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Menstruation. Your Period. Aunt Flo.
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Women’s Trouble. That Time of The Month.
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Coming Into Womanhood. The Crimson Wave.
The Red Badge of Courage.
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Flying Your Colors. The Invasion of the Red Army.
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Riding the Cotton Pony. Full Stop.
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I have a feeling I may have lost the
male demographic already…
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For something so little discussed,
it has so many names.
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Menstruation has long been taboo across many
cultures,
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with women’s cycles regarded
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as everything from inconvenient to unclean.
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With the creation and evolution
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of various
feminine hygiene products
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a term which itself frames women
as being in need of sanitation,
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the big red taboo remains,
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only now with brightly colored packaging
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and laughably unrealistic advertisements
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of blissfully happy menstruating women.
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With the introduction
of tampons in the 1930s
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a new level of freedom was afforded
to menstruating women everywhere.
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Or so they were told
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Underneath the sanitized imagery
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of these apparently revolutionary devices
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remains the inter-related
and oft-neglected question:
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Are tampons vegan?
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And are they even safe?
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Hi it’s Emily from Bite Size Vegan
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and welcome to another vegan nugget.
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When I started researching
for this topic,
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I figured it would be
a relatively simple video
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to throw together.
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Twenty plus hours later,
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I found myself deep in a
US patent document from 1997,
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tracing down various horrific
tampon safety experiments from the 1980s.
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Starting with
the obligatory Google search,
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I found a lot of people asking
about the vegan status of tampons,
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but only uncertainty
and vague supposition in response.
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Certainly they couldn’t
be tested on animals.
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I mean, how would that even work?
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As I dug further into the legal history
of tampon regulation and litigation,
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I realized that this video needed to
encompass more than a simple yes or no.
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Today we’ll be looking at three
inter-connected aspects of the
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tampon issue: women’s health,
animal testing, and environmental
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impact, though this topic bleeds
into many other areas as well...
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couldn't help myself...
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including important women's
rights issues.
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We’ll spend a good bit of time
on the health aspect
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because it lays the groundwork
for both the animal testing
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and environmental impact aspects,
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and is incredibly vital information
for women and girls to have.
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You can find chapter markers
for navigation in the video description.
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I will have a list of resources,
along with citations to everything I state,
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available on the blog post for this video
if you want to delve deeper.
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This is a rich and complex subject
that one could spend a week
-
every month investigating
and still have more to learn.
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Moving on…
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Feminine hygiene products are marketed as
synonymous with feminine health.
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But are they, and tampons in particular,
really in a woman’s best interest?
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When it comes to the health impact
of tampons there are three main variables:
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the ingredients, the absorbency level,
and the bleaching process.
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Each of these relates
to two main health concerns:
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Toxic Shock Syndrome
and dioxin exposure.
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To address each of these,
we need a brief history
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of the little cotton rockets.
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Things have come a long way since
the belted-on cotton rag contraptions of old,
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but really, tampons aren’t as new
as you may think.
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Introduced commercially
in Europe in the 1930s,
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they didn’t reach wide acceptance in the
United States until around 1974,
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due to puritanical concerns
that they threatened
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the integrity of a woman’s virginity.
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In 1974, Procter and Gable
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released the Rely brand tampon
and American women joined
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their European counterparts
in revolutionizing that time of the month.
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Because what woman doesn’t want
“an assurance of daintiness [she’s] never known before”
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while doubled over in pain as her uterus
plays out its personal Armageddon?
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As early as 1975, anecdotal evidence arose
connecting Toxic Shock Syndrome
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to tampon use.
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Toxic Shock Syndrome, or TSS, is a rare
but potentially fatal medical condition
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caused by toxins produced
by a bacterium and characterized
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by fever, headache, nausea
and vomiting, diarrhea, confusion,
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low blood pressure, rash, and sometimes
seizures, among other symptoms.
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Regardless of this disturbing connection
to their products, tampon companies
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didn’t investigate for five years,
and only then when confronted
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by the Center for Disease Control
and forced to pay damages to affected women.
