Plastic Wrap and Health: Studies Raise
Questions
By Marian Burros
Copyright 1999 New York Times
January 13, 1999 (later correction appended)
Plastic wrap seals so many everyday foods in the supermarket,
from cheese to 
meat, that it's easy to take it for granted. But now there is a new
worry about 
exactly how safe this ubiquitous convenience product may be. 
The concern is that some plastic wraps contain 
endocrine disrupters, which can mimic or interfere with hormones in
the body. 
The Environmental Protection Agency has begun to screen thousands
of chemicals 
to see which ones may be endocrine disrupters and need further
study. Some 
studies have suggested that disrupters can cause breast cancer,
birth defects, 
low sperm 
count and mental problems. While evidence continues to accumulate
that 
disrupters have an effect on animals, scientists are in heated
debate about its 
meaning for humans. In the meantime, some consumers are acting on
their own to 
to minimize exposure. 
 As hormones travel through the bloodstream, they affect
metabolism, growth, 
reproduction and other bodily functions. The disrupters can throw
a monkey 
wrench into that finely tuned endocrine system. The best known of
the suspected 
endocrine disrupters are dioxin, DDT and PCB's. 
Some data suggest that a plasticizer in 
some forms of the wrap, known in the industry as polyvinyl chloride
(PVC) cling 
wrap, is an endocrine disrupter. The chemical name for this
plasticizer, a 
component that adds clinginess to the wrap, is
di-(2-ethylhexyl)adipate, or 
DEHA. The plasticizer is in the plastic film grocery stores use to 
wrap wedges of cheese and meat and also in at least one brand of
household 
wrap. 
Because research has shown that plasticizers can leach into
food on contact, 
especially food with a high fat content, Consumers Union recently
tested 
prewrapped cheese. Nineteen pieces of cheese were analyzed, and the
seven that were wrapped in the PVC cling wrap used by supermarkets
contained 
consistently high levels of DEHA. The levels ranged from 51 to 270
parts per 
million, with an average of 153. 
"These are very large amounts," said Edward
Groth, an environmental scientist and food safety specialist with 
Consumers Union, though he acknowledged that no one knows if the
levels are 
harmful. The European Community has set a provisional limit of 18
parts per 
million for DEHA migration from plastic wraps to food. 
In a separate study, Consumers Union tested seven national
and store 
brands of consumer plastic wrap for plasticizers: Glad Crystal
Clear 
Polyethylene, Duane Reade, Foodtown, Dowbrands Saran Wrap,
America's Choice, 
White Rose and Reynolds Plastic Wrap. Only Reynolds Wrap was found
to be made 
with DEHA. There is no way to tell by looking at the 
box if a wrap contains DEHA. 
The Reynolds Metals Company issued a statement saying it
was in full compliance 
with all regulatory agencies: 
"DEHA is used in Reynolds Plastic Wrap," it said. 
"However, there has never been a study that Reynolds is aware
of that connects 
this material with endocrine 
disruption." 
The Society of the Plastics Industry, an industry group,
says that the Food and 
Drug Administration and the Environmental Protection Agency have
both given 
DEHA a clean bill of health. 
"There is no reason to believe DEHA is an endocrine
disrupter," Dr. George Pauli, the director of the division of
product policy 
in the Food and Drug Administration's office of premarket approval,
said in an 
interview last week. In 1996, the agency had said there was 
"insufficient evidence at this time" to demonstrate that
DEHA causes hormone disruption.
The lack of sufficient evidence was due to the absence of
studies, said Dr. 
Gina 
Solomon, a physician and senior scientist with the Natural
Resources Defense 
Council, the environmental group, in San Francisco. A number of
studies done 
since 1996 indicate that 
"DEHA is almost certainly an endocrine disrupter," she
said last week.  
"DEHA has been studied in a number of 
species of rodents, where it has been shown to interfere with male
reproductive 
function in all species," she said. 
"The question is, what does that mean for humans? It is still
unclear what the 
risks are."
The European Community's Scientific Committee for Food's
estimated safe daily 
DEHA dose for a 40-pound 
child would be exceeded by merely eating one and a half ounces of
the seven 
high-scoring cheese samples in the Consumers Union study. For a
130-pound 
adult, four ounces would be the limit. 
Consumers Union wants the United States to require
manufacturers to replace 
DEHA with 
a safer plasticizer, as British manufacturers did 10 years ago. In
a letter to 
the Food and Drug Administration, Dr. Groth said DEHA had not been
adequately 
evaluated for its possible endocrine effects. 
"It is a risk we consider potentially more significant than
carcinogenicity for 
this chemical," he 
said. 
Whole Foods Markets, a chain of 87 natural food
supermarkets across the 
country, is not waiting for Government action. It is asking
manufacturers of 
the cling wrap used in their stores directly whether the products
contain DEHA, 
said Margaret Wittenberg, the quality assurance director. 
Fortunately, consumers can take steps now to reduce
exposure to DEHA. 
* Remove cling wrap immediately from cheese or meat, and
store the product in a 
plastic bag or container. 
* Remove most DEHA, at least from hard cheeses, by using a
cheese slicer to 
take 
a millimeter off the surface. You can also scrape off a very fine
layer of meat.
* Purchase meat from a butcher, and ask for it to be
wrapped in paper. Purchase 
cheese from a wheel, and ask to have it wrapped in paper or put in
a plastic 
bag.
* 
Keep food in a ceramic bowl covered with plastic, without letting
it touch the 
food. 
Under no circumstances should you permit plastic wrap to
touch food when it is 
cooked in a microwave oven. Even the plastics industry agrees on
that. 
 
CORRECTION-DATE: January 20, 1999, Wednesday 
CORRECTION:
   A picture of a package of plastic wrap was
published in error last Wednesday 
with the Eating Well column in the Dining section, which reported
a study of 
potentially harmful effects of a substance found in some plastic
wraps. The 
product shown was not part of the study. 
Details are on page F2.
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