CREDIT: ISNS |
Despite the best intentions of parents, relatives, and
friends, seemingly safe toys given to children this holiday season could
contain another difficult-to-recognize surprise: unsafe levels of lead,
mercury, cadmium, selenium, barium, and arsenic. Toys can present many risks to
children, and the problem isn't confined to seemingly obvious dangerous items
-- such as the Red Ryder BB gun coveted by nine-year-old Ralphie Parker in the
popular holiday movie "A Christmas Story." Other dangers include
choking on small parts, lacerations from sharp edges or broken pieces, electric
shocks, strangulation from cords or string, and hearing damage from loud
noises. But the greatest risk to children may come from the chemical makeup of
the toys themselves.
The Consumer Product Safety Commission's records show that
in 2007 alone, 157 types of toys were recalled, 99 types of which were related
to lead toxicity. That meant about 6 million children’s playthings were pulled
off store shelves for lead paint or lead components. Despite the Consumer
Product Safety Improvement Act in 2008, which said every children's toy in the
United States must be tested by an independent body, there were still 45 types
recalled between 2008 and 2011 for toxicity issues. Lead is perhaps the
best-known menace, and has been on the Consumer Product Safety Commission's
"naughty list" for years. The commission currently regulates lead at
100 parts per million, or ppm, as part of adopting the American Society for
Testing and Materials' standards for testing heavy metals in children's toys in
February 2012.
Stephanie Goodson, a pediatrician and clinical instructor
at the University of Michigan, said 100 ppm is still too high, since the best
amount of lead exposure for a child is zero. The body needs a certain amount of
metals to function properly. This is why food labels commonly boast about the
iron and zinc content found in them. But toxic heavy metals work differently,
accumulating in the body and inhibiting normal, healthy processes. This can
cause illness in people exposed to high amounts. Screening children for lead is
an everyday occurrence in Goodson's profession, and she has studied its effects
in full. "We see a child who has elevated blood [lead] levels,
particularly in the synthesis of hemoglobin," Goodson said, referring to a
substance in blood cells that carries oxygen. "The lead blocks its
ability to synthesize this protein, because it binds onto the enzyme, so
therefore children become quite anemic from lead toxicity."
Goodson explained that children react more negatively than
adults to lead exposure. In children, lead is a potent neurotoxin, a term that
comes from the Greek word for nerve and the Latin word for poison. It
damages the developing brain, and can continually affect behavior and cognitive
ability into adulthood. Children exposed to lead when they are young are more
likely to develop reading disabilities by high school and are less likely to
graduate, according to the University of Michigan Health System. Like a tongue
stuck to a frozen flagpole, lead binds tightly to bones and releases its hold
very slowly over time. This process takes much longer for children. While lead
can escape soft tissues like the liver and brain in a few months, it clings to
children's bones for 30-40 years, Goodson said.
Regulatory and safety organizations have long addressed
lead levels in toys, but some other metals are not overseen in the same way.
Regulations on other toxic heavy metals like cadmium and barium are still
voluntary, Goodson said. This means that companies are legally free to swap out
lead for a substance that could be equally destructive to a child's body, or
pick and choose the standards that are enforced. In legal terms, this could be
something as minute as saying a company should not use dangerous levels of
cadmium versus they shall not. Goodson calls this practice "trad[ing] one
evil substance for another." Gene Rider is the president of an
Illinois-based division of Intertek, an international corporation that
researches and tests products, including toys. They also offer a variety of
services to businesses such as workshops on toy safety. Rider's company
instructs toymakers to "design safety and quality into the product."
And he's not pointing the finger at the elves in Santa’s workshop.
Intertek's research shows that 75 percent of recalls and
injuries were a result of design problems, not manufacturing issues. While a
factory may misstep by using lead-contaminated paint, whether buying the wrong
type or mixing leftover leaded paint with lead-free, Rider said that an error
in the design will have a greater scale of impact. Manufacturers can only do
their jobs "as long as the engineering specs specify that it needs to be
lead-free paint or heavy metal-free paint," he said. Intertek shares its
research with local governments and agencies in order to better inform
regulation. Rider feels that safety breaches in toy manufacture could be
prevented by more research as well as better training for engineering and
business students. "We shouldn't be making the same mistake others have
made," Rider said.
Healthfinder, a government-run public safety website, says
that reading labels is the best way to protect against heavy metals in toys.
The site tells parents and gift-givers that when the American Society for
Testing and Materials' logo or initials appear on a toy's tag, the toy has been
tested for lead, phthalate, and choking and laceration hazards Several other
organizations also post updates on newly recalled toys, from the Consumer
Product Safety Commission and Safe Kids USA to parent-run blogs. Prevent
Blindness America also offers a host of toy-buying tips on its website and in
print publications.
Source: Live Science
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