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Finding the companies had literally
no information about the effects
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of their products on vaginal physiology
and microbiology,
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the CDC undertook it’s own tests
and within 3-4 weeks
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had established that TSS was caused
by a particular toxin secreted
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by a particular bacterial strain
known as staphylococcus aureus.
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In the summer of 1980,
the CDC recommended warnings be issued
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with tampons, a regulation which
went into formal effect in 1982
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and remains today,
as well as cautioned women
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that if they wanted to avoid
the risk of TSS, to stop using tampons.
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The CDC report also found that Procter and
Gamble’s Rely tampons
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carried the highest risk for TSS.
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Rely tampons were uniquely composed
of carboxymethylcellulose
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and compressed beads
of polyester
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while other companies
utilized a blend of cotton and rayon.
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“It’s totally different from any other
tampon. See Rely is made of two materials.
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Each has advantages of its own,
but combined, they’re even better.”
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Originally tampons were 100% cotton,
but in an effort to combat leakage,
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companies increased absorbency
by introducing blends of synthetic fibers
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including polyester, polyacrylate rayon,
carboxymehtylcellulose and viscose rayon.
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With the rise of TSS cases,
all but cotton and rayon were phased out.
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While the Food and Drug Administration
insists that rayon is safe.
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experts like Dr. Philip Tierno,
director of microbiology
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and diagnostic immunology at New York
University Medical Center,
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insists that 100% cotton tampons
present the lowest risk.
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But before you run out to purchase
a small cotton plantation
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for residence in your nether regions,
it’s important to note that cotton
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is the dirtiest crop on the planet,
occupying only 2.4% of the world’s cropland
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but using 16-25% of the world’s pesticides.
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Aldicarb, for example, a pesticide commonly
used in cotton production,
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is so toxic that a single drop
absorbed through the skin
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can kill an adult human.
And let’s not forget Lauren Wasser,
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the model who at 24 years old had
her right leg amputated
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due to Toxic Shock Syndrome
contracted from Kotex Natural Balance.
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cotton tampons.
Though she’s now
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she's doing excellent work challenging
and redefining beauty standards.
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But tampon ingredients
aren’t the only factor.
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In 1980 two influential studies
were published
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which indicated that
tampon absorbency rating
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was a greater risk factor for TSS
than tampon ingredients,
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with the risk rising
with absorbency level.
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The FDA sprung into action
and four years later proposed the creation
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of federal regulations
for absorbency standards.
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After only another five years
of lively back and forth
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with industry leaders, the FDA finally
released their ruling
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for “Ranges of Absorbency Labeling”
for menstrual tampons
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on October 26th, 1989.
Made it in under a decade.
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Well done.
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While women could now take comfort in the
uniformity of tampon absorbency levels,
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it was still impossible for them
to know exactly what they
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were putting in their bodies.
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As early as 1982,
the FDA was asked to require
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ingredient labeling for tampons
due to growing customer concerns.
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But despite the advice of its own
Obstetrics-Gynecology Devices Panel,
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it refused to do so.
For a product that has such prolonged
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and intimate contact with one of
the most sensitive and absorbent
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part of the body,
the nondisclosure of ingredients
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is unsettling at best.
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Because the FDA classifies tampons
as medical devices, companies
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are under no obligation to reveal
what’s in their tampons.
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Which leads us
to the second major health concern:
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dioxin exposure in relation
to the bleaching process
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of tampon production.
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Dioxins are a group
of chemically-related compounds
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that are persistent environmental
pollutants
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which, due to their fat solubility,
accumulate and remain in the body
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for 7-11 years.
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According to the World Health
organization, “dioxins are highly toxic
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and can cause reproductive
and developmental problems,
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damage the immune system, interfere
with hormones and also cause cancer.”
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While the majority of dioxins people come
into contact with are through meat, dairy,
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fish and shellfish consumption,
they are also a byproduct
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of the chlorine bleaching process
used in the manufacture of paper products,
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including the rayon in tampons.
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In 1987, an FDA scientist stated that, “It
is critical to an adequate risk assessment
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that the level of dioxins in tampons,
sanitary pads, diapers,
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and other medical devices be measured.
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The capacity to measure such levels
exists within FDA.
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Extraction data for dioxin
from these products...
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would improve the accuracy
of any risk assessment.”
