A Critical Link: The Environment and Women's Health Conference
In recent years there has been an increased awareness of the connections between environmental contaminants, fertility, and health -- and a growing body of evidence supporting these concerns that link reduced fertility to pregnancy loss, adverse birth outcomes, reproductive tract abnormalities, learning disabilities in children, and various cancers to environmental contaminants. It is becoming increasingly clear to those of us who work for women's health that we must begin to turn our attention to the environmental toxicants that are affecting the ability of couples to become pregnant, have healthy pregnancies, and give birth to healthy babies.
At Planned Parenthood of Northern New England, we feel a responsibility as a health care organization to help our patients and communities make the link between human health and the products we put in our bodies, and in our homes and schools.
On September 10, 2009, PPNNE is presenting A Critical Link: The Environment and Women’s Health, in Burlington, VT. This ground-breaking conference will feature a keynote address by ecologist, author, and cancer survivor Sandra Steingraber. Steingraber and other environmental health experts, will participate in a panel discussion moderated by Dave Rapaport, Seventh Generation’s senior director of corporate consciousness, and Mia Davis, national grassroots coordinator for the Campaign for Safe Cosmetics, Planned Parenthood Federation of America President Cecile Richards will kick off the conference and share the Planned Parenthood perspective on providing greener, healthier choices to patients. For more information go to http://www.good-chemistry.org/
Showing posts with label environmental health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label environmental health. Show all posts
Friday, May 29, 2009
Thursday, August 14, 2008
A Month Without Plastics
The numbers were surprising:
603 items, including:Chris has blogged near-daily about her experiences, and it's interesting - not only to see how she is navigating shopping and childcare and the like sans plastics, but to learn more about plastics, where they're hidden in our food and consumer goods supplies, and how they're made.
* 36 carrier bags
* 67 food packaging bags and films such as bread bags, cheese wrappers (and a jumbo pack of Maltesers!)
* 23 polystyrene tea cups with lids and 24 coffee cup lids
* 15 fruit punnets and vegetable trays
* 13 yoghurt pots
* 16 water bottles, 10 milk bottles, 7 juice bottles
* Two toothbrushes
Probably the least pretty aspect to my household's waste at the moment comes in the form of disposable nappies. Our 18-month-old son gets through four or so a day so that's about 120 a month, plus individual nappy sacks, nappy bin bags and wipes, which go straight into landfill.
And I'll admit, for just a moment, I thought it might be interesting to repeat her experiment on this side of the pond. After all, I live in an area rich with local farms, where coffee shops push bringing in your own mugs instead of using disposable cups, and nearly everyone has totes they use at least part of the time while grocery shopping.
Unfortunately, I realized relatively quickly that my cats require food and litter, which is automatically going to guarantee buying some plastics (bags of both generally are lined in plastic). The same for prescriptions. I have to order textbooks - no way to get around plastics there. And the more I thought about it, the more I realized that while I certainly can reduce consumption and focus on reusing, it would be nearly impossible for me to eliminate plastics from my life.
So what about it - given the significant environmental and health concerns around the use and production of plastics, could you give up plastics in your life? For a week, a month, or longer?
-Kelly Hills
Labels:
BBC,
environmental health,
food ethics,
plastics
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