Cancer-causing chemical found in nearly 100 common soaps and shampoos: Study

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Cancer-causing chemical found in nearly 100 common soaps and shampoos: Study

Jonathan Benson

If you use store-bought, conventionally-formulated shampoos, conditioners, body washes and other similar personal care products on a regular basis, you could be exposing yourself to high doses of a cancer-causing chemical that few people are even aware exists. The Center for Environmental Health (CEH) recently published the findings of an independent study it conducted which found that 98 tested shampoos, soaps and other personal care products contained high levels of cocamide diethanolamine (cocamide DEA), a hidden foaming and thickening agent that is a known carcinogen.

Most NaturalNews readers are probably already familiar with some of the other more well-known chemical culprits found in personal care products, which include things like petroleum-based parabens or sodium lauryl sulfate, for instance. Many companies have already voluntarily phased these and other "big name" chemicals out of their products to meet growing demand for clean, toxin-free products. But there are still a number of other harmful chemicals out there like cocamide DEA that continue to be used in prominent personal care product brands, including some that are marketed as "natural" and organic.

Perhaps not surprisingly, several large corporate brands, including Colgate Palmolive and Paul Mitchell, were identified in the study as manufacturing products that contain cocamide DEA. Other brands that might come as more of a surprise include a lemon-scented kitchen hand wash sold by Trader Joe's and a ginger shampoo made by a company known as "Organix." Other implicated brands include American Crew, Palmolive, Equate (Walmart), At One With Nature, Simple Pleasures and Moroccanoil.

A full list of all tested products can be found at the following link:
http://ecowatch.com/2013/cancer-causing-chemical-in-shampoos/


Companies still selling products with cocamide DEA in California are breaking the law

While labeling that indicates the presence of DEA is obviously required on personal care products, labeling that indicates levels of the chemical is not. This is problematic, especially in California where a law passed last year prohibits the chemical from being added to any products sold in the state beginning in June 2013. This ban came after the International Agency for Research on Cancer found that cocamide DEA can cause cancer in mammals.

"Most people believe that products sold in major stores are tested for safety, but consumers need to know that they could be doused with a cancer-causing chemical every time they shower or shampoo," says Michael Green, executive director of CEH, about the new findings. "We expect companies to take swift action to end this unnecessary risk to our children's and families' health."

CEH recently sent letters to the nearly 100 companies it identified as still selling products that contain cocamide DEA, notifying them that their continued use of the chemical is a violation of California's Proposition 65, which pertains to cancer-causing chemicals. CEH has also reportedly filed lawsuits against Walgreens, Lake Consumer Products, Vogue International and Ultimark Products due to the presence of cocamide DEA in their products, with eventual plans to file lawsuits against the other 94 involved companies in the coming weeks and months.

"I don't think anybody wants to add one more thing to the list of cancer-causing chemicals that we're exposed to," says Caroline Cox, research director at CEH, as quoted by the San Francisco Gate. "There's lots of ways to make shampoo without it. This is one we don't really need."

Sources for this article include:

http://ecowatch.com

http://www.triplepundit.com

http://www.sfgate.com

Source:
http://www.naturalnews.com/042390_c...oos_personal_care_products.html#ixzz2h8LucrsI
 
Interesting to note that cocomide DEA is made from coconut oil. http://www.ewg.org/skindeep/ingredient/701516/COCAMIDE_DEA/


About COCAMIDE DEA: This ingredient is a chemically-modified form of coconut oil; used as a foaming agent.

http://ijt.sagepub.com/content/15/6/527

Amended Final Report on the Safety Assessment of Cocamide DEA


Abstract

Cocamide DEA is a mixture of ethanolamides of Coconut Acid that is used as a surfactant-foam booster and viscosity-increasing agent-aqueous in cosmetic products. Production formulation data submitted to the Food and Drug Administration in 1994 indicated that this ingredient was used in 745 products. The Cosmetic Ingredient Review (CIR) Expert Panel had previously evaluated the safety of Cocamide DEA, Lauramide DEA, Linoleamide DEA, and Oleamide DEA in cosmetics and concluded that they were safe as cosmetic ingredients at the concentrations that were currently being used (50%). CIR's decision to reevaluate the safety of Cocamide DEA in cosmetics is based on occupational studies indicating that this ingredient may have sensitization potential; however, the Expert Panel has determined that these studies are not relevant to cosmetic use. Furthermore, the Panel agreed that its original conclusion on Cocamide DEA should be clarified relative to use of this ingredient in rinse-off and leave-on products. Clarification of the original conclusion is based on the results of a skin irritation test in which 15 volunteers were tested with a surfactant solution containing 10% Cocamide DEA, the highest concentration tested in predictive patch tests. Additional comments that were made during the Panel's review of other data in the present report include that the severe ocular irritation reactions induced by a chemical (p H 9–10.5) containing >64% Cocamide DEA were likely a result of p H; that the renal effects noted in Fischer 344 rats in the National Toxicology Program (NTP) subchronic dermal toxicity study may be species-related and not test substance-related; and with reference to an ongoing NTP two-year chronic study that was initiated in 1993, that the results will be reviewed when the study is available. On the basis of the animal and clinical data presented in the present report, the Expert Panel concluded that Cocamide DEA is safe as used in rinse-off products and safe at concentrations 10% in leave-on cosmetic products. It was also concluded that Cocamide DEA should not be used as an ingredient in cosmetic products in which N-nitroso compounds are formed.

If you are eating lots of it, it could cause an increase in cancer risk but you are not eating large amounts in things like soap (unless you eat lots of soap).
 
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Are you telling me I should stop eating my body wash...

What is this world coming to...
 
I didn't know about this particular chemical, but I did know that almost every commercial/conventional shampoo and bar soap contain parabens. They do make organic soaps and shampoos that are often locally sold and/or produced in many areas—without the parabens.

Also, a good rule of thumb... if you have trouble pronouncing it, don't use it.
 
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I didn't know about this particular chemical, but I did know that almost every commercial/conventional shampoo and bar soap contain parabens. They do make organic soaps and shampoos that are often locally sold and/or produced in many areas—without the parabens.

Also, a good rule of thumb... if you have trouble pronouncing it, don't use it.

I remember doing an allergy test as a kid and that was one of the things my skin said I was allergic to and since then I have always bought "parabens-free" products.
 
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