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Yet the FDA again refused the advice
of its own people,
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saying there wasn’t adequate data
on dioxins to warrant labeling.
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Later in 1990, along with the EPA
and Consumer Product Safety Commission,
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the FDA authored a study of risks
related to products containing
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chlorine-bleached wood pulp and found
the dioxin levels to be negligible.
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However, numerous specialists
disagreed with their conclusion.
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One particularly firm voice was that of
House Representative Carolyn B. Maloney,
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who introduced a bill on November 7, 1997
proposing an act entitled
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“The Tampon Safety
and Research Act of 1997.”
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The act “provided for research
to determine the extent to which
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the presence of dioxin, synthetic fibers,
and other additives in menstrual
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tampons pose any risk to
the health of women.”
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Sadly, Maloney’s act was not passed.
But, ever persistent,
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she resubmitted it in 1999,
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2003,
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2005,
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2008,
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2011,
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2014
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and 2015,
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now calling it “The Robin Danielson Act,”
after a woman who died from TSS in 1998.
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An important element of Maloney’s
argument remains that the FDA itself
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doesn’t monitor dioxin levels,
but rather relies on companies
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to self-monitor and submit reports.
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Because if ever there were someone
the honor system was made for,
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it’s faceless multi-billion
dollar corporations!
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The dioxin levels found to be negligible
by these organizations are based
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on one tampon,
negating the accumulation
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within the body.
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Maloney compares this to
basing the health risks of smoking
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on one cigarette.
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While tampon companies have moved from
the original chlorine gas bleaching methods
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to either elemental chlorine-free
bleaching or totally
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chlorine-free bleaching,
most manufacturers use the former,
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which still produces dioxins.
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Now know what you must be thinking.
“Okay, okay, I get it!
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Tampons are toxic, infection-filled
cancer sticks for my naughty bits.
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It’s a tamponspiracy!
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But what’s that got to do with
veganism?” I’m so glad you asked.
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Well, with all the aforementioned
safety issues,
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scientists of course realized that
the only way to keep women safe
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from the great white threat
was to torture and kill mice, rabbits,
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chickens, rats, hamsters, guinea pigs,
monkeys, sheep, goats and baboons.
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Because nothing says feminine daintiness
like brutal vivisection.
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While I’ve always had to dig down
several layers to get to the substantial
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studies when I’ve researched animal testing
for particular products like medication,
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cigarettes or what have you,
there’s always been some readily
-
accessible information with which to start.
This was not the case with tampons.
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Outside of questions and debates on vegan
forums and a totally uncited excerpt
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posted and reposted on vegan tumblrs,
I couldn’t find specific information
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on how or even if tampons
are tested on animals.
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However, much like nature’s gift to women,
I’m nothing if not persistent.
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I eventually found my way
to a document for
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US Patent number 5641503 A
for additives to tampons,
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filed on January 13th, 1995 and published
June 24th, 1997, on behalf
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of Mcneil-Ppc, Inc, owned by the more
widely known Johnson & Johnson.
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This document described
several experiments,
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giving me just enough to search
out the original papers as a starting place.
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Now I’m not sure the difficulty of finding
such studies was purposeful
-
but it was certainly in the best interest
of tampon producers everywhere.
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I’ll briefly describe some
choice examples
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of the very un-vegan side of tampons,
but do refer to the blog post
-
for links to additional
and more thorough examples.
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And I won’t be showing anything graphic.
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The studies were hard enough
to find let alone photos.
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To start, almost every experiment
I encountered,
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whether using live animals or not,
at least employed the use of rabbits’ blood
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and either bovine brain heart agar,
which is exactly what it sounds like,
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or some sort of beef heart medium,
with several also employing
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sheep erythrocytes,
and one using fetal calf serum.
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A rather unique study incubated fertilized
hen’s eggs for 11 days and then injected
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the live chicken embryos with Toxic Shock
Syndrome Toxin One, knows as TSST-1.
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The embryos were then “examined
for death 24 hours after the injection.”
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Rabbit models for tampon safety
come in several variations.
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Some rabbits received multiple
intradermal injections into their backs
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of the TSS toxin over a period of 7 weeks
at which point “the rabbits were bled.”
