Flame Retardants— Helpful or Harmful?

Flame retardant and fire-resistant fabric are common features in clothing designed for the industrial sector. Firefighters may be the most frequent wearers of flame-retardant clothing; however, other professions including electricians and oil/gas drillers make use of it too. Although the idea of protecting textiles against fire has been around since roughly 400 BC, the notion of creating fireproof textiles did not gain prominence until the 17th century.

Flame Retardants Produce More Toxic Smoke

If an object doused in flame retardants catches fire —
yes, they can still catch fire — it gives off higher levels of carbon monoxide, soot, and smoke than untreated objects. Ironically, these three things are more likely to kill a person in a fire than burns, which means flame-retardant chemicals may actually make fires more deadly.

Flame-retardant chemicals belong to the same class of chemicals as DDT and PCBs (organohalogens) and, like the former, they too build up in the environment. These chemicals also react with other toxins as they burn to produce cancer causing dioxins and furans.

Flame-Retardant Chemicals Provide No Benefit for People

The chemical industry claims that fire-retardant products increase escape time in a fire by 15-fold. In reality, this claim came from a study using powerful NASA style flame retardants, and they did give an extra 15 seconds of escape time. However, this is not the same type of chemical used in most furniture, and government and independent studies show that the most widely used flame-retardant chemicals provide no benefit for people while increasing the amount of toxic chemicals in smoke.

Kids’ Exposure to Flame Retardants Linked to Neurodevelopmental Delays

PBDEs is the acronym for a class of chemicals called polybrominateddiphenyl ethers. PBDEs are one of the most common kinds of toxic flame retardant used in common household materials such as furniture, electronics, textiles, and vehicles, as well as in construction materials. PBDEs can migrate out of flame-retardant products and accumulate in indoor air, house dust, and eventually the general environment. PBDEs do not break down quickly in the environment, where they can enter the food chain. They have been found in air, soils, sediments, fish, marine mammals, birds and other wildlife, beef, chicken, dairy products, and people’s bodies. In people, some PBDEs can remain in the fat and other tissues of the body for long periods. It should come as no surprise that some of the highest levels of PBDEs have been found in the United States. The findings are particularly concerning because as many as 97% of all Americans have significant levels of PBDEs in their blood, which makes in utero exposure highly likely.PBDEs disrupt mechanisms that are responsible for releasing hormones in your body, as well as alter calcium signaling in your brain, which can adversely affect learning and memory. A recent study by researchers at the University of California, Berkeley revealed that both in utero and childhood PBDE exposures were associated with poorer attention, fine motor coordination, and cognition in school-age children.

PBDEs disrupt mechanisms that are responsible for releasing hormones in your body. They can also alter calcium signaling in your brain, which can adversely affect learning and memory. A recent study by researchers at the University of California, Berkeley revealed that both in utero and childhood PBDE exposures were associated with poorer attention, fine motor coordination, and cognition in school-age children.

Children are among those most at risk from PBDEs’ ability to disrupt and harm development. Products intended for children and babies are also those most likely to be doused in flame-retardant chemicals. For instance, such chemicals were recently detected in 60% of 2011 car seats tested by The Ecology Center, most likely in the polyurethane foam. A separate study in Environmental Science & Technology also detected flame-retardant chemicals in 80% of the nursing pillows, baby carriers, car seats, changing table pads, highchairs, strollers, bassinets, portable cribs, walkers, baby tub inserts and bath slings, glider rockers, and sleeping wedges tested.

According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), “ … there is growing evidence that PBDE chemicals bioaccumulate and are persistent in the environment, and that people are being exposed to them. For example, traces of the chemicals have been found in fish, in samples of human blood, and in women’s breast milk. Also, there is evidence that these chemicals may cause liver toxicity, thyroid toxicity, and neurodevelopmental toxicity.”

Higher exposures to PBDEs have been linked to decreased fertility, which could be in part because the chemicals may mimic thyroid hormones.

There are several steps you can take to decrease your exposure to these chemicals:

1. Buy products made with natural fibers (like cotton and wool) that are naturally fire resistant and may contain fewer chemicals.

2. Eliminate the use of fabric softeners that contain these chemicals. Use wool balls to fluff up clothes in the dryer instead.

3. Look for furniture without flame retardants.

4. Use a HEPA filter in your vacuum cleaner.

5. Eliminate carpeting from your home, especially if you have children.

Picture of Rota Krape, RN

Rota Krape, RN

Picture of Rota Krape, RN

Rota Krape, RN

In the know

Related Stories

Healing Water for My Soul | Palmetto Bella

Healing Water for My Soul

My love for healing water is the whole point for so many of the stories I tell and that I’ve told on the pages of Bella Magazine this year. The drops of healing water in my life are the moments of loving connection with others where I get the opportunity to share life with them, and they with me, with no strings attached. Some of these encounters this year have been a brief passing moment as I exchanged glances and a smile with someone, and other encounters have been for long chapters of my life that continue. There are so many times in this chaotic year when I have felt

Read More »
Gearing Up Your Health in the New Year | Palmetto Bella

Gearing Up Your Health in the New Year

2020 isn’t going to win any awards for the difficult and unpredictable year it’s been, with its controversial presidential election, pandemic, economic hardships, racial tensions, and widespread fear and uncertainty about health and quality of life going forward. Thousands have succumbed to a newfound virus called SARS-CoV-2 (the virus that causes COVID-19) that continues to elude medical doctors and scientists. Many of us found out that we aren’t as healthy as we thought and that we should have been taking better care of ourselves. Looking to the new year, what can we do to help our bodies become stronger and perhaps more resistant to the many pathogens out there? Perhaps

Read More »
A CAUSE FOR Celebration | Palmetto Bella

A CAUSE FOR Celebration

Appalachians tend to be very independent and content with their lives. They live close to nature and have a deeply held belief in God. They are friendly, kind, and helpful to one another, and they take care of the needs of others. Appalachians also have a strong sense of what is right, and of what ought to be. When I was still working as a nurse, we lived in a small town in western North Carolina. The population was mostly poor and set in their ways. Because they did not take kindly to people from “outside,” it took a long time for me to make friends with our neighbors, who

Read More »
HOW TO Celebrate the Holidays WITH SPECIAL DIETARY NEEDS | Palmetto Bella

HOW TO Celebrate the Holidays WITH SPECIAL DIETARY NEEDS

In 2008 I finally figured out that the health problems I had been experiencing for over a year were due to food allergies and sensitivities. There were a number of foods that caused my symptoms, the primary ones being gluten grains (wheat, rye, barley), corn, soy, and milk. I began to feel much better during the summer after I eliminated these foods. During the fall I began thinking about the Thanksgiving and Christmas holiday meals that would be coming up. I could not eat the traditional turkey dressing, green bean casserole, sweet potato casserole, or my mom’s pecan pie. Even the canned cranberry sauce was off-limits for me because it

Read More »