EWG ~ Know the Ingredients In Your Personal Care Products – True Goods
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  • EWG ~ Know the Ingredients In Your Personal Care Products
  • Elizabeth Wasserman
  • babies & kidsEWGproduct safety
EWG ~ Know the Ingredients In Your Personal Care Products

The best products are truthful in their marketing claims and free of potentially worrisome ingredients. Some products might make claims like "gentle" or "all-natural," but since the government does not require safety testing, personal care product manufacturers can use almost any chemical they want, regardless of risks. 

How To Read A Label

Every personal care product must list its ingredients. Here's how to navigate the label:

1) Start at the end of the ingredient list, with preservatives. Be sure to avoid:

2) Next, check the beginning of the ingredients lists, where soaps, surfactants, and lubricants show up. Try to avoid ingredients that start with "PEG" or have an "-eth" in the middle (e.g., sodium laureth sulfate).

3) Now read the ingredients in the middle. Look for these words: "fragrance," "FD&C," or "D&C."

For Grown-Ups

Many parents pay more attention to their kids' environmental health than their own, but toxic chemicals can affect adult bodies too. EWG's Safer Shopping List has common-sense tips to reduce everyone's exposures. For instance, buy fragrance-free, skip the nail polish and use fewer products overall.

Just for Kids

Extra caution is in order for kids because, pound for pound, they are exposed to more contaminants in everyday products than adults. Their immature metabolism and organ systems are typically less capable of fending off chemical assaults. Even subtle damage to young bodies can lead to disease later in life.

Follow EWG's top five tips for kids:

1) Use fewer products and use them less often.

2) Don't trust ad hype. Check ingredients.

3) Buy fragrance-free products.

4) Avoid the use of baby powder.

5) Always avoid EWG's top six chemicals of concern for kids:

~ Special thanks to Environmental Working Group who authored the original post as part of their Healthy Home Tips series. Copyright © Environmental Working Group, www.ewg.org. Reproduced with permission. ~

  • Elizabeth Wasserman
  • babies & kidsEWGproduct safety