Recently, the DEHP cases that boom out from Taiwan creates a major concern over food healthy issues around the whole Asia region. In Taiwan, the selling of products made using an emulsifier made by the Yu Shen Chemical Company has already been stopped. Yu Shen Chemical Company used DEHP as substitute for palm oil has been proved from a study made by the Taiwan Food and Drug Administration. Energy drinks, bottled tea and juices, fruit jam, and fruit jelly with ingredients made by Yu Shen Chemical Company which covering a large range of food were pulled out from store shelves in Taiwan. DEHP not only expose to environment through food but also in any PVC material that we use in daily life. Toys, PVC pipe and even medical equipments such as IV tubings also contain DEHP!
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Bubble tea that may contain DEHP due to food additives produced by Yu Shen Chemical Company! |
Who would suspect that the everyday plastics in your house or the medical products used at your hospital would be made in such a way as to leach a toxic chemical into your body? What exactly is DEHP? What is it use for and how can it harm people?
Firstly, DEHP is an abbreviation for Di (2-ethylhexyl) phthalate, is an organic compound with the formula C6H4(C8H17COO)2. DEHP is a phthalate which is an ester of phthalic acid and are mainly used as plasticizers (substances added to plastics to increase their flexibility, transparency, durability, and longevity). They are used primarily to soften polyvinyl chloride. DEHP is colourless, viscous and almost no odour. It is soluble in oil but not water. They are widely used in plastic products in the food and construction industries, plus they are used extensively in beauty products, pesticides, wood finishes, insect repellents, solvents and lubricants. They exist almost everywhere in our life.
How can DEHP comes in contact with human and environments? DEHP is highly lipophilic fat(fat soluble). When used in PVC plastic, DEHP is loosely chemically bounded to the plastic and readily leaches into blood or other lipid-containing solutions in contact with the plastic. This leaching of DEHP to humans via the solution with which it is in contact increases risk of certain adverse health outcomes. Animal studies showed that exposure to DEHP can damage the livers, kidneys, lungs and reproductive system particularly the developing testes of prenatal and neonatal males.
The major impact of DEHP is to the male reproductive system. Phthalates are one of the groups of "gender-bending" chemicals causing males of all species to become more female. The endocrine systems of wildlife are disrupted by these chemicals, causing testicular cancer, genital deformations, low sperm counts and infertility in a number of species, including polar bears, deer, whales and otters, just to name a few. This is a real example that occurred in Taiwan. A pregnant woman that drank tainted-bubble tea everyday has been told that her baby boy would have difficulties in reproduction due to the abnormal development of testes.
The most shocking news is that DEHP has the highest exposure in hospital! One of DEHP's primary uses is in the medical industry—manufacturers add it to polyvinyl chloride (PVC) to make plastic equipment more flexible. DEHP in PVC extends the shelf life of red blood cells. In fact, medical devices can contain different percent of DEHP by weight and IV tubing can contain up to 80 percent!
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| IV tubing can be a source of contact with DEHP. |
One question that may arise is “Can this chemical actually leach from the IV tubing into your baby?” Yes, it can and it does. Small level of DEHP is exposed to everyone in everyday life, but your baby can be exposed to HIGH levels via certain medical procedures. We3 know that DEHP is not bound to the vinyl. It readily leaches out of these medical devices (the tubing or bag) into the solutions that come into content with the plastic, where it then goes directly into you or your child.
The degree of this leaching depends on several factors which are the temperature, the lipid content of the solution, agitation of the solution, and the duration of its contact with the plastic (i.e., storage time). Of course, the more medical procedures your child requires, the higher the exposure to this chemical. So, babies who are seriously ill and hospitalized have the greatest risk of exposure, as well as being the most vulnerable to its effects.
We can’t avoid to come in contact with DEHP but we can decrease the exposure to it. One of the ways is use reusable plastic bottle. Always read, read, and READ the labels. Besides DEHP, look for the following:- DBP (di-n-butyl phthalate)
- DEP (diethyl phthalate)
- BzBP (benzylbutyl phthlate)
- DMP (dimethyl phthalate)





