If you’re still using polycarbonate baby bottles, sippy cups and
juice bottles despite their propensity to leach the dangerous compound
bisphenol A, as my colleague Anne Underwood explains in the Feb. 4 issue, at least don’t fill them with really hot water.
Bisphenol A is what’s called an environmental estrogen. That means
it acts like a hormone, which may not be what you want for your fetus,
baby or toddler. Hundreds of studies on lab animals find that exposure
to even minute amounts of bisphenol A can trigger cancer of the breast
or prostate years later, reproductive abnormalities and behavioral
changes. There are no conclusive data on people, though there’s no
doubt we’ve (almost) all become walking chemical cabinets: federal
scientists find that 92 percent of us ages 6 and up harbor measurable
amounts of bisphenol A. Anyone who wants to wait around for definitive
human data, be my guest. For everyone else, some tips:
- Scrubbing or dish-washing polycarbonate baby bottles releases bisphenol A, tests have long shown.
- New data reveal that boiling-hot water increases that rate of
release markedly. Even brief exposure to boiling water raises the rate
of release by a factor of 15 to 55, scientists led by Scott Belcher of
the University of Cincinnati report today in the journal Toxicology Letters.
Before exposure to boiling water, the rate of release from individual
bottles ranged from 0.2 to 0.8 nanograms per hour. After exposure,
rates increased to 8 to 32 nanograms per hour.
There are more and more non-polycarbonate (and therefore bisphenol
A-free) baby bottles on the market. That’s the only kind Whole Foods
sells, for instance. But if you can’t or won’t buy those, at least wash
yours gently in only lukewarm water. No child needs a dose of hormone
with her apple juice.