Entries in Babies (24)
Does your child's teether have phthlates?
Did you know that many toys have phthalates in them? Hundreds of independent studies published in respectable, peer-reviewed scientific journals over the past forty years have linked phthalate exposure to serious health effects in children, including reduced testosterone levels, lowered sperm counts, early puberty in girls, and genital defects in baby boys. And yet many soft plastic or vinyl toys, including teethers, have phthlates in them.
More than 20 million toys have been recalled over the last six months, most because of lead contamination. Fortunately, the Consumer Product Safety Commission Reform Act (CPSC Act) is
addressing high levels of lead in children's toys.
An amendment has been proposed to the CPSC Act which would prohibit the use of six toxic phthalates in children's toys. It's a no brainer. In fact, the European Union and 14 other countries have already passed similar phthalate bans as have California, Washington and Vermont. Even Mexico has more protective standards that the USA regarding phthalates in kid’s toys!
The toy industry isn't fighting the phthlate ban. But guess who has suddenly come up with studies -- paid for by the plastics industry -- showing your baby will be just fine sucking on that teether with the phthlates? That's right, Exxon Mobil – one of
the world’s largest producers of phthlate DINP (the primary plasticizer used to
make soft plastic kids' toys), and its trade association – the American
Chemistry Council.
It isn't that Exxon can't come up with other, profitable, products. After all, Exxon made $40 billion in profits last year – more
than any other U.S. company. They don't NEED to sell phthlates to the toy industry. But they'd rather drag this out for another decade until the proof -- in the form of our children's poisoned bodies -- can no longer be denied.
If you'd like to be sure your child's favorite rubber ducky isn't going to deprive you of grandchildren, tell your congressperson that you support the Feinstein Amendment to the House/Senate Consumer Product Safety Commission Reform Act, which restricts phthalates in toys. Remind them that parents
shouldn’t have to worry that we might be exposing our kids to a dose of
toxic chemicals when we give them a rubber ducky in the bath!
And if you want to use your cell phone while you're shopping, or look online, to search
a database of over 1,200 toys and other products to see if they contain
toxic chemicals, MomsRising.org can tell you how.
House Passes Paid Parental Leave Bill
You did it! A couple of weeks ago,thousands of mothers emailed their U.S. Representatives urging them to vote YES for the Federal Employees Paid Parental Leave Act (HR 5781), and... the bill passed the House!
If this bill passes the senate, federal workers will finally receive four weeks of paid leave when they birth or adopt a child. If we pass this bill for federal employees, we'll be one step closer to paid family leave for everyone. We might even catch up to England, France, Canada, and every other country we usually compare ourselves to. Who can argue with the need for mothers to bond with their new babies? Did you know that when you have a baby in France, you not only get paid time off to bond, the government also sends someone to help with housework and laundry so you can rest?!
The organization taking the lead on this is MomsRising.com, which recently helped New Jersey and Washington state make history by passing paid leave policies. A special thank you is also due to the National Partnership for Women & Families for all the amazing work they're doing on this and many other issues. And in my own home state, New York, Working Families has been keeping paid family leave on the agenda and pressuring the legislature.
The next step now is to push this bill through the U.S. Senate. We need your help. Your Senators need to hear from you now, while the bill is hot out of the House, to show that moms care and to give this bill a boost forward.
Take action at MomsRising.org.
If you need more info, here's some background:
Everyone needs paid family and medical leave and it's past time to start putting this policy in place. We know that paid family leave helps provide children with a healthy start and keep families out of poverty. Yet, the United States lags behind every developed country in the world in offering paid leave to new mothers.
It's time for the federal government to become a model employer by offering their workforce paid parental leave, and to pave the way for the rest of the nation to follow. With more than 1.8 million civilian employees, the federal government is the nation's largest employer. Currently, federal workers don't have any guarantee of paid leave for the birth or adoption of a child. Some have accrued paid sick or vacation time that they may be able to use while on unpaid FMLA leave. However, others, especially younger workers who haven't accrued sick or vacation time, have no choice but to take unpaid leave.
If passed, the Federal Employees Paid Parental Leave Act guarantees qualifying federal workers four weeks of paid parental leave for the birth or adoption of a new child. It would also enable federal workers to use up to eight weeks of accrued paid sick time immediately following the first four weeks of parental leave.
First federal employees, then the rest of the people in our nation!
Baby Borrowers
"The babies won't remember the experience, so it won't hurt them." So goes the justification for NBC's new reality series, "The Baby Borrowers," in which babies and toddlers are sold by their parents to be mishandled by teenagers for days at a time.
What year is this? We now have almost a century of research showing that babies and toddlers are impacted for life by early separations, which, by definition, they don't remember.
During WW2, John Bowlby documented the stages of grieving in babies and toddlers who were temporarily left with unfamiliar care-givers, from initial protest to confusion to despair. These kids were more vulnerable, later in life, to anxiety, panic and mood disorders as well as alcoholism. Neuroscientific research in the past five years has documented the permanent brain changes that result from early separations and other traumas and which underlie these adult mental illnesses.
Producers of this show may justify it by claiming they're teaching birth control, but let's be clear: letting these teens sleep in the same bed night after night hardly gives that message. NBC is after ratings. And the parents of these babies and toddlers? They should be prosecuted.





