Our Chemical Lives - Are Chemicals Hurting Us?

This is an excellent video that explains the chemicals that are in our lives, and what they are doing.

From Australia’s ABC Sciences, Dr. Maryanne Demasi interviews the leaders in the field of hormones, endocrine disruption, and chemicals’ effects, to give a comprehensive and comprehendible (!) explanation of common chemicals in our daily lives, and how they affect us, our children, our grandchildren, and beyond.

The video can be found below, as well as the full transcript, organized for all of our references.

Please watch, they did a great job!

 
Thousands of chemicals are used in everyday products - in our water, our food and in the air we breathe. It's the chemical soup of modern life and it's virtu...
 

TRANSCRIPT

Announcer
Plastics will play as large a role in peace as they do in war.

NARRATION
The 20th century gave rise to the chemical industry. It has revolutionized our world and transformed the way we live.

Laureate Professor John Aitken
After the Second World War, there was a sudden burst of activity in the chemicals industry and the environment has become flooded with new chemicals.

NARRATION
Over 80,000 chemicals are used in everyday products. We handle them, they're in our water, our food and in the air we breathe.

It's impossible to escape them. But now there's growing concern that these chemicals are not safe.

Professor Peter Sly
There's no requirement to show that these chemicals are actually safe before people are exposed to them.

Dr Linda Birnbaum
We basically, in the US, consider chemicals safe until proven otherwise.

NARRATION
Experts believe the rise in the use of industrial chemicals is linked to issues like lower IQ, cancer and reproductive problems.

Dr Maryanne Demasi
So, without adequate testing of the safety of chemicals, are we in the midst of an uncontrolled human experiment?

NARRATION
Chemical pollution begins in the womb. From the moment we're conceived, our bodies are exposed to a cocktail of potential toxicants.

Laureate Professor John Aitken
Mothers are being exposed to chemicals during pregnancy. These chemicals are somehow finding their way across the placenta directly into the fetus and having an impact on the normal pattern of development.

NARRATION
The dangers of chemicals, like mercury and lead, have been well established. But less is known about other chemicals which interfere, or perturb, with our endocrine system. This system of glands produces hormones that regulate virtually every aspect of human health, beginning at our most vulnerable time in the womb.

Dr Linda Birnbaum
Our hormone system controls who we are. It controls our basic physiology as adults, but our endocrine system is absolutely essential during development.

Professor Peter Sly
Timing is actually critical. There's this concept of windows of susceptibility where an agent can have really adverse effects if it's present at a specific time during development. For example, something can cause an adverse effect if it's exposed on day 18 but not if it's exposed on day 20. It can be that critical.

Dr Linda Birnbaum
It's like you throw a monkey wrench into a system and it can never recover from it. So you'll have permanent change.

NARRATION
In plastics and in the lining of cans, you'll find bisphenol A, or BPA.

In cosmetics, skin creams and perfumes there's phthalates.

Foods sprayed with pesticides.

Carpets, furniture and electronics, all infused with fire retardants.

It's the chemical soup of modern life.

The concern is our bodies mistake them for hormones.

Dr Andrea Gore
Endocrine-disrupting chemicals can act like hormones or they can interfere with hormones.
And if there's any perturbation, including an extremely small perturbation, due to a deficiency in a hormone, an excess of a hormone or some sort of outside chemical, like an endocrine disruptor, that can have very devastating consequences.

NARRATION
One of the most researched chemicals found in plastics is BPA, which mimics the female hormone estrogen.

Professor Ian Shaw
This is the estrogen molecule and it binds to the estrogen receptor, rather like a lock and key. Switches on the receptor and carries out the estrogenic properties. BPA, the molecule below here, you can see has a very similar sort of structure. And if you superimpose them on top of each other, you can see the hydroxyl groups line up really nicely. So that will be a key for the lock.

Dr Maryanne Demasi
So it's quite possible that BPA would have very similar effects to estrogen when it binds?

Professor Ian Shaw
They will have almost identical effects. The only difference will be the magnitude of the effects for BPA are lower than estrogen, because it doesn't fit that receptor quite as well.

NARRATION
The supply of estrogen to a fetus is exquisitely controlled by the placenta in order to achieve normal male and female development.

Professor Peter Sly
The placenta itself detoxifies the estrogens from the mother, the natural estrogens, and stops them crossing into the fetus. Unfortunately, some of these synthetic chemicals, and particularly things like bisphenol A, while they have endocrine and estrogen activity, they're not recognized by those detoxification enzymes as estrogens and they pass straight through the placenta.

