I’ve read more than a handful of articles on PFAS, but this one really underscored just how prevalent they are- concentrated in fish, dental floss, blood donations, shoes, food packaging, explosives, food, water, the air, etc. Not only does the sheer number of them concern me, but the fact that they will be difficult to replace in anything that needs to be waterproof, high temperature resistant, or perhaps airtight is concerning.

  • Apathy Tree@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 year ago

    And just like those other things, and smoking, and climate change, etc. ad nauseum, the people who make those chemicals have known for a very long time they pose a serious risk to human and environmental health, and suppressed that information from the public. For example, most can coating recipes are “trade secret” so the public has no idea what’s in them, and indeed can’t know. Pfas and other forever chemicals are used as plasticizers, so they are in a -lot- of stuff in direct contact with food and water (drinking or environmental).

    If, instead of being greedy [removed], they had started developing less harmful chemicals back then, we wouldn’t be saturated with the health issues they can cause now, nor would future generations have to cope with the mess being left behind.

    I think the real problem is that the public is largely unaware of these things (by design) so we can’t really do anything to avoid it. We don’t know what plastic bottles are made of. We don’t know what fabric is made of or treated with. We barely even know what’s in our actual food, we don’t stand a chance with plastics, which are now everywhere on earth, no exceptions.

    • ZenFriedRice@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Businesses have damaged public health for profit so many times that I don’t think there should be any trust any more. All business processes, research, algorithms, etc should be public. No new materials should be used widespread without 3rd party safety testing.

      We can’t keep adding layers of permanent poison to the planet.

  • d3Xt3r@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Forget PFAS, a much more concerning issue is micro and nanoplastics, which are far more prevalent - and have even been detected in the air even in places far from civilisation, like polar regions. This shows how widespread they are. No place on earth is safe from micro/nanoplastics.

    Nanoplastics permeate living cells and damage DNA, causing everything from minor inflammation to organ failure and cancer.

    PFAS is nothing compared to micro/nanoplastics.

  • shanghaibebop@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    In terms of harm, almost everything will be several orders of magnitude less than lead. PFAS and Microplastics might be bad, but they really aren’t on the same level of bad as lead, which is known to cause severe societal harm due to its impact on the neural system.

  • HubertManne@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Definately not. I don’t think we will ban anything much anymore. Would not be surprised if we went back to lead and asbestos.

  • flatbield@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I am not sure. I do not think they have the direct harmful effect of some things. Not saying no effect. As far as I know it is that they do not break down fast which means any bad effect is going to linger and get worse the more we produce and use. It is not that they are everywhere… The question is are they at a significant concentration.

    It was the long lasting persistence that was the unknown issue when all this started. Especially the higher molecular weight stuff.

    I have not followed recently. So do not know. Keep in mind we put a lot of stuff into the environment much of it potentially not good. At some level this is just the one in the press now.