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Science -
This chemical compound has been linked to cancer,
infertility and birth defects, as well as liver,
kidney and lung damage. It’s banned or restricted by
governments around the world, but it’s in
some of
your most intimate products and you don’t even know
it. It’s called Phthalates.
What are Phthalates?
Phthalates are used to soften plastics. Phthalates
give sex toys their Jelly feeling. It also gives
them a distinct smell and slightly oily feeling. The
smell and oil are Phthalates coming to the
surface. Then, when you handle one of these toys,
you are absorbing the phthalates into your body.
Phthalates have been around since the 1920’s. Today,
nearly a billion pounds of phthalates are produced
every year. It’s in everything from plastic food
storage containers to medical devices. As a result,
everyone has some level of phthalates in their
body.
What are the medical risks?
This is a tricky question. It appears every study
that has been done on the effects of Phthalates on
the human body is backed by a group with an
agenda. A Greenpeace study done in conjunction with
the Dutch government concluded that sex toys made
with Phthalates (DEHP) should be banned because
these items pose a significant risk to the health of
the user.
However, the Phthalates Information Centre Europe
issued another report showing no conclusive link
between Phthalates an illness in humans. That report
has been widely criticized because there is no way
to do direct human testing of Phthalates because of
the potential risk to the subjects.
Instead, rodent tests have shown a strong link
between Phthalate exposure and different cancers,
birth defects, infertility, organ damage,
accelerated puberty, respiratory difficulties, and
increased sensitivity to allergens.
The United States government has taken a stand. The
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
classifies Phthalates as a Probable Carcinogen.
So why are Phthalates used in sex toys when there
are so many health concerns?
Simple – they are cheap! Making sex toys out of PVC
and softening them with Phthalates is the cheapest
possible way to make a jelly sex toy. And, since
consumers don’t know what they are putting in their
bodies, no one is demanding a safer sex toy…until
now!
So what are the alternatives?
There are a number of other, more natural compounds
that cost a little more, but are safe for your body
and the environment. Science has evolved past the
basic compound created nearly 90 years ago and now,
the sex toy industry is starting to embrace these
safer alternatives.
The natch snatch
line of products offers a variety of adult toys that
are Phthalate-free. These toys do not smell like
traditional sex toys because they aren’t leaching
potentially dangerous chemicals. Also,
natch snatch adult
products come in a safety sealed inner package for
greater peace-of-mind. natch
snatch adult sex toys are safety tested
and packaged in recycled material.
If you would like to learn more about safer sex
toys, contact natch snatch
via email. They
can put you in touch with a retailer who is also
concerned with keeping toxic materials out of your
sex life.