The first national survey about  bisphenol A (BPA) conducted by Statistics Canada has revealed that 91% of  Canadians have a body burden of this chemical known to have hormone-like  effects. Click here to read in further detail http://www.theglobeandmail.com/life/health/statscan-survey-finds-bpa-present-in-91-per-cent-of-canadians/article1674153/. What does  not mean? Honestly, no one knows because “we are the experiment.”
 
 While the  average BPA level in Canadians is just over 1 part per billion, it is a  1000 times more than natural estrogen levels in our body. This sampling  is the largest done to date in the world. In this survey, Canadian teens  were found to carry BPA levels about 30% higher than the rest of the  population. That fact appears to make sense because teens eat more food  (food is the major source of BPA) relative to their body size than any  other population segment. Canadian children had the next highest levels  of body burden of BPA. BPA is found in can liners for food  and drinks, water-cooler bottles, baby bottles, flatware, as well as  dental sealants and composite dental fillings. Cash registers are also a  prolific source of BPA.
 The chemical  industry has called this data “reassuring.” According to U.S. BPA  researcher Frederick vom Saal, “The fact that most people have the  chemical BPA in their urine suggests they were having regular  exposures in the 24 hours to 36 hours before their tests.” The chemical  industry maintains that half of the BPA ingested in food is broken down  into a harmless chemical without hormonal activity about every 6 hours.  However, all would agree, we simply don’t know the long term effects of a  population exposed to BPA. Because of  the vast numbers of chemicals in our environment, food, and water, and  the unknown effects of combination of these chemicals, we have truly  become the experiment.
 We do know that the possible  effects of exposure to BPA include but are not limited to  the following:
• reproductive  tract changes that may be permanent
 • testosterone decreases
 • breast  and prostate cancer cells predisposed to cancer
 • hyperactive  behavior
 • prostate weight increase.
 While Health  Canada and the U.S. FDA and EPA fail to take action pending safety  tests, it is critical to vote with our pocket books. And, take urgent  action urged by ANH-USA for a Citizens Petition to ban BPA in cash  register receipts. Click here to learn more https://secure3.convio.net/aahf/site/Advocacy?cmd=display&page=UserAction&id=595. It is  alarming that the FDA has failed to take action on a petition by ANH-USA  to ban BPA in dental sealants in the mouths of children. Can we afford  to potentially sacrifice our children’s health while further safety  studies are conducted?
 Deborah Ray, MT (ASCP)