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One experiment described
strapping the rabbits into a rack
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for four hours to acclimate them
so they’d fight less
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when restrained for injection.
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Then their “deaths were recorded
and surviving rabbits were observed after
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four days for gross myocardial
and liver necrosis.” Some were also
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given endotoxins “to determine
their susceptibility to lethal shock.”
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Other methods implanted subcutaneous
diffusion chambers under the rabbits’ skin
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for a steady release of toxins.
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One such experiment included
that their diffusion chambers were made
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of “perforated polyethylene gold balls.”
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Yet other rabbits had four
diffusion chambers implanted
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in their uteruses, releasing toxins
directly into their wombs.
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The chambers were “recovered
at the time of death
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or after 14 days
when the experiment was terminated,”
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at which time all remaining rabbits
were killed and dissected.
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Some rabbits endured the repeated
vaginal insertion of actual tampons
-
laced with live TSST positive bacteria.
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In one such experiment,
rabbits had an infected tampon inserted
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and left for four hours before having it
removed and the process repeated
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with a sterile tampon,
and then again with a third
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that was left in for 14-16 hours
to simulate overnight usage.
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Menstruation was simulated
by injecting a mixture of rabbit blood
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and bovine serum albumin
into the rabbits’ vaginas
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once the tampons were in place.
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Perhaps the most bizarre iteration
was an experiment where tampons
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were inserted subcutaneously into the
tissue on the back of the rabbits’ necks.
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The forced vaginal insertion
of toxin-laced tampons
-
was also inflicted upon baboons,
with one experiment leaving them in
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for twelve hours at a time
“to allow for additional growth
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of staphylococcus aureus and TSST-1
production within the vaginal cavity.”
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Guinea pigs also received intravaginal
innoculations of the TSS toxin
-
and other associated strains
in an experiment carried out
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at a University 15 minutes
from where I currently live.
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One report used terminology
I’ve never before seen in a scientific paper
-
stating that the rabbits
who hadn’t already died
-
were “sacrificed” for dissection,
a term which actually captures
-
rather simply the main
argument for animal testing.
-
Namely that it’s a necessary sacrifice
for the greater good.
-
I have an entire video series
on animal testing delving into
-
this argument and more,
but a summary review
-
on Toxic Shock Syndrome research
from within the scientific community
-
itself and one that’s in favor
of continued experimentation,
-
says it better than I ever could:
-
“That S. aureus strains produce
a wide number of extracellular products…
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which cause severe biologic effects
in some animals makes it difficult
-
to confirm that the symptoms noted
in animals given TSST-1 or infected
-
with TSST-1-producing strains are
specific for TSS in humans.”
-
Basically meaning because these are mice,
rabbits, rats, hamsters,
-
guinea pigs, monkeys, sheep,
goats, and baboons, and not humans,
-
the results can’t be relied upon
as indicators of human reactions.
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So what was the point?
-
Well, the report assures that
“Nonetheless, most animal model data
-
relating to the effects
of TSST-1 strongly support its role
-
as the most prominent toxin causing TSS.”
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Excellent.
-
Now we know that the Toxic Shock
Syndrome Toxin Number One
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is the most prominent cause
of Toxic Shock Syndrome.
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I’m sure every one of those beings
who was injected,
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cut into, raped with toxin-laced tampons,
and “sacrificed” can rest easy knowing
-
their invaluable contribution to
science was not in vain.
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While most of the specific experiments
I described were from the eighties
-
and nineties, with a few in the 2000’s
this kind of experimentation
-
continues today all over the world,
right in our own backyards.
-
Now if what we’ve covered already isn’t
reason enough to ditch
-
the little toxic seeds
of vaginal destruction,
-
let’s briefly look into the environmental
impact of our Monthly Visitor
-
The average woman will throw away
250-300 pounds of menstruation products
-
including as many as 16,800 tampons
in her lifetime.
-
While both tampons and pads leach
chemicals, including dioxins, into the water
-
and soil, tampons in particular
are a major hazard to marine life.
-
The buoyant applicators can float out
for miles and are often eaten
-
by marine wildlife,
becoming lodged in their digestive tracts,
-
causing them to slowly starve to death.
