The following information was provided by the Washington Toxic Coalition Fact Sheet.
 This is just a tiny bit of what their information
provided:

How Toxic Chemicals Can Hurt Children

Immediate Injuries.  

There are countless examples of children suffering acute exposures to toxic chemicals
and subsequent serious injuries or death......Each year more then 100,000 children
accidentally eat pesticides.  (EPA, Environmental Health Threats).  Children also eat toxic
household cleaning products and can be the victims of chemical spills at local
industries.

Less Immediate but Equally Serous Health Effects:

The effects of ongoing lower level toxic exposure are also of tremendous concern.....A
recent analysis of 100 high volume regulated chemicals found that more than 90% had
not been tested at all in terms of impacts on children like post birth performance and
nervous system effects.  Tests for cancer causation, injury to reproductive ability,
neurological injury, and immune system damage were missing for 63%, 53%,
67% and 86% respectively.  Similarly, we now know that it is the offspring of any given
species which is often the most at risk from toxic
exposures.  Even when low dose exposures to mothers cause no noticeable harm, the
offspring of those mothers can suffer serious problems.  And we have discovered that
combinations of chemicals can be more deadly than single chemicals, making our
chemicals by chemical prediction of health effects obsolete Nonetheless, a growing
body of evidence that includes wildlife findings, laboratory studies, and human
data indicates that our children may well be paying the price for our toxic releases with
their health.

Cancer

The rates of childhood cancer have been steadily increasing for over 20 years.  This
terrible trend has been strongest for certain forms of leukemia and brain cancer.  Some
8,000 children per year are diagnosed with cancer in the U.S.   One in every 400
Americans can expect to get cancer before the age of 15. Cancer rates for the whole
population and excluding lung cancer increases, U.S. Cancer incidence increased by
31.7% between 1950 and 1990.  The increases in specific types of cancer are
particularly dramatic.  A woman's lifetime risk of getting breast cancer was 1 in 20 in
1961; now it is 1 in 8, for example.  Scientist believes that most cancer (80-90%) is due
to environmental causes.  Only 10-20% of cancer is attributed to genetic inheritance.

Birth Defects

Of 39 types of birth defects tracked by the Center for Disease Control between 1979 and
1987, 20 increased in incidence.  

Learning and Behavioral Problems.  

Reduced ability of offspring to lean, to pay attention and to cope with unpleasant
situations has been linked in various studies to toxic exposures experienced by their
mothers.  In two separate studies of children born to women who ate Great Lake fish,
researchers found correlations between pollutants in the fish and learning impairments
and other adverse effects in the children.  The effects were more severe as levels of
the pollutants measured in the umbilical cords increased.  In the longer of the two
studies, lower IQ and verbal comprehension at age 11 was correlated to prenatal toxic
exposures.

Reproductive Problems

Many wildlife and laboratory animal studies have found reproductive problems like
smaller or deformed penises, low sperm counts, injury to female reproductive organs,
reaching sexual maturity too early, and delayed descent of testicles to be correlated to
pollution exposures. Endometriosis in which cells from the uterus migrate elsewhere in
the abdomen, often causing pain and sterility, has now reached epidemic proportions,
afflicting an estimated 10% of U.S. women of childbearing age. Infertility is widespread
and appears to be increasing with more than 2 million couples who want to have
children unable to do so.A new study indicates that many girls in the U.S. are entering
puberty much earlier than normal.  There is some evidence that exposure to pollutants
that mimic estrogen may be contributing to the phenomenon.  In addition, to the social
and personal implications of early puberty, women who go through puberty early have
a longer-than-normal exposure to estrogens and many have a greater risk of breast
cancer.

Asthma and other respiratory problems.  

Asthma deaths are on the rise in children and young people, increasing by a dramatic
118 percent between 1980 and 1993, according to the Center for Disease Control.  Many
of the most common air pollutants can cause or contribute to the respiratory illnesses,
including asthma, which is now the leading cause of hospital admissions for our
nation's children.  More the 25% of the nation's children live in areas that don't
meet nation's air quality standards.
All Natural Cleaning Services
Effects On Our Kids