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AAP
AAP
Health
Abe Maddison

World-first study finds plastic is not so fantastic

Exposure to chemicals in common plastics increases health risks to humans, a study has found. (Jono Searle/AAP PHOTOS)

UMBRELLA  RSEARCH BY UNIVERSITY OF ADELAIDE, JBI AND THE MINDEROO FOUNDATION

*Five classes of chemicals were investigated: bisphenols, phthalates, PBDE, PCBs and PFAS

*Review found exposure to plastic-associated chemicals was linked to a wide range of health outcomes, including:

*Before birth (miscarriage)

*At birth (weight, genital development and appearance)

*In childhood (neurodevelopment, obesity, blood pressure, asthma and bronchitis, precocious puberty in girls)

*In adulthood (endometriosis, sperm concentration and quality, type 2 diabetes and insulin resistance, thyroid function, polycystic ovary syndrome, obesity, cardiovascular disease, hypertension and cancer)

*Umbrella reviews are one of the highest levels of evidence synthesis 

*The review synthesised data from 52 systematic reviews, involving more than 900 meta-analyses on  about 1.5 million people, including pregnant women, babies, children and adults 

*INC-5, the fifth session of the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee to develop an international legally binding treaty on plastic pollution, starts in South Korea on November 25

*Minderoo Foundation director Jay Weatherill says a treaty with the protection of human health at its core is the first step in addressing the crisis

*Minderoo will advocate at INC-5 for a treaty with two key goals:

*Reduction of virgin fossil fuel-based plastic production through a "polymer premium" on primary plastic production

*Removal of harmful chemicals in plastics by global bans on their use in plastic production

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