From water bottles and food wrappers to microplastic in the air, plastic and its chemical components are nearly impossible to avoid today. Researchers have now measured the extent to which people are exposed to these chemicals using an innovative approach: specially designed wristbands.
Researchers with the International Pollutants Elimination Network (IPEN) gave the wristbands to 30 workers in Thailand from three different groups: recycling workers, plastic waste workers, and office workers. Each person wore the wristband, designed to absorb chemicals their skin has been exposed to, for five workdays, after which it was sent to an independent lab for analysis. The lab tested for 73 chemicals in six different chemical groups, including phthalates and bisphenols.
Lab tests found that all workers, despite their occupation, were exposed to at least 21 different chemicals. The waste and recycling workers had the most chemicals registered on their wristbands, as well as the highest concentrations of the chemicals.
In a related study, the IPEN researchers gave the wristbands to 12 international delegates currently meeting in Busan, South Korea, for the U.N. plastics summit. These delegates, from Asia, Latin America and Europe, are mostly office workers or university professors, with little obvious occupational exposure to plastic. Nonetheless, each delegate wristband registered at least 29 chemicals in all the six different categories.
“The wristband study has been a wake-up call,” said participant Elisa Morgera, professor of global environmental law at the University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, and U.N. special rapporteur on climate change and human rights. “I see now how much more I can do to eliminate plastic in my daily life, but I am also thinking about how much plastic is surrounding me that I didn’t ask for or need,” she said in a statement.
Chemicals from plastic, many of them endocrine disrupters, have been linked to a wide variety of health problems, including elevated risk of stroke and cardiovascular disease, infertility, obesity, diabetes, and certain cancers.
While more than 13,000 chemicals are associated with plastic, the 73 selected for the studies were chosen because they’re very common, associated with known health hazards, and aren’t currently regulated internationally, the researchers write. However, the expensive lab testing of the wristbands makes it difficult for average people to assess their own exposure the same way.
John Norman, senior director of regulatory and scientific affairs with the American Chemistry Council (ACC), a plastics industry association, told Mongabay in an email that the IPEN study “includes broad generalizations and lacks sufficient scientific detail.”
IPEN science adviser Sara Broche told Mongabay by phone that very few chemicals are internationally regulated, so addressing the global plastic chemical problem will take a coordinated effort.
“That’s why we are hoping and encouraging governments at this plastics treaty negotiations to put in strong measures to address these chemicals because this is an opportunity do so,” she said.
Banner image of plastic bottles ready for recycling. Image by Hans Braxmeier from Pixabay.