Plastic is one of the greatest—and worst—inventions over the past centuries.
Thanks to plastic, products are exponentially cheaper, sturdier, longer lasting, and more widely available. Because of plastic, we can travel across the world in a single day or obtain items that would otherwise have been impossible due to difficulties of storage, transportation, or preservation.
Unfortunately, for all the ways plastic has benefitted the world, it has also done a significant amount of damage to the world. Or, perhaps better said, the way we use plastic has damaged the world.
Spend a few minutes researching the Great Pacific Garbage Patch or “plastic pollution”, and you’ll see that the situation is a lot more dire than most of us realize.
You see, for all its convenience in our daily lives, plastic is difficult to safely and cleanly dispose of. Recycling plastic is more expensive than simply creating new plastic, so most plastic products don’t end up being re-used, merely dumped into landfills—or worse, thrown into the ocean.
And that’s when we really start seeing problems!
Once plastic gets into the oceans, there is nothing to stop it from spreading around the world. Currents and tides can carry a plastic bag from the beaches of Los Angeles to the shores of South Africa or the Great Barrier Reef of the Australian coast. In fact, plastic waste has been found on uninhabited islands never visited by humans—it’s only there because someone somewhere dumped it into the sea, ocean, or a river.
Plastic can break down into smaller pieces and particle over time and exposure to saltwater. When those particles and pieces are ingested by animals, they are toxic enough to sicken, contaminate, and even kill those animals.
According to UNESCO [1] more than 100,000 marine mammals are killed each year by plastic.
And it’s at this point that the plastics we’re throwing into the ocean (and in so doing, harming the marine life) comes back to bite us ….big time!
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When we eat fish that is contaminated with these plastic particles and toxins, we are exposed to a wide range of potential health concerns. Research [2] has indicated that microplastics and nanoplastics can be absorbed into all human organ tissue, where they can become carcinogenic and increase cancer risk, as well as interfere with healthy organ function. They’re also known to be mutagenic [3], mutating our very DNA and causing serious long-term health problems.
Granted, a lot more research is needed to determine just how much of a threat microplastics ingested via contaminated fish and seafood really is. But there are other forms of plastic that have been proven to be significantly harmful for human health.
According to one 2019 paper [4], “of the 906 chemicals likely associated with plastic packaging, 63 rank highest for human health hazards and 68 for environmental hazards”. Not only that, but “7 of the 906 substances are classified in the European Union as persistent, bioaccumulative, and toxic (PBT), or very persistent, very bioaccumulative (vPvB), and 15 as endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDC).”
One article in the New York Times [5] talked about the “most worrying plastics for human health”, and their quoted expert listed the two biggest threats: phthalates, which are added to plastic to make it soft and pliable; and bisphenols, which is used in the manufacturing of polycarbonate plastics (harder plastics).
These two plastics are endocrine disruptors, which interfere with or mimic your natural hormones. Research has indicated that endocrine disruptors like these two plastics can:
It’s clear to see that plastics aren’t just damaging our oceans; they’re directly threatening our health!
Reducing plastic is not an easy task! Plastic is everywhere, in everything, and nearly impossible to avoid. But there are a few things you can do that will help you limit the amount of plastic you use, as well prevent exposure to potentially hazardous plastics:
These are just a few things you can do to reduce your exposure to and use of plastic, but they can be absolutely game-changing to help you protect yourself against the dangers of plastics.
Resources
[1] https://www.unesco.org/en/ocean
[2] https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6132564/
[3] https://theconversation.com/were-all-ingesting-microplastics-at-home-and-these-might-be-toxic-for-our-health-here-are-some-tips-to-reduce-your-risk-159537#:~:text=Microplastics%20can%20carry%20a%20range,meaning%20they%20potentially%20cause%20cancer.
[4] https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0048969718338828
[5] https://www.nytimes.com/article/plastics-to-avoid.html
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