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Dangerous hormone-disrupting chemicals found in US breast milk samples

57 pointsby andsoitistoday at 2:47 PM21 commentsview on HN

Comments

SubiculumCodetoday at 4:21 PM

The uncomfortable, not even close to proven hypothesis, is that increased exposures to such hormone-disrupting chemicals are associated with an increased incidence of sex- and gender-diverse identities. That might be a good thing...I think sex- and gender-diverse people are wonderful and interesting...but the uncomfortable thought though is what that might imply in terms of the consequences of environmental policies. This topic is so fraught, I think there is a reluctance to engage except for those with an agenda, one side or another.

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childofhedgehogtoday at 3:17 PM

These chemicals are so prevalent that there is no way to avoid them without legislature in a country that is destroying the ability to CHOOSE motherhood. So we’re setting ourselves up for forced births where the babies have no choice but to ingest these chemicals which negatively impact them. Hopefully this research leads to action to prevent this, but will likely get swept under a rug.

molsongoldentoday at 3:41 PM

Has anyone seen evidence of lower levels in other countries? I searched for recent studies and it sounds like Canada and the EU have also reported similar findings but there isn't much widespread testing or totally comparable testing across locations.

ComputerGurutoday at 4:57 PM

Did I miss the link to the study? I was wondering if storage contamination were a possibility? Breast milk storage bags are all plastic, and cheap brands abound.

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SoftTalkertoday at 4:18 PM

I don't understand how The Guardian readers get through a normal day. Every headline on that page is doom-and-gloom news designed to get you to be fearful or panic about it.

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Metacelsustoday at 4:42 PM

Sure, but at what levels? The dose makes the poison, and the article doesn't say

RcouF1uZ4gsCtoday at 3:39 PM

> The chemicals present a serious risk to infants because they likely interfere with hormones that are critical to newborns’ proper development, and have been found to be harmful at very low levels of exposure. About 92% of 50 samples were contaminated with at least one of the anti-microbials or plasticizers for which researchers checked.

If they were that significantly harmful it would be massively obvious at that level of prevalence.