• Categories

  • Organic Facts

    " . . . The quality of the fruits and vegetables available at grocery stores is terrible. Most are laden with toxic substances, such as sulfates on grapes, pesticides . . . many times fruits and vegetables are imported from foreign countries that use toxic pesticides that are illegal in the United States."
    As stated by Dr. Ronald Steriti in our article Antioxidants and Organic Foods

My Follow up to: My Skin Care Quest for Chemical Free, Organic Skin Care

August 2nd, 2005 - Laura Klein

Recently I wrote about my quest to live a more sustainable and organic lifestyle. Part of this quest has been to discover organic and chemical free skin care. If you would like to know more about how I qualify this please read my previous blog.

When I started my quest for organic and chemical free skin care I started the search at my local grocery store which happens to be Whole Foods. I went and spoke to their helpful staff and gave them my ideal profile for a skin care line, again chemical free and organic. By the way, I did this on a number of different occasions at different Whole Foods stores, with different staff in and around my city.

Almost every time I was immediately directed to two skin care lines: Aubrey® Organics and Dr. Hauschka Skin Care. As I ran out of personal products like, make-up, shampoo, conditioner, lotion, soap etc., I started replacing them with products from each line.

I started with Aubrey® Organics Rosa Mosqueta® Rose Hip Moisturizing Cream. I also decided to try their Aloe Essence™ hair care line. All of their products work well; you just need to find out which one is appropriate for your skin type and body chemistry. When using the shampoo I found that I needed to sometimes wash my hair two times for it to become real clean. I however have long hair and you may not need to do this. The Aubrey® Organics line is the most affordable of the product lines I tried at about $15 for their face cream and $8.50 for their shampoo. Additionally their sunscreens are great for summer and they don’t have all of the chemicals. Their Titania Full Spectrum Sunblock SPF 25 is what I used for my fair sensitive skin and it works wonders!

I then moved on to Dr. Hauschka’s Skin Care line and began using their Translucent Make-up, loose Face Powder, Cleansing Milk and Eye Contour Day Cream. I loved all of the products I tried. They work and feel amazing on the skin. The only thing about the line is that it has a high price point. The Cleansing Milk runs about $30 for one bottle. The Eye Contour Day Cream runs about $38. You can see this is not a cheap line. I also tried their Sunscreen Cream SPF 20 which worked great on my sensitive skin.

The third line that I tried is Jurlique. This is an incredible line as well. I did not find this at Whole Foods. I found it through other means of research. It however is pricey like Dr. Hauschka. In fact Jurlique was started by one of Dr. Hauschka’s protégés. All of the herbs are grown organically and biodynamically on the Jurlique herb farm in South Australia. I tried their Day Care Face Cream at about $34 and the Herbal Recovery Gel which is absolutely amazing. It sells for about $67. It is expensive but probably worth it. It even smells like fresh herbs and essential oils.

Depending on your budget and your skin type, I would recommend all of these products. They all work. It just comes down to personal preference.

Another recommendation for healthy skin: drink at least eight glasses of water per day. Doing this will actually help diminish the fine lines around your face and tighten your skin. I have also tried using organic olive oil on my face and virgin coconut oil. Both are great for keeping the skin supple and soft.

If you would like to learn more about what untested chemicals are in conventional personal and household products, check out the Environmental Working Group’s website at: www.ewg.org. You can also check out Aubrey® Organics list of 10 ingredients to avoid at: Aubrey® Organics.com .

Happy and healthy organic living!

Kind regards,

Laura Lynn Klein
Publisher/Editor
www.OrganicAuthority.com

My Search for the Paraben Replacement

June 1st, 2005 - Laura Klein

This year I attended the Natural Product Expo West trade show in Anaheim, California. This massive trade show exhibits every kind of natural and organic product imaginable from food, supplements, personal care, healthcare and pet products.

