Posted on 05/06/2007 4:13:48 PM PDT by mom4kittys
Arlington Heights resident Julie Furer said she bought vinyl-backed bibs for 3-month-old son Jensen because they stopped the drool from leaking through.
Previously, Jensen, who turns 1 today, had been using cloth bibs, but they had proved ineffective.
I called him Waterfall. That was my nickname for him, said Julie Furers mother, Mount Prospect resident Marilyn Furer. He would be soaking wet, because he was just constantly drooling.
Jensen would also put the bib in his mouth when he was hungry, something that came to Marilyn Furers attention when he started using the vinyl-backed bibs.
It caused Marilyn to think back to reports she had heard of lead being found in plastic school lunch boxes.
So there I think, hmmm, plastic in the mouth, plastic in school lunch boxes. What the heck, Ill just go get a (lead testing) kit just to play it safe. I never thought it would come out like that.
Using a household lead test kit produced by Homax Products Inc., she crushed the two points on the barrel of the testing swab, shook the swab and squeezed it until a yellow liquid appeared on the tip. Then she rubbed the swab tip on the test area. To her surprise, the swab tip turned pink, indicating the presence of lead. She wound up testing 20 bibs, with eight of them yielding a positive result.
She sent the bibs, which were made in China and sold at Wal-Mart, to the Center for Environmental Health in Oakland, Calif., which had done the research on the lunch boxes.
Testing commissioned by the center revealed that one of the Baby Connection brand vinyl bibs, which were sold exclusively at Wal-Mart stores, had a lead level of 9,700 parts per million, more than 16 times greater than the legal limit for lead in paint.
The bibs were later tested in Illinois and New York, revealing similarly high levels, with the result that Wal-Mart has stopped selling the bibs in those states indefinitely. In addition, the Illinois attorney general announced a statewide recall of the Wal-Mart bibs.
These vinyl bibs pose a lead poisoning threat to infants and toddlers who are at the most vulnerable age, said Caroline Cox, research director at the Center for Environmental Health and author of a report on lead in baby bibs released by the center this week. As every parent knows, young children commonly chew and suck on their bibs, so if the bib is contaminated, children are being directly exposed to lead.
For Marilyn Furer, it wasnt the first time her activism had produced results. When her daughter Julie, Jensens mom, was 18 months old, she was diagnosed with juvenile diabetes. In 1973, Marilyn, along with a small group of concerned parents, founded the first chapter of the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation (now known as the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation) in Illinois.
She ran the whole organization as president out of our house in Mount Prospect, Julie Furer said.
Marilyn Furer is calling for a national ban on lead-based products used by infants and children.
As far as Im concerned, any trace amount is unacceptable, she said.
One should be suspicious, she said, of any product that uses plastic. If it cant be made without lead, it shouldnt be made. People should use the double cloth bibs or buy wooden toys.
Above all, she said, one should buy American and be suspicious of imports, especially from China.
Also, she said parents should get their children tested for lead.
Marilyn Furer said it is nice to hear that people are proud of her for bringing the issue to light, but is surprised it wasnt thought of before. Im disappointed and disillusioned that our public, governmental agencies havent had in place already something that stops these kinds of things from coming on in the first place.
Bump! This is frightening.
Isn’t it though?
BTW, we have experienced a big increase in Autism in this country. There has to be a cause.
sw
China again? Who would have thunk it?
************
Although I am not usually a proponent of government regulation or interference, this is a perfect case for it.
I posted to you in the other thread—I hope you don’t mind! I thought it was SO important for people to know about this!
Let the free marketeers justify this.
Who knows? Maybe someone will read about it on FR, cuz it sure isn't getting much attention in the MSM..grrrr.
sw
If anyone has any links to this outfit that sells lead tests, post it!
On FR in the last few weeks I’ve read two people saying that their dishes (ceramic ware made in China) tested positive for lead. Notice how all ceramic ware now says “made in China” on the bottom?
We are now eating out of stainless steel bowls and drinking out of mason jars until we test our dishes for lead.
At this point, we tell Chinese suppliers they have two options:
A. Take out the lead.
B. Don’t sell your sh*t here.
I prefer C: buy American (or other northern hemisphere) bibs, from countries who adhere to the rule of decent law.
I use stainless and glass everywhere I can. I cringe when I see people microwaving stuff in plastic, sytrofoam or *microwavable* containers. I can’t help but wonder what chemical reactions are occurring when those microwaves hit the plastic or the plastic becomes hot from the food.
No, only one option. The second one. I didn’t trust them before when there was nothing to put your finger on. I trust them less now that it’s been verified.
Kudos to this woman! A great many parents ought to be thanking her.
Hah, nice try. I guess when rational arguments fail, you start looking around for anecdotes. Kind of like the Virginia-killer-proves-we-need-gun-control arguments.
Name that country.
Good grief. I had no idea. No more chinaware in our kitchen. Thanks for the heads up.
LOL!
Yes! If logical arguments come up short, let's try to start a emotional stampede
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