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Skin Deep – Report on Cosmetics & Skincare
view the entire report at http://www.ewg.org/reports/skindeep/report/executive_summary.php
Executive Summary
FDA cannot require companies to do safety testing of their cosmetic
products before marketing.
-- FDA Office of Cosmetics and Colors (FDA 1995)
About 10,500 different cosmetic ingredients and a similar number
of fragrance ingredients are being used by the cosmetic industry.
-- FDA Office of Cosmetics and Colors (FDA 2000)
Most consumers would be surprised to learn that the government
does not require health studies or pre-market testing for cosmetics
and other personal care products before they are sold. According
to the government agency that regulates cosmetics, the FDA's Office
of Cosmetics and Colors, "...a cosmetic manufacturer may use
almost any raw material as a cosmetic ingredient and market the
product without an approval from FDA" (FDA 1995).
The toxicity of product ingredients is scrutinized almost exclusively
by a self-policing industry safety committee, the Cosmetic Ingredient
Review (CIR) panel. Because testing is voluntary and controlled
by the manufacturers, many ingredients in cosmetics products are
not safety tested at all. Environmental Working Group's analysis
of industry and government sources shows that:
* Eighty-nine
(89) percent of the 10,500 ingredients FDA has determined are used
in personal care products (FDA 2000) have not been evaluated for
safety by the CIR, the FDA, or any other publicly accountable institution
(FDA 2000, CIR 2003).
The absence of government oversight for this $35 billion industry
leads to companies routinely marketing products with ingredients
that are poorly studied, not studied at all, or worse, known to
pose potentially serious health risks.
The Environmental Working Group's (EWG's) six-month computer investigation
into the health and safety assessments on more than 10,000 personal
care product ingredients found major gaps in the regulatory safety
net for these products. To help people use what we learned we developed
an online rating system that ranks products on their potential
health risks and the absence of basic safety evaluations. The core
of the analysis compares ingredients in 7,500 personal care products
against government, industry, and academic lists of known and suspected
chemical health hazards.
Our analysis shows that ingredients in cosmetics range from essentially
harmless components like table salt and oatmeal, to chemicals known
to cause cancer in humans. Notably, natural ingredients are no
more likely to have been assessed for safety than synthetic chemicals.
Individual ingredients vary tremendously in their ability to soak
through the skin. Some absorb in only miniscule amounts, while
others can quite easily penetrate the skin to the blood vessels
below. Few individual ingredients pose excessive risks, but most
people use many products in the course of a day, so it well may
be that these risks are adding up. A survey of 2,300 people conducted
as part of this research effort shows that the average adult uses
9 personal care products each day, with 126 unique chemical ingredients.
More than a quarter of all women and one of every 100 men use at
least 15 products daily.
Little research is available to document the safety or health
risks of low-dose repeated exposures to chemical mixtures like
those in personal care products, but the absence of data should
never be mistaken for proof of safety. The more we study low dose
exposures, the more we understand that they can cause adverse effects
ranging from the subtle and reversible, to effects that are more
serious and permanent.
Overall, our investigation of product safety shows cause for concern,
not alarm. Much more study is needed to understand the contribution
of exposures from personal care products to current human health
trends.
Findings. Our safety assessment of 7,500 personal
care product labels, documented in this web-based review, shows
that:
* Just 28 of the 7,500 products
we analyzed have been fully assessed for safety by the cosmetic
industry's self-regulating panel, the Cosmetic Ingredient Review
(CIR). All other products -- 99.6 percent of those examined -- contain
one or more ingredients never assessed for potential health impacts
by the CIR. This panel, run and funded by the cosmetic industry's
trade association, is billed as the organization that "thoroughly
reviews and assesses the safety of ingredients used in cosmetics" on
behalf of the industry (CIR 2004). The government does not systematically
review the safety of personal care products and has banned or restricted
just nine of the more than 10,000 ingredients used in personal
care products.
* One of every 120 products
on the market contains ingredients certified by government authorities
as known or probable human carcinogens, including
shampoos, lotions, make-up foundations, and lip balms manufactured
by Almay, Neutrogena, Grecian Formula, and others. An astonishing
one-third of all products contain one or more ingredients classified
as possible human carcinogens.
