Moms know that the ads we see are often the front lines for whether a product gets bought or ignored. A large and increasing number of greener moms may read up on blogs, read reports and articles and try to look up chemical names of material safety data sheets, but not everyone does this. Many moms are still influenced by ads that say “this will get your laundry smelling like a spring breeze!” and buy the bottle—along with the messages and ads that are sold to them.
That’s why I find it so unnerving that Procter & Gamble has issued a complaint to green company Seventh Generation, asking them to take down one of their online advertisements for the inexcusable crime of talking about safety.
The National Advertising Division of the Council of Better Business Bureaus’ ruling upholding Procter & Gamble’s claims against Seventh Generation’s commercial implies that companies can’t make claims based on the safety of their products, even though more and more research shows that consumers are increasingly making purchasing decisions based on product safety due to health concerns.
Case in point: a recent report by EcoFocus Worldwide found that the category they term “EcoAware Moms” (more than 51 million women) have $1.45 billion in buying power, and that of the top five products that these women are buying more often, two of them are safer cleaning products: chemical-free cleaners (47%) and plant-based cleaning products (40%). You’d think companies would want to advertise the relative safety of their products to this powerful consumer group.
More disturbingly, the ruling upheld Procter & Gamble’s claim that chemicals in conventional cleaning product chemicals have no connection to a rapid increase in illnesses such as autism, ADHD, asthma, allergies, immune system deficiencies and birth defects. But scientific research continues to mount, linking chemicals in cleaning products to chronic health problems. Women’s Voices for the Earth has released three reports compiling the science on certain chemicals in cleaners and impacts to human health, finding:
- A class of chemicals called APEs are linked to reproductive harm and fertility problems.
- Phthalates are linked to genital malformations in baby boys, reduced sperm count, and increased asthma and allergic reactions in children.
- Triclosan is hormone disruption and is linked to increased risk of breast cancer.
- Synthetic musks are bioaccumulative, showing up in blood, breast milk, and infants, and may break down our bodies’ defenses against other toxic exposures.
Procter & Gamble is the maker of Mr. Clean®, Tide®, Dawn®, Febreze®, Cascade®, Gain®, Swiffer®, and more. It seems like a company with such high-profile brands would want to advertise their safety. And if companies aren’t allowed to advertise how safe their products are, then consumers should be able to look on a product label to decide for themselves—too bad Procter & Gamble is only disclosing a few ingredients on their website, and no ingredients on product labels (as U.S. law doesn’t require ingredient disclosure for cleaners, few do). At least consumers can look on Seventh Generation product labels to see all ingredients and make a choice based on safety at the point of purchase.
The bottom line is that harmful chemicals shouldn’t be in cleaning products to begin with. Join Women’s Voices for the Earth to eliminate toxic chemicals that impact women’s health from products we use every day!
Sign our Twitter petition to the American Cleaning Institute
http://act.ly/2dc
Follow WVE on Twitter
www.twitter.com/women4earth
Join us on Facebook
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Womens-Voices-for-the-Earth/110000049854
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A lot of families recycle. Some compost. There are so many things people can do, one family at a time, and sometimes the simplest, easiest solutions are the best. When a person realizes that she creates four pounds of trash a day, it's not hard to see that every little change can make a big difference.
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Surfactants (cleaning agents) currently used in all cleaning products, including laundry detergents can be found in our waters, including the ocean, is having a effect on all water life and human health. My view is surfactants are used for only one reason, they are very cheap. There are safer alternatives and big detergent knows this, they just don't think the general public will be willing to pay a little extra for safety so they have no incentive to produce a safer product. I've recently started a blog compiling the mounting evidence of the damage being caused by surfactants and urge consumers to let detergent makers know, they must change their formulations. http://surfactant-free.blogspot.com
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