Connect with Us:

The Power of Information

Facebook Page Twitter @enviroblog Youtube Channel Our RSS Feeds

At EWG, our team of scientists, engineers, policy experts, lawyers and computer programmers pores over government data, legal documents, scientific studies and our own laboratory tests to expose threats to your health and the environment, and to find solutions. Our research brings to light unsettling facts that you have a right to know.

Privacy Policy
(Updated Sept. 19, 2011)
Terms & Conditions
Reprint Permission Information

Charity Navigator 4 Star

sign up
Optional Member Code

support ewg

Concern over US babies 'born polluted'

Categories


Published July 13, 2005

American babies in the womb are steeping in a cocktail polluted by more than 200 chemicals including Teflon, mercury, pesticides and fire retardants, according to a new study released Thursday. "They are literally born polluted," said New York Democratic Representative Louise Slaughter, calling for greater public pollution control measures as she introduced the report. "If we ever had proof that our nation's pollution laws aren't working, it's reading the list of industrial chemicals in the bodies of babies who have not yet lived outside the womb. "Let's not permit our babies of the future to be polluted before they are even born," Slaughter told reporters. The study by the Environmental Working Group found that hundreds of toxic chemicals including pollutants and pesticides were pumped through the umbilical cord by mothers to their babies. Tests were conducted on blood samples drawn from 10 babies born in US hospitals in August and September of 2004. Researchers found that babies averaged 200 contaminants in their blood including mercury, fire retardents, and the Teflon chemical PFOA. "For years, scientists have studied pollution in the air, water, land and in our food. Recently they've investigated its health impacts on adults. Now we find this pollution is reaching babies during vital stages of development," said EWG Vice President for Research Jane Houlihan. The EWG is a non-profit public health lobby group.