake of such kinds of news reports, four nursing mothers
came together in 2005 to form Make Our Milk Safe (MOMS), a
nonprofit engaging in education, advocacy and corporate campaigns
to try to eliminate toxic chemicals from the environment and
in breast milk. The group educates pregnant women and others
about the impacts on children of exposure to chemicals before,
during and after pregnancy, and promotes safer alternatives
to products such as cleaning supplies, food storage containers
and personal care products that contain offending substances.
Along with its antibodies, enzymes and general goodness,
breast milk also contains dozens of compounds that have been
linked to negative health effects, reports MOMS, which
lists Bisphenol-A (BPA, a plastic component), PBDEs (used
in flame retardants), perchlorate (used in rocket fuel), perfluorinated
chemicals (PFCs, used in floor cleaners and non-stick pans),
phthalates (used in plastics), polyvinyl chloride (PVC, commonly
known as vinyl) and the heavy metals cadmium, lead and mercury
as leading offenders.
Despite these concerns, some recent research has shown the
toxic load in breast milk to be smaller than that in the air
most city dwellers breathe inside their homes. Researchers
from Ohio State and Johns Hopkins universities measured levels
of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in breast milk and in
the air inside the homes of three lactating Baltimore mothers,
finding that a nursing infants chemical exposure from airborne
pollutants to be between 25 and 135 times higher than from
drinking mothers milk.
We ought to focus our efforts on reducing the indoor
air sources of these compounds, said Johns Hopkins
Sungroul Kim, the studys lead author. He concurs with
the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
and many other public health experts that, despite breast
milks vulnerability to chemical contamination, the benefits
of breast feedingfrom the nutrition and important enzymes
and antibodies it supplies to the mother/child bonding it
providesfar outweigh the risks.
RESOURCES:
MOMS
Study:
Volatile Organic Compounds in Human Milk
CDC
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