-
Some also contain bisphenol A,
an endocrine disruptor
-
proven to have harmful effects
on aquatic wildlife.
-
Used tampons and pads
can harbor harmful pathogens and bacteria,
-
and their decomposition in landfills
is unlikely to impossible with a 2005 study
-
showing tampons to be the slowest
to degrade of all paper/cotton products.
-
I think it’s safe to say,
after all of this,
-
that mainstream tampons
are decidedly not vegan
-
and very, very likely, not safe.
-
So what’s a girl to do
when the Uterine Ninjas arrive?
-
Well, luckily there are alternatives
which I have links to on the blog post.
-
There are several brands
of 100% organic cotton tampons,
-
which sidesteps the toxic chemicals
of conventional cotton
-
and the questionable affects of rayon,
though can still contribute
-
to pollution even if
labeled biodegradable.
-
The ones I have listed on the blog post
have clear no animal testing policies.
-
An alternative that checks all the boxes
is a menstrual cup,
-
which, believe it or not,
even predates the tampon,
-
with the first known concept arising in 1867.
-
Though distributed since the 1930’s,
menstrual cups have not seen
-
the same success as tampons,
possibly in part because of their lack
-
of built in obsolescence,
meaning most of the companies
-
are small and independently run.
-
Options include the Keeper,
the Diva Cup, and more.
-
Additionally, for your pads,
as they are composed of the same
-
questionable materials and toxins,
and just as environmentally destructive,
-
there are reusable cloth options
like GladRags and Lunapads,
-
with organic non-bleached options.
-
Both the cups and reusable pads
have to struggle against societal norms
-
and menstruation taboos as they require
a bit more intimacy with your own anatomy.
-
But when you think of your health,
the needless torture of animals,
-
and the destruction of the planet
and its marine life, getting a little more
-
acquainted with your private parts
seems a small price to pay.
-
And since cups and cloth last for years,
you actually save money!
-
I hope that this video has been helpful.
It’s far longer than I originally envisioned
-
but in seeing how very little reliable
information is out there on this topic,
-
I really wanted to be thorough.
-
Menstruation is nothing to
be ashamed of or secretive about.
-
Just like the importance of exposing
the animal products industries,
-
it’s only when we shine a light on what’s
hidden that we can know what we
-
are supporting and choose to make
different decisions from here on out.
-
The time it took to produce this video
clocks in at about [62 hours].
-
If you’d like to help support
Bite Size Vegan so I can keep
-
putting in the long hours to bring you
this educational resource,
-
please check out the support links in the
video description below where you can give
-
a one-time donation or receive
perks and rewards for your support
-
by joining the Nugget Army, the link for that
is also in the iCard sidebar.
-
I’d like to give a special thanks my $50
and above patrons and my whole Patreon family
-
for making this
and all of my videos possible.
-
You are beyond awesomtastic.
-
Now I’d love to hear your thoughts on this
red-hot report.
-
Did you know this information about tampons?
-
What alternatives do you use
or think you’d like to try in place
-
of those treacherous tomes of toxic death?
Let me know in the comments!
-
If you enjoyed this video, please give it
a thumbs up and share it around
-
to help inform other women and girls.
If you’re new, be sure to hit
-
that big red subscribe button down there
for more awesome vegan content
-
every Monday, Wednesday, and some Fridays.
-
Now go live vegan,
Ride the Crimson Wave
-
on the Cotton Pony,
and I’ll see you soon.
-
I just discovered something great!
It's Rely.
-
A new tampon from Proctor and Gamble.
It's really different and better.
-
Really a better tampon.
Remember they named it Rely.
-
If you use Rely Tampons here is an
important message from Proctor and Gamble.
-
Women who use Rely Tampons should
stop using them and return any unused
-
product to Proctor and Gamble
for a refund.
-
Proctor and Gamble has suspended the
sale of Rely tampons.
-
This action has been taken until more
is known about a new disease
-
called Toxic Shock Syndrome.
Some studies suggest that Rely Tampons
-
increase the risk more than other
tampon brands.
-
We advise you to stop using Rely
tampons.
-
Remember they
named it Rely