Talcum Powder and Mesothelioma
Talc
is a harmless ingredient by itself, and most people rarely think of
products such as perfumed powder being deadly. Yet, when mixed with
asbestos, talcum powder can cause life-threatening diseases such as
mesothelioma.
If you or a loved one have been diagnosed
with mesothelioma or asbestos-related lung cancer, you may be eligible
for substantial compensation. There is currently over $30 billion in asbestos trust funds, set up for those who are victims to asbestos-related diseases. Use our free Asbestos Attorney Locator Tool today to find a leading mesothelioma attorney in your area.
About Talcum Powder Dangers
Talc is
a soft mineral that can be found worldwide. It’s mined frequently for
use in a variety of products, including talcum powder. In some instance,
mine talc contains asbestos, usually tremolite asbestos, and its still
in the talc when it’s formed into consumer products. In turn, mesothelioma lawsuits continue to surface from people who’ve developed asbestos-related diseases after using talcum powder.
Although
talcum powder manufacturers assert that currently, only the purest
asbestos-free forms of talc go into products, there’s no way to be
absolutely sure since the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
doesn’t screen these consumer products and allows the cosmetics industry
to monitor their own products.
Asbestos Studies on Talcum Powder
According
to the National Toxicology Program of the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services, occupational studies done on talcum powders showed that
when women used these powders, toxic asbestos fibers, which were mixed
into talcum products prior to the late 1970s, could cause ovarian
cancer. This type of cancer occurs after the asbestos fibers in the
power build up and accumulate in a woman’s ovaries.
In 2014,
the International Journal of Occupational and Environmental Health
published a detailed study regarding mesothelioma victims who used
talcum powder. Investigative journalist Andrew Schneider, the writer of
the story, pointed out in detail that many women who passed away with
mesothelioma developed the disease from asbestos after using common
household products such as talcum powder. The women’s development of
mesothelioma remained a mystery until the story uncovered the culprit.
Schneider
wrote that scientists from three different laboratories tracked
asbestos-containing talc for over a year in both mines and in consumer
products. The scientists then linked asbestos to a woman’s lungs, who
had passed away from mesothelioma. She had used talcum products for
numerous years.
Other reports of women who used talcum powder and
subsequently died followed. According to Ronald Gordon, a pathologist
and a contributor to the study,
“Of course we knew that there was
asbestos contaminating the talc in many cosmetic powders, but who would
have ever thought that that’s the way these women were being exposed?”
At
the Mount Sinai School of Medicine, Gordon analyzed a deceased female’s
lung tissues, which confirmed further that the cause of her
mesothelioma stemmed from asbestos found in talc.
“We have traced
the asbestos in the talc to the mines from which it originated, into the
milled grades, into the product, and finally into the lung and lymph
nodes of the users of those products, including one woman who developed
mesothelioma.”
According to the study, the female mesothelioma victim frequently used a talcum powder called Cashmere Bouquet, manufactured by Colgate,which “contained
identifiable asbestos fibers with the potential to be released into the
air and inhaled during normal personal talcum powder application.”
In
addition to mesothelioma, the study, similar to the previous
occupational studies done, confirmed that not only are women who use
talcum powder at risk for developing mesothelioma, but they also have a
heightened risk of developing certain types of ovarian cancers.
Talcum Powder is Still Dangerous
Although
talcum powder manufacturers stopped using asbestos in the products more
than 30 years ago, this doesn’t necessarily mean that today’s talcum
powders are safe. According to a 2006 study published by
the International Agency for Research on Cancer, using talcum powder,
even without any asbestos mixed in, can still be dangerous as
it’s “possibly carcinogenic to humans.”
In another study performed
on talc powder in 2013 by the American Cancer Society (ACS), results
confirmed that using non-asbestos talcum powder “is associated with a
modest 20-30 percent increase in risk of developing epithelial ovarian
cancer.”
And as mentioned earlier, there isn’t a true way to know
if talcum powder is asbestos-free unless the FDA begins to thoroughly
inspect the products. For now, the companies that manufacture the
products are still responsible for inspections. Additionally, although
there’s probably products with much less asbestos in them these days,
thousands of talcum powders are shipped into the United States from
overseas all the time. These products are not inspected by the FDA or
any other federal agency.
Unfortunately, the makers of cosmetic
products aren’t required to prove that the ingredients used in the
products are safe before selling them. According to a statement on the
FDA website,
“Cosmetic companies have a legal responsibility for
the safety and labeling of their products and ingredients, but the law
does not require them to share their safety information with FDA.”
Women and Mesothelioma
Although
mesothelioma generally affects men more, as asbestos was once used
heavily in numerous industrial jobs that primarily had more male
workers. Yet, women are four times more likely to develop mesothelioma
when compared to men.
Talcum powder isn’t the only way women come
into contact with asbestos. Second-hand exposure to asbestos through a
spouse’s or family members’ work clothes is one of the the leading ways
that women develop asbestos related illnesses. Some women have developed
mesothelioma while working in schools, hospitals, and court buildings.
For
instance, Gina Lees, a school teacher in England who worked around
asbestos-filled drawing pins for over 30 years. Doing simple and normal,
everyday school activities disrupted asbestos in the classroom, which
eventually led to Lees developing mesothelioma. She died in 2015 after
battling the disease heartily.