Are Your Christmas Clothes Full of Toxins?

Are Your Christmas Clothes Full of Toxins?

From Red Adair, the Texan who extinguished oil-well fires (think of John Wayne in the 1968 movie “Hellfighters”) to the first responders on 9/11, our fascination with firefighters starts as toddlers and never fades. Probably because fire is so frightening and firefighters are such heroes.

Drs. Oz & Roizen
Dr. Michael Roizen & Dr. Mehmet Oz

But our fear of fire has led us to douse everything from PJs to couches in fire-retardant chemicals – mostly PBDEs (polybrominated diphenyl ethers) and chlorinated Tris. Now those chemicals are in the bloodstream of up to 97 percent of North Americans. It’s true, they reduce the risk of injury in a fire, and that’s good, but we’re also more likely to see decreased fertility in women, learning and coordination disabilities in kids and lower birth weights in newborns.

Seems that as the chemicals leach out of household products, such as electronics, carpets and fabrics and foam used in upholstered furniture, they can be inhaled or ingested. But you can do a lot to remove the peril from your home and protect your family:

Are Your Christmas Clothes Full of Toxins?-Discard dry, disintegrating foam cushions. And repair tears in upholstery that can allow chemicals from cushions to drift into the air.

-Eighty percent of baby and kids’ clothes have fire-retardant chemicals in them, but you can avoid them by buying untreated, natural fabrics, not highly flammable synthetics.

-Control household dust; vacuum and damp-mop regularly.

Bottom line: Read all labels, and say no to carpets, carpet pads, furniture, bedding and fabrics with fire retardants. Say yes to naturally fire-resistant materials, including wool, cotton and hemp.

– Dr. Michael Roizen & Dr. Mehmet Oz

© 2012 Michael Roizen, M.D. and Mehmet Oz, M.D. Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc.

Recommended Articles