EcoWaste Coalition Finds More Mercury-Laced Beauty Creams in the Market, Urges Consumers to Shun Chemical Whiteners and Embrace Natural Skin Color
26 April 2021, Quezon
City. An environmental health watchdog group today exposed the unlawful
sale of five more unauthorized “beauty creams” from Pakistan that are laden with high
levels of mercury, a chemical poison banned in cosmetic product formulations.
In its latest ALERTOXIC (a portmanteau of “alert” and “toxic”) advisory,
the EcoWaste Coalition revealed the illegal sale of five brands of “beauty
creams” smuggled from Pakistan with mercury content as much as 16,900 times
the trace amount limit of one part per million (ppm) under the ASEAN Cosmetic
Directive and the Minamata Convention on Mercury.
“Our discovery of more contraband skin whitening creams laced with mercury
justifies the need for nonstop public education, law enforcement and other
interventions to break the supply and demand for these poison cosmetics,” said
Thony Dizon, Chemical Safety Campaigner, EcoWaste Coalition. “We also see
the need to counter the deep-seated misbelief that white skin is ABC –
attractive, beautiful and cleaner - compared to dark skin. Colorism or
skin color bias has to go!”
"As parties to the Minamata Convention on Mercury, we appeal to the
governments of Pakistan and the Philippines to take stringent measures to enforce the
treaty's 2020 phase-out provision for mercury-added cosmetics," added
Dizon. Article 4 of the treaty lists cosmetics, including
skin lightening products, with mercury above one ppm among the products
whose manufacture, import and export were phased out last year.
Environmental health scientist Dr. Geminn Louis C. Apostol, Assistant
Professor at the Ateneo School of Medicine and Public Health, pointed out that
“pregnant women, nursing mothers and children, including fetuses, are
particularly sensitive to the toxic health effects of mercury,” warning that
“even non-users such as children and babies can be unsuspectingly exposed
through contact with a household member who uses a mercury-containing cosmetic,
by touching contaminated materials such as used clothing and towels, or from
inhaling mercury vapor in the air.”
Dizon revealed that the items were purchased for P100 to P350 per unit from a
mall retailer in Pasay
City . A
subsequent check by the group also found one of the products (Golden Pearl
Beauty in both new and old packaging) being traded online.
Using a handheld X-Ray Fluorescence (XRF) analyzer, the group found Parley
Goldie Advanced Beauty Cream laced with 16,915 ppm of mercury, AQME Beauty
Cream with 16,000, Golden Pearl Beauty Cream (new packaging) with 10,200 ppm,
Safora Beauty Cream with 6,410 ppm, and Morning Face Beauty Cream with 5,696
ppm of mercury.
The above products are sold illegally, the EcoWaste Coalition said, as their manufacturers,
importers or distributors have not secured the required cosmetic product
notifications from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) prior to placing or
selling them in the domestic market.
The
group also scored the exaggerated and outlandish claims as written on the
product packaging and inserts. For example, one product (Golden Pearl
Beauty Cream) declares it “is the only cream in the world which in a very short
time makes you look beautiful.” Another product (Parley Goldie Advanced Beauty
Cream) boasts itself as offering one solution to 10 problems such as “stain and
spots, dark neck, dark fingers, black heads, dark elbow, side effects of make
up, wrinkles and freckles, dark feet, pimples, dark circles.” Despite its
mercury content, one product (AQME Beauty Cream) insists it can “provide 100%
results with no side effects.”
The World Health Organization-published “Mercury in Skin Lightening Products”
identified the following as adverse health effects of mercury in some skin
whitening products: kidney damage, skin rashes, skin discoloration and
scarring, reduction in the skin’s resistance to bacterial and fungal
infections, anxiety, depression, psychosis and peripheral neuropathy.
To prevent exposure to mercury in skincare products, the EcoWaste
Coalition urged the public to take pride in their natural skin color and avoid
chemical whiteners, stressing “natural is beautiful.”
To protect the rights and interests of consumers, the group also cautioned the
public against consuming products that have not passed FDA’s quality and safety
assessment, and to insist on their right to truthful information, including
full disclosure of a product’s chemical content.
Reference:
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