Brazilian Blowup: It's Time for the FDA to Act
FDA has known for years about health problems caused by Brazilian Blowout and keratin hair relaxers -- problems like the hair loss reported by actress Mary Louise Parker and many others
April 2011
Massive hair loss, blistered scalps, severe rashes -- you might
expect such complaints to prompt a federal agency charged with
protecting public health to actually do something to protect the
public. Not in the good ole U.S. of A.
According to documents released this week by Environmental Working
Group, the U.S. FDA has known for years about health problems caused
by Brazilian Blowout and keratin hair relaxers -- problems like the
hair loss reported by actress Mary Louise Parker and many others.
Eight months ago, after complaints of severe allergic reactions
(nose bleeds, difficulty breathing), Oregon Health and Science
University tested the supposedly "formaldehyde-free" Brazilian
Blowout and found significant levels of formaldehyde, a potent
allergen and known cancer-causing chemical.
Canada conducted its own tests and acted quickly to ban the product;
several other countries followed suit. Seeing no action from the
federal government in the U.S., state agencies stepped forward to
warn the public, and the California Attorney General filed a lawsuit
against the LA-based manufacturer of Brazilian Blowout.
Finally this week, the federal U.S. Occupational Health and Safety
Administration jumped in with a health alert, warning salons to stop
using formaldehyde-based hair straighteners.
Yet right now, today, countless women are being exposed to dangerous
levels of formaldehyde in hair salons across America. As one
enthusiastic customer said to me, if this stuff was really
dangerous, wouldn't FDA pull it off the market?
Ah yes, FDA, the federal agency in charge of protecting the American
public from dangerous cosmetics: no word from them yet, a fact that
has surprised even John Bailey, former FDA official and current
spokesperson for the cosmetics industry. Bailey told TIME magazine
that he'd never before seen OSHA issue a warning of this sort before
FDA had acted.
But it's no surprise to those of us who have been working for years
to get FDA to take action against unsafe cosmetics.
The Brazilian Blowup illustrates what we've been saying all along:
FDA is in desperate need of a makeover, and so are the 70-year-old
cosmetic regulations that are failing to protect public health.
For starters, FDA doesn't even have the authority to recall unsafe
cosmetics such as formaldehyde-laden hair straighteners or the
mercury-containing skin lighteners discovered by the Chicago
Tribune. (Why are media outlets and NGOs doing the job the federal
government is supposed to be doing?)
FDA can't require companies to assess cosmetics for safety or
monitor health impacts on highly exposed people such as salon
workers, and they can't require full labeling of cosmetics (parents
might want to know, for example, that many baby shampoos also
contain formaldehyde).
Federal cosmetics laws are so weak that the state of California
passed its own law, the Safe Cosmetics Act of 2005, to give the
state authority to protect the public. The recent injunction filed
by the California Attorney General is the first legal action under
that law.
It's time to bring the FDA and federal cosmetic regulations into the
21st century. The federal Safe Cosmetics Act, introduced by Rep. Jan
Schakowsky (D, Ill.), would give FDA the authority to do its job of
protecting the public. First introduced in 2010, the law would
prohibit cancer-causing chemicals (like formaldehyde) from
cosmetics, require full labeling of personal care products and set
up a system to assess ingredient safety. The law should be
reintroduced into Congress ASAP.
In the meantime, just say no to putting known carcinogens on your
head! Here's a great resource for finding the
safest hair straightening options.
Stacy Malkan is co-founder of the national Campaign for Safe
Cosmetics and author of the award-winning book, "Not Just a Pretty
Face: The Ugly Side of the Beauty Industry." Follow her on twitter @safecosmetics.
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