NARRATION
Scientist were first alerted to the potential effects of endocrine disruptors in wildlife species.

Laureate Professor John Aitken
Fish in the rivers of the south-east of England, where 85% of the water flowing through those rivers is recycled sewage water, contains high levels of estrogenic compounds and it was influencing the sexual differentiation of the fish. There's been similar data in Lake Apopka in Florida, where alligators have been found which have abnormalities of penile development, normal sexual development, which has been correlated with chemical spills into that lake beforehand.

NARRATION
This was the result of high-dose exposures where the impact on health is obvious. But establishing such chemical links to human health is harder.

Dr Maryanne Demasi
The link between chemicals and human disease is based largely on correlations. So it doesn't prove causation. That's why scientists have to rely on animal studies to support their hypotheses.

Professor Ian Shaw
The research in animals is really very important indeed to try and get cause and effect. If you look at some of the early studies in animals, for example, if you give a rat in development an endocrine disruptor and it's a male we're looking at, you often get changes in the development of the penis. So if you give estrogenic compounds during the development of that rat, then you will affect the penis. And that's a really good example of cause and effect. Whereas the studies in humans are looking levels of chemicals we're exposed to … and effects. We never quite know whether they're linked.

NARRATION
And that's the challenge - to prove the effects in animals also occurs in humans.

Dr Linda Birnbaum
There's something that's been termed the testicular dysgenesis syndrome,

and this includes things like:

hypospadias, which is where the urethra does not exit at the tip of the penis.

- It's cryptorchidism, or otherwise known as undescended testicles, which cause sterility.

-  There is low sperm count or impacts on sperm quality, mobility and so on,

-        and there's also testicular cancer.


NARRATION
In the past 30 years, the incidence of testicular cancer in Australia has increased by over 50%.

Laureate Professor John Aitken

It's undeniable that this increase in testicular cancer is occurring. It's too vast to be entirely genetic and, therefore, likely to be something which is environmental.

NARRATION
Most men are diagnosed at around age 30. But the initial cause can be traced back to the womb.

Laureate Professor John Aitken
Testes development is a very sensitive barometer of environmental toxicants. When these environmental chemicals hit the testes, there are some cells sitting in the testes that are of a very primitive kind. And they respond very abnormally to that signal and give you your testicular cancer.

NARRATION
In some countries, up to 40% of young men have poor semen quality. The link to toxicants is inconclusive but certainly plausible.

Laureate Professor John Aitken
Spermatozoa are just very susceptible to attack by chemicals and the reason for that is very evident. If you just look at them, they're composed of nothing more than basically a nucleus on top of a sperm tail. There's no space in there to put any protective enzymes that are going to help preserve the integrity of these cells.

Dr Maryanne Demasi
But haven't we developed mechanisms to be able to deal with these kinds of toxins?

Laureate Professor John Aitken
In the last century or so we've introduced a whole NEW range of toxicants into the environment for which our defense mechanisms are not well adapted. And it's probably that lack of fit between our defense mechanisms and these new chemicals that have arrived in the environment that are responsible for these impacts that we're seeing on reproductive health.

NARRATION
The Endocrine Society, representing over 18,000 members, set out to update all the scientific evidence linking chemicals and endocrine-related disorders. Toxicologist at the University of Texas, Andrea Gore, spearheaded the report.

Dr Andrea Gore
We knew that there were increases in infertility, there were disorders of puberty. People were noticing their girls were going through puberty at nine and ten years old instead of 11, 12 or 13 years old, which is when they used to go through puberty. And the Society began to wonder, and the endocrinologists began to wonder, whether there were chemicals in the environment that may be responsible for that change.

Professor Ian Shaw
The way that puberty is stimulated in girls is for a quick shot of estrogen, which the girl begins to produce just before she goes into puberty. So if that girl is exposed to a hormone mimic, and estrogen mimic and endocrine disruptor, that might well start the process. If you give rats a dose of estrogenic chemicals, endocrine disruptors that mimic the female hormone, they will also come into puberty earlier. So in animal studies the connection is absolute, in human studies it's not absolute, but the two things are together.

The dose is crucially important for any toxicological consideration. Hormones work at an INFINITESIMALLY tiny doses, and estrogenic chemicals work at infinitesimally tiny doses. So the sort of doses that you get in water and food, contamination from plasticizers or whatever, are well within the range of doses to have a biological effect.

NARRATION
Canadian researcher Dr Bruce Lanphear says even low levels of chemicals can have a significant impact on brain development.

