
Many cosmetics contain toxic chemicals that aren't listed on the labels. They're simply accounted for as "fragrances" or "trade secrets."
It’s a Friday night and you’re in front of the mirror with your girlfriends coating your cheeks with blush, layering your lashes with mascara and plumping up your kisser with lipstick. Your reflection shows a woman dolled up and ready for a night on the town. But what the mirror doesn’t show is what’s happening beneath the products you just slabbed all over your beautiful face. While you’re in the cab headed to your favorite bar, chemicals are settling into your bloodstream. As you drink your first cocktail, paraben preservatives begin laying the foundation for potential breast cancer, skin rashes and hormone disruptions. By the time your favorite song comes on and you make your way to the dance floor, the chemical banned in Europe known as formaldehyde is having its own dance party in your body: creating immune dysfunction, fatigue and dizziness along with causing allergic reactions and depression. As the night winds down and you find yourself barefoot and missing an earring, little do you know you actually have bigger problems to worry about. Members of the amine chemicals family (DEA, TEA and MEA) are wreaking havoc on your body as a carcinogen linked to liver and kidney cancer. By the time you get home and wash your face of your now smudged makeup, the damage is already done.
Many women coat their faces each day with makeup not knowing the (dangerous) contents of each bottle, case or tube. But what’s worse is that companies are not even required to list all ingredients in their personal care products sold in the U.S.! The Environmental Working Group (EWG) reports that many of them contain chemicals that have never been assessed for safety. So therein lies the responsibility for safety and health in the consumer. And if we, as consumers, are uneducated about these chemicals, the makeup and cosmetics companies will continue to reel in profits at our expense.

The U.S. needs regulation on ingredients that go into our cosmetics and beauty products that can potentially lead to cancer, asthma and hormone disruptions.
Reading and understanding the ingredients labels on products can help you determine whether or not you’re risking your health, but to get the full picture requires some deeper digging. The EWG website has a fabulous free resource called the Skin Deep Database, which lets consumers know what chemicals are in their beauty products, lotions, shampoos, toothpaste and other products. You can search by label names and product types to see a ranking from zero to 10 determining its toxicity. For example, the popular cosmetic brand, Clinique, may surprise you with its overall rating of 3 – 8 (3 – 6 is considered moderate hazard and 7 – 10 is considered high hazard). Their Clinique Happy Perfume Spray is rated 8 because of ingredients that are linked to cancer, developmental/reproductive toxicity and allergies.
Like some Clinique products, you may find the ones you use on a daily basis are more toxic than you think. While we can use tools such as this Skin Deep Database to educate ourselves about what we’re putting in our bodies, there needs to be more regulation to ensure these product ingredients don’t make it to store shelves. It’s crucial that the federal government set comprehensive safety standards for cosmetics and other personal care products. European governments have already required the removal of many toxic chemicals, and the cosmetics companies have made necessary adjustments to their ingredients. Once we have some form of regulation here in the U.S. and our products are labeled honestly, we can (hopefully) feel better about the choices we have on the shelves. In the meantime, it’s recommended that consumers look for fragrance-free products and those with a short list of ingredients. Do the best you can to familiarize yourself with toxic ingredient terminology too, so you know what to look for when avoiding certain products.
Check out the SafeCosmetics.org website for a great video explanation of what’s happening with our cosmetics. The truth is shocking.


