BFF-30 French watchdog sounds alert over chemicals in diapers

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FRANCE-CHILDREN-HEALTH-DIAPERS

French watchdog sounds alert over chemicals in diapers

PARIS, Jan 23, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – A French public health watchdog issued a
warning Wednesday about the risks of several chemicals found in disposable
nappies, particularly artificial perfumes, leading the government to demand
that manufacturers withdraw them from their products.

The Anses health body stressed there was no medical study which had proved
health problems caused by disposable diapers.

But “we cannot exclude a risk… because we have recorded some substances
that are above healthy limits,” the deputy director of the Agency for Food,
Environmental and Occupational Health and Safety (Anses), Gerard Lasfargues,
told AFP.

The chemicals identified in the study — described as the first of its kind
— include two artificial perfumes as well as other complex aromatic products
that are refined from oil, and potentially dangerous dioxins.

The French government called a meeting of nappy manufacturers on Wednesday
morning and gave them 15 days to remove the products identified by the
watchdog.

“I want to reassure parents: Anses says that there is no immediate risk for
the health of our children,” Health Minister Agnes Buzyn said after the
meeting.

“Obviously we should continue putting nappies on our babies. We’ve been
doing that for at least 50 years,” she said, while adding that the report
does not exclude “a health risk for children in the long term”.

“That’s why as a precaution we want to protect our children from possible
effects,” said Buzyn, who met the manufacturers along with the economy and
environmental ministers.

In a statement on Wednesday, market leader Pampers, which belongs to US
consumer products group Procter & Gamble, said its diapers “are safe and have
always been so.”

Scientists working for Anses tested 23 types of nappies in real-life
conditions as they were worn by children, which it said was a world first.

“We calculated the amount (of chemicals) absorbed, calculated according to
the time a nappy is worn, the number of nappies worn by babies, up to 36
months, and then we compared the results with toxicology standards,”
Lasfargues said.

An average baby in France wears 3,800 to 4,800 nappies, Lasfargues said,
with the potentially hazardous chemicals found even in products marketed as
environmentally friendly.

BSS/AFP/SSS/1952 hrs