Dr Bruce Lanphear
In many of the chemicals that we're concerned about, like flame retardants, like lead, seem to be dopaminergic toxicants. They seem to disrupt the prefrontal cortex, that part of the brain that makes us most distinctly human. So that's particularly concerning to us is when you start to monkey with that, that's the part of the brain that allows us to think fast on our feet, to be a CEO, to be a scientist, to have impulse control. And so if we start messing around with that, we're really dealing with a part of the brain that makes us human.

NARRATION
US data shows exposure to endocrine disruptors was also associated with a five-point decrement in IQ.

Dr Bruce Lanphear
When we see this on a population level, impact is phenomenal. So take in the United States, if you shift the mean IQ by about five points, that results in an increase in the number of kids who are considered challenged - what we used to call mentally retarded - from about six million children to over nine million children.


NARRATION
There's also a corresponding decrease of 2.4 million gifted children with high IQs.

Dr Bruce Lanphear
So when you start to look at the impact of that, it's huge. What we're beginning to recognize, those of us that do this work, is that the pattern is pretty clear. We should expect that some of these chemicals will be toxic and we should no longer be using our children as guinea pigs to find out when they are toxic.

NARRATION
Some chemicals are stored in the body for decades, whereas others are metabolized and excreted readily.

Dr Linda Birnbaum
We have some chemicals, like the persistent organic chemicals, which tend to build up in your body over time. But there are other chemicals which have very, very short half-lives, and they are handled by the enzyme systems in our bodies. But at the same point, that doesn't mean we aren't exposed again and again and again and again. And we begin to see that even short-lived chemicals can have effects.

NARRATION
International media has shown a spotlight on the safety concerns of one of these short-lived chemicals - BPA, which is known to leach out of plastic into food and drink products.

Professor Peter Sly
We don't necessarily know about the chemicals we're exposed to because there's no requirement on manufacturers to list all the ingredients in the products, there's no requirement to show that these chemicals are actually safe before people are exposed to them.

Dr Andrea Gore
The chemicals that are used, for example, to make a water bottle don't need to undergo the same kind of safety scrutiny as a chemical that goes into a food product because making a water bottle, you're not intending for that chemical to get into the water. The problem is that it does get into the water through leaching.

NARRATION
As plastic degrades, like when left in the sun or put in dishwashers or microwaves, there's an accelerated leaching of plasticizers into the food or drink.

Professor Peter Sly
One of the most avoidable exposures that people as aware as they should be is heating food in microwaves in plastic containers. You can put them in pyrex or glass containers. They won't have the same problem.

Heating baby's milk in plastic bottles in a microwave is completely unnecessary. If you are going to heat it, don't put it in the plastic bottle.

Children's books with recycled paper are full of plasticizers. We think it's quite cute that kids chew on their books, but you don't realize that they're actually exposing themselves to these plastic products quite unintentionally.

The heat-sensitive paper in the cash register receipts are full of plastic products - bisphenols and phthalates.

Dr Linda Birnbaum
We've just conducted a study where we've actually measured the levels of BPA in people who are cashiers. We measure before shift and then we measure after an eight-hour shift and, in fact, what we see is an increase in their levels over the time of the shift. So we know that the way a cashier handles receipts can lead to elevated exposure.

NARRATION
It's still not clear whether this level of exposure poses a health risk.

NARRATION
Recently industry has responded to concerns. In Australia, for example, there's been a restriction of one phthalate in products used by infants up to three years of age. Also, many products now boast they're BPA free. But are these products actually safer?

Professor Peter Sly
What you're not told is that they have other bisphenols in them - other agents like bisphenol S, bisphenol AF, bisphenol B - and the health effects of these are starting to become known as well.

Dr Maryanne Demasi
On 1 January this year, France introduced legislation to suspend the use of BPA in packaged products that come into direct contact with food.

NARRATION
But industry groups are fighting back and calling for this ban to be overturned. Recently, the European Food Safety Authority has temporarily lowered the safe limit of BPA from 50 micrograms to 4 micrograms, pending studies. They estimate that this is still three to five times lower than the highest daily exposure.

Dr Andrea Gore
I think that level of four micrograms is rather an arbitrary number. There's really good evidence in the laboratory that levels of exposure much lower than four micrograms have effects on the developing brain, on the developing mammary gland and may relate to mammary cancer, on the prostate gland, on the thyroid gland. So I do not believe that if a chemical is an endocrine disruptor it can be considered safe at any level.

