Are baby shampoos poisoning infants?
Consumer groups boycott Johnson & Johnson after finding trace levels of potentially dangerous chemicals in the iconic Johnson's Baby Shampoo
Johnson & Johnson baby shampoos may be tear-free, but they're not (yet) free of known carcinogens, according to consumer advocates who are calling for a boycott. Photo: John Lund/Drew Kelly/Blend Images/Corbis SEE ALL 164 PHOTOS
Best Opinion: AP, Forbes
A coalition of consumer advocates and health watchdogs is urging Americans to boycott Johnson & Johnson. The company's alleged crime: Continuing to sell Johnson's Baby Shampoo containing cancer-causing chemicals, even though the product has been pulled from the shelves in other countries. What parents need to know:
What are these toxic
chemicals?
The first, dioxane, is "a likely
carcinogen" that is "a byproduct of
a process for making chemicals more
soluble and gentler on the skin,"
reports the Associated Press.
The second is a preservative called
quaternium-15, which releases
formaldehyde to kill bacteria.
Formaldehyde "was declared a known
human carcinogen" this year. The
shampoo complies with government
standards, but babies are more
vulnerable to exposure than adults,
says Tracey J. Woodruff, director of
the Program on Reproductive Health
and the Environment at University of
California-San Francisco. "Even
though the chemicals may be
low-level, why risk it?"
So consumer groups are
pushing a boycott?
In a new report called "Baby's Tub
is Still Toxic," the Campaign for
Safe Cosmetics says that bottles of
Johnson's Baby Shampoo still contain
trace amounts of the carcinogenic
chemicals, even though the company
offers versions without them in
other countries and the Campaign for
Safe Cosmetics has been urging
Johnson & Johnson to remove these
chemicals from its baby products for
more than two years. "It's clearly a
double standard," Lisa Archer, the
group's director,
tells the Associated Press,
"something they can easily fix."
What does the company say?
Johnson & Johnson says it is
changing the formulas of its baby
products to reduce dioxane content
below detectable levels. It also
says that formaldehyde-releasing
preservatives are safe and have been
approved by regulators in the U.S.
and elsewhere, but it's still
phasing them out. "We know that some
consumers are concerned about
formaldehyde,"
the company said in a statement,
"which is why we offer many products
without formaldehyde-releasing
preservatives." Johnson & Johnson
already makes a new, more expensive
alternative to its traditional baby
shampoo called Johnson's Naturals
that doesn't contain the chemicals.
If it's phasing out the
carcinogens, why boycott?
The Campaign for Safe Cosmetics'
wants to know exactly when the
company will eliminate the chemicals
completely. And Johnson & Johnson
might be unusually sensitive to such
pressure. Less than a month ago, the
company ranked as the most trusted
brand in America in a Forbes
survey, so its executives might
be worried this controversy "could
give consumers pause,"
says Amy Westervelt at Forbes.
For Safe and healthy products
without controversial ingredients
Healthy-Communications.com