Banned chemicals found in American shampoo, sunscreen and tampons across major brands

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
From shampoo and in tampons sunscreen, many personal care products on American shelves contain chemicals related to cancer, infertility and hormonal disturbances – the ingredients that are prohibited or limited in the European Union and in other countries. Despite these alarming associations, no federal law in the United States requires companies to disclose potentially harmful ingredients. Only California obliges limited transparency, leaving most Americans in ignorance of what they put – and absorb their bodies.
For Tiah Tomlin-Harris, a survivor twice of triple negative breast cancer, this lack of transparency was an alarm clock. Diagnosed before the age of 40 without genetic predisposition, Tomlin-Harris began asking difficult questions: Where does it come from? Genetic tests have returned negative, placing it among the 80 to 90% of patients with breast cancer whose disease is not linked to family history. His experience as a chemist in the pharmaceutical industry has given him a unique perspective and a critical eye for labels.
New Maha initiatives focused on technology will inaugurate the “new era of convenience”, improves health results, says Trump

The Yuka application, illustrated here, assesses products for chemical security – fill in a regulatory gap that leaves most Americans in darkness. (Fox News Digital)
“I started digging in the causes,” she told Fox. “The first thing I did was to remove all the products from my house – hair detergent care. I went back to grandmother’s remedies – soda, vinegar – because I no longer knew what was safe.” While she was doing research, she has done how many widely used beauty and hygiene products are filled with potentially harmful chemicals.
While the Secretary of Health and Social Services, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., was pressure for the elimination of toxic additives in processed food, he has not yet discussed the personal care industry. The FDA commissioner, Marty Makary, admits that the agency is in a “deregular state of mind”, saying, “[We’ve] regulated too much. “”
The choice of Trump CDC confirmed – but its pro -Vaccin position can compete with the RFK Jr. agenda.

Mobile tools give buyers more control in the alley of the grocery store – especially since the concerns go up on hidden chemical exposures. (Getty)
This state of mind has led to an explosion of tools focused on consumers like Yuka and Clearya, applications that scan bar codes and analyze ingredient safety using AI. “Most people are shocked,” said Julie Chapon, co-founder of Yuka. “They assume that green packaging means safety.”
Tomlin-Harris highlighted the disproportionate impact on women of color, especially black women. “We spend nine times more in beauty products than any other demographic group, but these products often contain the most harmful ingredients – parabens, phtalates, formaldehyde, benzene. It is not only linked to cancer. They weaken chemotherapy drugs. They disrupt hormones. They have an impact on fertility – for men and women.”
A Consumer report survey I found carcinogens in 10 of the best brands of braided hair, many of which are marketed with black women and girls.

American consumers take the safety of products in hand, a barcode at the same time. (Wavebreakmedia)
Janet Nudelman, Director of the campaign for safe cosmetics in breast cancer prevention, should often choose “between protecting skin cancer compared to the increase in their risk of breast cancer” due to harmful ingredients. Dr. Leonardo TRASANDE, whose studies highlight the health risks of common chemicals, called the current system “rigged to produce toxic chemical exhibitions for our hormones”. The consequences, it warns, are societal: higher health costs and reproductive and developmental health problems for life.
The federal government responds slowly. The package of safer beauty invoices, reintroduced to congress, seeks to ban toxic ingredients, increase the disclosure of ingredients and protect vulnerable populations such as hairstyles, nail technicians and women of color. But for the moment, consumers are widely left to protect themselves.
The FDA commissioner, Makary, insists that change arrives: “We make an inventory of all chemicals in food supply to see how we can make it safer.” However, defense groups say that the United States is far behind the EU in the regulation of cosmetic security.
Industry representatives grow back. The Council of Personal Care Products says: “The PCPC and our member companies have fully committed to maintaining the highest standards of safety, quality and transparency.”
Click here to obtain the Fox News app

Products to personal care, defenders like Tiah Tomlin-Harris say it is time for transparency to the full label in the United States (istock)
But for defenders like Tomlin-Harris, promises are not enough. “It’s not just a female problem,” she said. “It is a problem of the people. Men are affected. Children are affected. Our whole population is exposed to chemicals to whom we have not consented, and we pay the price.”
His message is clear: “We need transparency. We need regulation. And we need business responsibility that create these products. It is time to detoxify our routines, ask for safer alternatives and prioritize our health.”