Dr Bruce Lanphear
You go back, the same statement was made about lead, the same statement was made about mercury, and PCBs and PBDEs. Time and again it's the same story.

They don't know…

 I mean, you've seen this before, right? You look at study after study - we don't know, we don't know… Now this is harmful.

Dr Maryanne Demasi
So you disagree with the regulatory bodies?

Dr Bruce Lanphear
Yes. The regulatory system that's been set up assumes that these chemicals are safe until proven otherwise.

So what the regulatory authorities are doing, what are governments are doing, are basically saying, 'We don't have enough evidence to show that these are guilty yet. So until we have definitive evidence from the laboratory, from a number of human studies, we're going to continue to treat them as though they're innocent.'

So in the end what we're doing, each time we release another chemical onto the market that hasn't been sufficiently tested is we're doing this massive experiment on our children, on all of us. I think what's happening is we're waiting for that crisis.

Dr Andrea Gore
Many of us are concerned that the people who are involved in the decision-making process are being influenced by groups that have a vested interest in those products. I consider it a conflict of interest if you make a product and you test that product yourself and say that it's safe to then use that as the basis for regulatory policy. I believe it's absolutely critical to bring in researchers who have no conflict of interest, who are not financially invested in a product and let them do the research in a controlled way and then make sure that that research is carefully peer reviewed.

NARRATION
Food Standards Australia New Zealand says that 'the weight of scientific evidence indicates that the levels of BPA exposure pose no public health and safety concerns for consumers.' They also said they 'assess both independent and industry sponsored studies and that they continue to review new information as it becomes available.'

One difficulty faced by regulators and scientists is trying to assess the safety of multiple chemicals.

Dr Maryanne Demasi
When determining the toxic effects of a chemical, it's often done one chemical at a time. But this scenario is hardly a reality.

Professor Peter Sly
People are very seldom exposed to a single chemical at a time. We're exposed to chemical mixtures. And most people who study in the area, study one chemical at a time because it's technically easier. It's much more difficult to study mixtures and study the effects of mixtures. But the reality is people are exposed to mixtures of chemicals all the time.

Professor Ian Shaw
Now, my feeling is we should be regulating chemicals like BPA because I think their combined effect is really quite significant. But it's very difficult for regulators to take account of the levels of everything in the environment and consider BPA in the context of that cocktail.

So each chemical is looked at individually and the individual levels are all far too low to have an effect. But the combined effect is what's important.

NARRATION
There are ways that individuals can try to minimize their exposure.

Dr Andrea Gore
If you wash your fruit and vegetables, you remove most of the residual pesticides. If you buy fresh foods instead of packaged foods, you're not exposing yourself to any contaminants that leach into your food or water. You also minimize creating a lot of trash, like the empty water bottles that are now getting into the oceans and the landfills. We can also keep our houses clean and thereby minimize having to spray with chemicals to try to get rid of the pests.

Dr Bruce Lanphear
You can choose to eat organic, if you can afford it. Try to eat fresh, unpackaged foods. Avoid canned foods. I tell my daughters this all the time, they don't listen - don't use cosmetics. There's a lot of things in cosmetics.

Invariably every year there'll be another study about lead in lipstick. Phthalates are big in cosmetics. So I tried to tell my daughters, 'You're beautiful like you are.' And it doesn’t work.

Professor Peter Sly
Unfortunately I'm not surprised. I think this is a reflection of the fact that these chemicals are everywhere and we don't know exactly what products they're in. If we don't know what they're in, it makes it much more difficult to avoid them.

NARRATION
Without clear labelling on products, consumers are exposed to many chemicals unknowingly.

NARRATION
Now, there are populations, like the Amish, that shun modern technology and have significantly lower levels of BPA and phthalates. But this is unrealistic for most.

A better way to control our exposure to environmental chemicals is through government regulation.

In 2004, the Stockholm Convention ratified an international treaty to target chemicals with known impact on human health.

The list, known as the Dirty Dozen, includes chemicals such as pesticides like DDT, and industrial chemicals like PCBs.

For more than a decade, this lab in Queensland has measured the level of these chemicals in the Australian population. They found that the levels of DDT have decreased by more than a factor of ten since the 1970s. While some brominated flame retardants in children have decreased to less than half the concentrations ten years ago.

Professor Jochen Mueller
You can really see that the Stockholm Treaty works because it really led to the decrease of these chemicals in human serum in Australia.

Dr Maryanne Demasi
So it's a good news story.

Professor Jochen Mueller
That's a great story. I think that it shows that regulation works.

