Problem of toxic lead in used consumer products extremely widespread
December 2nd, 2010 - 5:55 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Dec 2 (ANI): In a new paper, researchers have revealed that the problem of toxic lead in used consumer products is extremely widespread and present at levels that are far beyond safe limits.
They found that many other items available for purchase throughout the United States - such as toys, home décor items, salvage, kitchen utensils and jewelry - contain surface lead concentrations more than 700 times higher than the federal limit.
Laurel Sharmer of the State University of New York, Anna Harding of Oregon State University, Steven Shackley of the University of California, Berkeley made the team research.
Researchers purchased a collection of used items from second-hand stores, junk shops and antiques stores in Virginia, New York and Oregon.
The items included salvaged construction pieces, antique toys, common dishware, jewelry and other collectibles. Many of the items would have significant appeal to children. Before purchase the items were tested in the store using a qualitative swab test. Those that tested positive were purchased.
Using X-ray fluorescence at the Geoarcheological Laboratory at UC Berkeley, the items were quantitatively tested for lead content.
Nineteen of the 28 items violated the federal standard for lead, which is 600 parts per million. The amount of lead ranged from twice the federal limit in a metal ice cream scoop to 714 times the limit in a saltshaker lid.
The results are published in the December issue of The Journal of Environmental Health. (ANI)
- Popular toys could damage hearing of children - Dec 19, 2011
- Kids' cartoon drinking glasses 'contain 30pc lead' - Nov 23, 2010
- Scientists tap baby brainpower for smarter computers - Mar 25, 2012
- Collectible toys could foster healthy food choices - Sep 25, 2011
- Flooring can affect how consumers make purchase decisions - Jun 04, 2010
- New Brand of Kid's Jewelry Recalled by Feds; More To Come - May 11, 2010
- Angelina Jolie Collaborating on Jewelry Line for Charity - Dec 10, 2010
- IQ linked to quantity, not quality, of short-term memory - Nov 30, 2010
- Peter Jackson's credit card fraudster jailed - Feb 10, 2011
- The child in a 63-year-old has over 2,000 toys - Aug 13, 2011
- February 2010 Children's Toys Recalls Make Headlines - Mar 01, 2010
- Shah Rukh, Gauri Khan promote home furnishing brand in Mumbai - Aug 27, 2010
- Tips To Buy The Safest Baby Toys In 2010 - Dec 05, 2010
- Pretty things lead to budget-busting spending spree - Dec 15, 2010
- Retail Stores Try Their Best To Attract Shoppers With Black Friday Deals - Nov 21, 2010
Tags: antique toys, antiques stores, collectibles, cor, harding, ice cream scoop, journal of environmental health, junk shops, kitchen utensils, many other items, oregon state university, research researchers, salvage, shackley, state university of new york, swab test, uc berkeley, university of california, university of california berkeley, x ray fluorescence