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Johnson & Johnson has always been a famous household name, especially for it’s range of baby care products. But the brand has been under constant fire for a few years now.
The reason - over 12,000 women in the US have sued the company over claims that the talcum powder manufactured by them is the prime cause behind their ovarian cancer.
A recent investigation by Reuters claimed that the talcum powder was contaminated by carcinogenic asbestos, making it poisonous and life-threatening for women using it on themselves. The main allegation of the report was that Johnson & Johnson knew this all along but decided to hide it.
As per a report in Zee News, Indian drug inspectors had seized some samples of Johnson & Johnson’s baby powder from a manufacturing plant in Himachal Pradesh. There is no official statement from the company yet.
So what’s confusing many people is how did asbestos get into the talc in the first place? And should you, as a parent, be worried? We find out.
Talc is a naturally occurring mineral, found in clay, that is mined from the soil. Being the softest mineral known to mankind, it can be crushed into white powder known as ‘talcum powder’.
Now, asbestos is also a naturally occurring mineral found underground. Thin asbestos fibers which are soft and flexible often seep inside the talc deposits. This is how asbestos contaminates the talc mined from the soil.
What makes the contamination even more dangerous is that talc is also widely used in cosmetics and other personal care items.
And not only that, talc is also used in food, consumer products, medicine such as chewing gums, polished rice, crayons, children’s toys etc.
And obviously, talc is the main component of baby powder manufactured by Johnson & Johnson, unless the pack specifically mentions ‘pure cornstarch’ on the front.
Pediatricians have often advised parents not to use baby powder on infants because there was always a risk that a baby would inhale the fine particles which could lead to choking or respiratory issues or worse, lung damage.
But yes, the doctors never mentioned asbestos as the reason.
In a 1991 paper titled ‘Inhalation of Baby Powder: An Unappreciated Hazard’, researchers said that ‘there is little dermatological evidence for using non-medicated powders in routine skin of infants’ and that health workers should ‘discourage routine use of talcum powder’. It also mentioned that ‘barrier creams were more appropriate for the area covered by the nappy’.
Doctors suggest replacing talcum powder with gel or oil based ointments to prevent rashes in infants.
Talc containing cornstarch can be used by adults who use talcum powders to avoid smelly armpits or to keep their genital area dry.
Hundreds of lawsuits from women have claimed that regularly applying products like Johnson’s Baby Powder and Shower to Shower to their genitals has caused ovarian cancer.
Around 11,700 plaintiffs have accused the company’s talc of causing their cancer, while since as early as 1972, different tests by labs had already found asbestos in the talc, information that the company hid from the FDA.
From at least 1971 to the early 2000s, the company’s raw talc and finished powders sometimes tested positive for small amounts of asbestos, and that company executives, mine managers, scientists, doctors and lawyers fretted over the problem and how to address it while failing to disclose it to regulators or the public.
But the baby-product manufacturer continues to deny all claims.
As reported by Chicago Tribune, the company attorneys told Reuters that the results that revealed the presence of asbestos were actually from the talc batches meant for industrial uses, not for baby powder.
The medical community hasn’t reached a consensus on talc as a possible carcinogen.
The National Toxicology Program, made up of parts of several different government agencies, including the National Institutes of Health, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Food and Drug Administration, has not fully reviewed talc.
Speaking to Associated Press (AP), Dr Adetunji Toriola, a cancer epidemiologist at Washington University’s Siteman Cancer Center in St Louis, had said that case studies indicated that women who used talc increased their chances of developing ovarian cancer by 20 to 40 percent. Ovarian cancer is highly deadly because it is often diagnosed too late.
He had said that talc might cause inflammation, which in turn was believed to increase the risk of ovarian cancer.
According to a report in CNBC, India is the biggest importer of asbestos in the world with a industry worth 2 billion dollars but more than 50 countries are petitioning for the mineral to be banned.
Why?
As per the World Health Organisation (WHO), all forms of asbestos are carcinogenic to humans.
The stats say that about 125 million people worldwide are exposed to asbestos at the workplace.
(With inputs from AP and Reuters)
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Published: 17 Dec 2018,06:42 PM IST