Thanks AR! I'm not worried about Parabens. I just happen to have an Avalon organics product bottle that says Paraben free & wondered.
There are two types of parabens I see on the 3b ingredients info. Methyparaben is one of them.
Thanks AR! I'm not worried about Parabens. I just happen to have an Avalon organics product bottle that says Paraben free & wondered.
There are two types of parabens I see on the 3b ingredients info. Methyparaben is one of them.
The Environmental Working Group has summaries and links to peer-reviewed medical journal articles on this and thousands of other cosmetics ingredients. In addition to the positive "hits," they point out where there are data gaps (i.e., where the safety of ingredients, alone or synergistically, is unknown. I don't know how Australia's environmental regulation works, but in the USA, the default is that companies may sell anything for ingestion or skin application until someone else has proved it's dangerous, which is obviously difficult to impossible).
As you may remember, the more reading I do about what I went through last summer, the more certain I am that I'm not going down that path again. But since I now know that I'm at high risk for breast cancer, I think that it would be silly for me to have that knowledge and not take any preventive measures (as the doctors would have me do).
Obviously avoiding parabens isn't the #1 step I'm taking. Most of the major steps were things I was already doing (activity, maintaining a healthy body-fat %, avoiding meat and hormone-treated dairy products, treating my depression, avoiding second-hand smoke; I'm beyond it now, but I never took birth control pills and never intended to take HRT). There were a couple of high-risk activities in my life (drinking alcohol, eating some corn-fed dairy products, eating large amounts of un-fermented soy products) and I've drastically cut down on those. In addition to those changes, not instead of them, I've taken steps to reduce my exposure to environmental endocrine disruptors. Methylparaben and bp-A, as well as household organophosphate pesticides, are so easy to avoid that it would be silly not to, IMO. Knowing that I'm at high risk, why should I increase that risk, even a little?
Last edited by OakLeaf; 06-04-2009 at 03:52 AM.
Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler
5 years after that initial publication, the German cancer society repeats there is no evidence. A large study that controlled for other risk factors such as, diet, hormone intake, found nothing.
Maybe even stressing over preceived risk factors is worse.
It's a little secret you didn't know about us women. We're all closet Visigoths.
2008 Roy Hinnen O2 - Selle SMP Glider
2009 Cube Axial WLS - Selle SMP Glider
2007 Gary Fisher HiFi Plus - Specialized Alias
I don't know why reading labels should be perceived as "stressing."
I read the labels for any processed food I buy, and generally buy the most minimally processed foods. Why shouldn't people do the same with cosmetics? In reality, I already read the labels for irritants like some alcohols, and petroleum products. To me, reading labels isn't a bit stressful; it's kind of interesting, really.
(And FWIW, I finished the end of my tube of Chamois Butt'r - I just won't buy any more.)
ETA: in fact, the externally imposed stress and the possible health effects of that is one of the major reasons I'm not taking the doctors' route.
Last edited by OakLeaf; 06-04-2009 at 03:53 AM.
Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler