NTP Confirms Health Care Without Harm About Vinyl Medical
Products MINNEAPOLIS, Dec. 17 -/E-Wire/-- Today, the National
Toxicology Program (NTP) confirmed Health Care Without Harms
assertion that di-ethylhexyl-phthalate (DEHP) is a hazard to
human development and fertility. DEHP is a phthalate plasticizer
used to make polyvinyl chloride (PVC) medical products soft and
flexible. Patients are exposed to DEHP when it leaches out of
PVC medical devices such as IV bags, tubing, enteral
(intestinal) feeding tubes and some feeding bags, and blood
bags.
NTP Confirms Health Care Without Harm About Vinyl Medical
Products
MINNEAPOLIS, Dec. 17 -/E-Wire/-- Today, the National
Toxicology Program (NTP) confirmed Health Care Without Harms
assertion that di-ethylhexyl-phthalate (DEHP) is a hazard to
human development and fertility. DEHP is a phthalate plasticizer
used to make polyvinyl chloride (PVC) medical products soft and
flexible. Patients are exposed to DEHP when it leaches out of
PVC medical devices such as IV bags, tubing, enteral
(intestinal) feeding tubes and some feeding bags, and blood
bags.
The expert panel also expressed strong concern about the
level of DEHP in the foods we eat every dayespecially dairy,
meat, fish and oils.
NTP, a division of the National Institutes of Environmental
Health Sciences, convened a panel of experts to review toxicity
data on phthalates. Data on health effects of DEHP in animals
showed that oral exposure can cause miscarriage, birth defects,
reduced fertility, abnormal sperm counts and testicular damage.
"The weight of evidence from animal studies indicates
that DEHP exposure can cause serious reproductive and
developmental problems," said Ted Schettler, MD of Science
and Environmental Health Network. "The developing organism
is the most susceptible, and unfortunately, some young
patientsespecially premature infants receiving extracorporeal
membrane oxygenation (ECMO) therapy or exchange blood
transfusions -- are receiving doses at or near the levels
causing adverse effects in animals. We simply dont know if
the children are being harmed, and studies to clarify that would
be extremely difficult to do."
The panel used animal studies to judge human risk, as is
common in the pharmaceutical industry. The agency reaffirmed
that laboratory animal studies were "relevant to judging
hazard to human reproduction and development." There are
very limited human data available. Rather than delaying a
decision until additional human health data are collected,
Health Care Without Harm advocates the replacement of PVC
medical devices where alternatives are available now.
"Here is the federal government saying that the
phthalates in PVC medical products may pose a threat to the
ability to bear healthy children. Now health care professionals
and patients need to insist that if we can make the same
products out of materials that do not contain this reproductive
and developmental poison, lets do it," said Charlotte
Brody, RN, co-coordinator of Health Care Without Harm.
The U.S. health care industry uses more than 500 million IV
bags each year. About 20 percent of those are made of a blend of
plastics free of PVC or plasticizers.
Phthalates have come under increasing international scrutiny
in the past year and many companies have acted accordingly.
Baxter Healthcare, the nations largest maker of IV bags,
promised shareholders that it will establish timelines to phase
out its use of PVC. Major health care companies Tenet
Healthcare, Universal Health Services, Kaiser Permanente and
Catholic Healthcare West are also shifting away from vinyl.
Earlier this month, the European Union (EU) enacted a ban on
the use of phthalates in PVC childrens toys in 15 countries,
due to concerns about the health risks of phthalate exposure.
Health Care Without Harm, an international coalition of
more than 240 groups in 15 countries, works for the
elimination of environmental and public health threats from
health care practices, including the industrys use of PVC
plastic. Member groups include more than 60 hospitals, the
Ambulatory Pediatric Association, the American Nurses
Association, the Intravenous Nursing Society, and many others.
To learn more about HCWH, visit the web site at http://www.noharm.org
SOURCE Health Care Without Harm