What I like about this trade show is that their educational seminars are free. When I thumbed through my Natural Product Expo Guide and saw a seminar for Safe Ingredients for Natural Personal Care I new it was a must attend. One of the emerging controversies in the organic and natural product world are the chemicals found in personal care products. Studies are now finding that the chemicals found in everyday products like shampoo, makeup, creams and nail polish can possibly be linked to breast cancer and other human diseases.

The speakers on this seminar’s panel were: Jane Houilhan, Vice President of Research Environmental Working Group, Jeanne Rizzo, RN, Executive Director, The Breast Cancer Fund, Mark Rossi, Health Care Without Harm, Morris Shriftman, Senior VP Marketing, Avalon Natural Products.

A heated discussion amongst the audience and the panelists arose surrounding the replacement for parabens in personal products. If you are not familiar with parabens, they are a synthetic chemical that cosmetic and food companies use to preserve the shelf life of their products. Recently parabens have been linked to breast cancer. New studies are demonstrating that whole parabens can be found intact in breast tissue and are an endocrine disruptor, which is a scary thought. Synthetic chemicals such as parabens like fat and collect in fatty tissue, i.e. breast tissue, which the body can not eliminate. Studies have not shown that parabens cause breast cancer, but there is a link between the two.

One could conclude that the Natural Product Expo West organizers made a mistake when they chose to have one retail company as panelist member amongst three non-profit groups. Yes Avalon Natural Products have replaced parabens with another preservative in their products, but what is it? The answer to this question is exactly what enraged audience members when Avalon wouldn’t immediately divulge the information.

The audience members consisted of many cosmetic company business owners and executives. When Avalon did not fess up to the answer to the above question, the audience did not take too well to this. Many interpreted Avalon’s presentation a clear plug for the company. After numerous tough questions were thrown at Avalon’s representative a man from Avalon Natural Products stood up and identified himself as the company’s President (when I checked their website, they list Stacey Kelly-Egide as the company’s President. For obvious reasons this can not be the same person because of gender. Maybe it was Stacy’s husband Mark Egide who is the co-founder with Stacey?). He finally revealed the replacement they are using and where to get it. However, because of the noise and disruption of the audience members I did not catch the name of the new ingredient. Another audience member then stood up and revealed his knowledge about the replacement ingredient and said it was another chemical and that it didn’t work to keep a product emulsified and stated, “Avalon Organic’s products are sitting on the shelf separating.”

So this leads me to question: What has Avalon Organics replaced parabens with in their products? Is it so bad that Avalon Organics wanted to keep their competitive advantage over their competitors and not reveal the ingredient or the source? Are they such a bad company if they are truly leading the way in an overhaul of the cosmetic industry as a whole by raising consciousness in cosmetics? Maybe they aren’t so bad, but let’s find out what they’re using as a preservative in their products.

Look for the follow up on our investigation as to what Avalon Organics has replaced parabens with in their products.

My Skin Care Quest for Pure, Organic Skin Care

April 7th, 2005 - Laura Klein

Do you know what chemicals are in your natural and organic products?

In my quest to live a more sustainable and organic lifestyle, one of my goals has been to uncover and discover personal beauty products that are organic and chemical free. You may wonder why I add chemical free to my qualifications. You may think organic products must be chemical free because they are organic, right? Wrong.

There are many personal care products that carry the organic label and claim they are “all natural and organic” but they are not chemical free. How can a product make this claim and contain synthetic chemicals? The government does not require the cosmetic industry to test the chemicals they put in their products for safety. Additionally the cosmetic companies are not monitored by the government thus allowing questionable synthetic chemicals to find their way into personal products.



Yet when it comes to labeling products and produce as “organic,” the USDA has instituted semi-stringent labeling standards on organic products, or products that contain organic ingredients. If a product has the USDA organic label with a 70% on the label this means 70% of the ingredients are organic. Potentially the remaining ingredients, or the other 30%, may contain or may all be synthetic chemicals such as parabens and laurel/laureth sulfates.