Dr Maryanne Demasi
So is it possible that these chemicals might be substituted with others of unknown safety?

Professor Jochen Mueller
There's definitely a chance. I think that's what happens that when you regulate one group of chemicals, the industry sees a need to replace it with some other chemicals. And so the way chemicals are regulated and considered to be safe are not bulletproof.

Dr Maryanne Demasi
It's almost like a human experiment.

Professor Jochen Mueller
Unfortunately, yes.

Dr Linda Birnbaum
Fearmongering never helps anybody, but denying the existence of concerns is equally harmful.

I strongly believe that you have act when you have concerning information in the absence of certainty because science is rarely ever 100% certain.

Laureate Professor John Aitken
It would be something like the smoking debate where it wasn't until the horse has bolted that we suddenly realized that there was a link between smoking and lung cancer. The data was there suggesting this many decades before, but we were very slow to react to it.

We don't want to be slow to react to this because reproductive toxicants are something that will impact upon us all.

I don't think future generations will forgive us if we turn our back on this information and do nothing with it.

Professor Peter Sly
If you accept that the lag period between early life exposure and chronic disease in later life might be 50 years or so, then we're exposing generations of children and people to problems.

Now, we know that these chemicals are already in people's bodies.

There's enough evidence to suggest that they are harmful and that there's no benefit for them being there.

So it makes perfect sense to me to act now rather than waiting for 50 years till we get definitive evidence.

 


For the official website and video on ABC Australia’s website, please click here.


  • Reporter: Dr Maryanne Demasi

  • Producer: Dr Maryanne Demasi, Adam Collins

  • Researcher: Roslyn Lawrence

  • Camera: Kevin May
    Daniel Shaw
    Jeff Malouf
    Michael Fanning
    Micah Walker
    Rich Humphreys
    Maurice Branscombe
    Adam Collins

  • Sound: Stephen Ravich
    Gavin Marsh
    Cole McIntyre
    Jules Marchant
    Tim Parrat

  • Editor: Vaughan Smith

    Foetus footage courtesy Anatomy Department UNSW
    Archive courtesy Prelinger Archives

    Thanks to;
    Dr Ian Musgrave, University of Adelaide
    Professor Ian Rae, University of Melbourne
    Prof Katherine Samaras, Garvan Institute
    John Maruca
    Foetus footage courtesy Anatomy Department UNSW
    Archive courtesy Prelinger Archives
    Cancer animation courtesy WEHI

    Daniel Garza
    Vicki Matustik
    J.B. Bird
    Gemma Ward, UQ
    Jason Cockington & team
    Bridget Maher
    Briggs and friends
    Stephanie Ball
    Michelle, Lilith & Eris Boniwell
    Stephanie Rajo
    Chen zhao
    Kate Elks 
    Elyce Reed, Mushroom Rodentry
    Ellen Abraham, Sweetie’s Rodentry
    Leisa Mulheron
    Therese Kerr
    David & Danielle Shirley
    Dana Nachman & “The Human Experiment”

 

STORY CONTACTS

Laureate Professor John Aitken 
Director, Centre for Reproductive Science
University of Newcastle

Professor Peter Sly 
Deputy Director, Qld Children’s Medical Research Institute

Dr Linda Birnbaum 
Director, US National Toxicology Program &
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences 

 

Dr Andrea Gore 
J & J Centennial Professor of Pharm/Tox, Uni of Texas
Editor-in-Chief, Endocrinology

Professor Ian Shaw 
Director of Biochemistry, Professor of Toxicology
University of Canterbury

 

Dr Bruce Lanphear 
Faculty of Health Sciences, Simon Fraser University

 

Professor Jochen Mueller 

ENTOX, University of Queensland

 

Sarah Wilson 
Author and Wellness Commentator

 

RELATED INFO

The Endocrine Society – Introduction to Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals (EDCs)

World Health Organisation (WHO) – Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals (EDCs)

World Health Organisation (WHO) – State of the Science of endocrine disrupting chemicals - 2012

Endocrine-Disrupting Chemicals – An Endocrine Society Scientific Statement

European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) – Guidance on Bisphenol A (BPA)

Food Standards Australia New Zealand (FSANZ) – Guidance on Bisphenol A (BPA)

(US) National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) – Fact sheet - EDCs

(US) National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) – Endocrine Disruptors

CHOICE: Endocrine-disrupting chemicals - Which common chemicals have been linked to cancer and reproductive abnormalities?

Plastics Europe: View Paper on Endocrine Disruptors

Plastics Europe –Safety of Bisphenol A (BPA)