* Seventy-one
hair dye products contain ingredients derived from carcinogenic
coal tar. These products have all been granted a specific exemption
from federal rules that deem products to be adulterated when they
contain ingredients that can harm human health. Coal tar containing
products include dyes made by Clairol, Revlon, L'Oreal, and others.
Coal tar hair dyes are one of the few products for which FDA has
issued consumer advice on the benefits of reducing use, in this
case as a way to potentially "reduce the risk of cancer" (FDA
1993).
* Fifty-five percent of all
products assessed contain "penetration enhancers," ingredients
that can increase a product's penetration through the skin and
into the bloodstream, increasing consumers' exposures to other
ingredients as well. We found 50 products containing penetration
enhancers in combination with known or probable human carcinogens.
* Nearly 70 percent
of all products contain ingredients that can be contaminated with
impurities linked to cancer and other health problems. Studies
by FDA and European agencies show that these impurities are common,
in some cases occurring in nearly half of all products tested (FDA
1996, DTI 1998). Some manufacturers buy ingredients certified by
an independent organization called United States Pharmacopeia (USP).
These ingredients may contain lower levels of harmful impurities,
but the criteria for certification are not public. There are no
federal standards for ingredient purity. While it seems likely
that some companies purchase or manufacture refined, purified ingredients,
it is equally likely that many do not. Consumers and government
health officials have no way to know.
* Fifty-four products violate
recommendations for safe use set by the industry's self-regulating
Cosmetic Ingredient Review board. Most of these products contain
ingredients found unsafe for the intended use of the product they
are found in. Examples include ingredients found unsafe for use
in baby products but used in diaper cream, ingredients found unsafe
for use on injured or damaged skin contained in products marketed
specifically for use on chapped and injured skin, and ingredients
not safe for sprays but found in spray products. Brand name products
found in violation of industry recommendations include Neutrogena,
Desitin, Herbal Essences, and Rite Aid.
* In its 67-year history
of monitoring cosmetic safety, FDA has banned or restricted just
nine personal care product ingredients (FDA 2000). In its review
of 1,175 ingredients, the industry's safety panel has found just
nine ingredients (a different nine) unsafe for use in cosmetics
(CIR 2003). By contrast, 450 ingredients are banned for use in
cosmetics in the European Union, although the vast majority of
these have never been used by the industry. The regulatory vacuum
in the U.S. gives cosmetic companies tremendous leeway in selecting
ingredients, while it transfers potentially significant and largely
unnecessary health risks to the users of the products.
Table 1. Many leading cosmetics companies may have failed
to formulate their products with customer health as a top concern.
According to an EWG Safety Assessment Rating for personal care
products, the products with the highest health concerns in 25
different product categories contain ingredients linked to cancer,
pregnancy problems, and other potential health issues (scores
range from 0 to 10, with 10 being of highest health concern):
Product Category Score
1 Clairol Natural
Instincts Haircolor, Level 2, Sahara 02 Hair
Dye 10.0
2 Elizabeth Arden
Ceramide Plump Perfect Moisture Cream SPF 30 Facial
Moisturizer/Treatment 9.6
3 Skin Success Eventone Fade
Cream, For Oily Skin Anti-Aging
Treatment 9.5
4 Klear Action Acne Treatment
System Acne Treatment/Medication 9.4
5 Nivea for Men After Shave
Balm, Mild with Bonus Face Wash Shaving
Products 9.3
6 OPI Nail Treatments Nail
Envy, Natural Nail Strengthener Nail
Treatments 9.3
7 St. Ives Apricot Scrub,
Gentle For Sensitive Skin Exfoliator 9.3
8 Neutrogena
T-Gel Shampoo, Stubborn Itch Control Shampoo 9.3
9 NARS Balanced Foundation Foundation 9.3
10 Dove Face Care Essential Nutrients,
Cream Cleanser Facial
Cleanser 9.2
11 DDF Anti-Wrinkle Eye Renewal
Treatment Eye