Why doesn’t the government require testing of synthetic chemicals? The National Toxicology program a division of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services acknowledges the risks shown in lab studies but states that the US population is exposed to theses chemicals at levels too low for the population to be at risk (Source, The Wall Street Journal, January 14, 2005 http://www.safecosmetics.org/docUploads/Wall%20Street%20Journal%2Edoc )

The FDA’s website states,

“The regulatory requirements governing the sale of cosmetics are not as stringent as those that apply to other FDA-regulated products. Manufacturers may use any ingredient or raw material, except for color additives and a few prohibited substances, to market a product without a government review or approval.”

Yet the question remains, does the government take into consideration repetitive, long term, exposure to these chemicals on a recurring daily basis? Scientists are now finding that the human body stores many of these synthetic chemicals for life and can not eliminate them. The skin is the largest organ of the human body and what you put on it is absorbed into the human blood stream. Just as you carefully pick organic fruits and vegetables, one should carefully consider the personal products you put on your skin and in your hair. If you don’t want synthetic chemicals circulating in your blood stream, just as you don’t with pesticides and toxic chemicals, don’t put them on your body or in your hair. Choose your personal products wisely and get to know the ingredients.

Kim Erickson author of Drop Dead Gorgeous states, “Some cosmetic chemicals accumulate in the body’s fatty tissues, where they can remain for years and damage your cells.” As an example, a study, reported in the January 2004 edition of the Journal of Applied Toxicology, found parabens the most common cosmetic preservative present in significant amounts in 18 out of 20 breast cancer tumors.

Something is just not right with these standards and practices. The USDA requires companies to pay large amounts of money to update their manufacturing systems so they can put the organic label on their product. Additionally organic farmers are required to pass rigorous tests that meet certain certification standards so they can get the USDA certified organic label. Yet the synthetic chemicals that are added to theses personal products are never tested for human safety. Something is wrong.

Lets take a look at a couple of synthetic chemicals that have come under fire, parabens and laurel/laureth sulfates. Unless you read and study product labels, you probably have never heard of these synthetic chemicals.

Parabens are used in many personal products as a preservative to extend the shelf life of products. Parabens are known to be toxic and cause allergic skin reactions. There are several types of parabens. You can recognize this chemical under numerous names such as Methyparaben, Propylparaben, and Sobutylparaben. Basically, any chemical name that contains the word “paraben,” is a paraben. These chemicals can be found in face and body moisturizers, body wash, cleansers, liquid hand soap, sunscreen, toothpaste, hairspray, mascara, etc. For a whole list of products that contain this chemical you can visit Environmental Working Group’s website. Whole parabens have been found in samples of breast cancer tumors but a direct scientific link has yet to be made (source: http://www.mywiseowl.com/articles/Parabens ).

Laurel/laureth sulfates/sodium lauryl sulfates is a detergent used in shampoos for its foam creating abilities. It is known to cause, skin rashes, eye irritation, and even hair loss. It is frequently disguised in pseudo-natural cosmetics with the parenthetic explanation “comes from coconut.”

As a consumer, know you have a choice. If you want a truly pure chemical free product they are out there. You just have to know how to read labels and decide if you want a pure chemical free product. If you come across ingredients on a product label that you are not familiar with and they sound like they came from your high school’s chemistry lab, you should probably find out more about the ingredients in question. To do this you can go to the Environmental Working Group’s website. They will tell you if the chemical has ever been tested for human safety and what it is commonly used for.

You would be surprised at the uses of the synthetic chemicals commonly found in cosmetic and personal care products. The same chemicals used in these products are used in industrial manufacturing processes to grease gears, clean industrial equipment and scour a cement floor. Chemicals used to clean industrial equipment may not be the safest choice with which to wash one’s face. Some of these chemicals are linked to cancer, birth defects and other health problems that continue to rise in the human race.

To date I have found three skin care lines that are truly pure and the majority of the ingredients are organic. I will review these skin care products in an upcoming blog as I use them.


© 2010 OrganicAuthority, LLC

Bad Behavior has blocked 3001 access attempts in the last 7 days.