Treatment 9.2
12 Revlon SkinLights
Face Illuminator Powder Bronzer, Warm Light Powder 9.2
13 Dial Dial Antibacterial Hand
Soap with Vitamin E Moisture Beads Liquid Hand Soap 9.2
14 Maybelline
Full 'N Soft Mascara Mascara 9.2
15 Alpha Hydrox Moisturizing Body
Wash, Sea Mist Body
Wash/Cleansers 9.2
16 Nioxin Bionutrient Actives Scalp
Therapy, for Normal Hair Hair
Regrowth Treatment 9.1
17 Igia Epil-Stop & Foam, 6-in-1
Hair Removal System AT956 Depilatory
Cream/Hair Remover 9.1
18 St. Ives Apricot Hand & Foot
Scrub Foot Odor/Cream/Treatment 9.1
19 Murad APS Oil-Free Sunblock
Sheer Tint Sunscreen/Tanning
Oil 9.1
20 Healing Garden
Green Teatheraphy Exfoliating Body Scrub, Balance Body
Scrubs 9.0
21 NARS Cream Eye Shadow Compact Eye
Makeup 9.0
22 Te Tao Tea for Body, Anti-Stress
Bath Soak Bath Oils/Salts/Bubbles 9.0
23 Biolage by
Matrix Daily Leave-In Tonic Conditioner
9.0
24 L'Oreal Visible
Lift Line Minimizing Concealer Concealer 8.9
25 DDF Fade Cream SPF 30 Skin
Coloring 8.9
Recommendations. Because the FDA has no legal
authority to require safety assessments of cosmetics, products
safety is by default the responsibility of the industry and its
own appointed Cosmetic Ingredient Review panel. This voluntary
policing arrangement has been a failure. EWG's analysis of 7,500
personal care product labels found that some cosmetic companies
use known human carcinogens in products, manufacture scores of
products containing ingredients in direct contraindication of industry
hazard assessments, widely use chemicals that are likely to be
contaminated with harmful impurities, and add to thousands of products
ingredients that industry assessments show lack basic information
needed to support their safety.
To improve the safety of personal care products EWG recommends
that manufacturers:
* Remove from
products all chemicals classified as known or possible human carcinogens,
reproductive toxins, and developmental toxins. Manufacturers are
currently reformulating products in Europe to comply with this
restriction.
* Certify that
ingredients do not have impurities classified as known or probable
human carcinogens, reproductive toxins, or developmental toxins.
* Conform with
the recommendations of the CIR and reformulate products to eliminate
ingredients that are deemed unsafe for the intended use of the
product.
In addition to these actions by industry we also strongly recommend
that:
* Congress amend
the Federal Food Drug and Cosmetic Act to provide FDA with clear
and unencumbered authority to request any and all safety studies
that it deems necessary to assess the safety of cosmetics and other
personal care products.
References
Cosmetics Ingredient Review (CIR) (2003). 2003 CIR Compendium,
containing abstracts, discussions, and conclusions of CIR cosmetic
ingredient safety assessments. Washington DC.
Cosmetics Ingredient Review (CIR) (2004). CIR information available
at http://www.cir-safety.org, accessed May 6 2004.
Department of Trade and Industry, UK (DTI) (1998). A survey of
cosmetic and certain other skin-contact products for n-nitrosamines.
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) (1993). Hair Dye Dilemmas.
FDA Consumer. April 1993. Accessed online May 6 2004 at http://vm.cfsan.fda.gov/~dms/cos-818.html.
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) (1995). FDA Authority over
Cosmetics. Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition. Office
of Cosmetics and Colors Fact Sheet. February 3 1995. Accessed online
May 6 2004 at http://www.cfsan.fda.gov/~dms/cos-206.html.
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) (1996). Are nitrosamines in
cosmetics a health hazard? Accessed online May 6 2004 at http://vm.cfsan.fda.gov/~dms/qa-cos25.html.
Updated November 1996.
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) (1999). Diethanolamine and
Cosmetic Products. Office of Cosmetics and Colors Fact Sheet. Dec
9, 1999. Accessed online May 6 2004 at http://vm.cfsan.fda.gov/~dms/cos-dea.html.
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) (2000). Cosmetics Compliance
Program. Domestic Cosmetics Program. July 31, 2000. Accessed online
May 20 2004 at http://www.cfsan.fda.gov/~comm/cp29001.html.
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