Feeding
Toxic Baby Bottles?
By Rachel Rabkin Pechman, Parenting
PRINT


 
See Also
Different features for different children - Parenting.com
To encourage the transition - Parenting.com
Have concerns about your baby's plastic bottles or cups? Here's how to err on the side of caution - Parenting.com
Early this year, a report by a California environmental group brought attention to toxic chemicals in plastic baby bottles, causing a run on glass versions. Next came a conference funded by the National Institutes of Health and other major groups at which similar warnings were announced. The concern: A chemical in some plastics called bisphenol A (BPA)  -- which has been linked with cancer, impaired immune function, hyperactivity, and other problems  -- can leach into a bottle's contents.

"There's no need to be frightened, but you should try to reduce your baby's exposure to this chemical," says pediatrician Harvey Karp, M.D., a board member of Healthy Child Healthy World, a non-profit group that raises awareness about environmental toxins. Here's how:

Avoid hard polycarbonate plastic, which contains BPA. Instead, use bottles made of glass, or softer, safer plastics made of polyethylene, polypropylene, or polyamide. Brands that carry these include Born Free (which makes only BPA-free bottles), Gerber, Sassy, and Medela; call the manufacturer to check which it sells.

Discard worn bottles (those that are cloudy or scratched): Chemicals leach into food more easily when plastics break down.

Don't heat plastic bottles in the microwave, or wash them in the dishwasher, since heat degrades plastic, releasing chemicals.


ADVERTISEMENT
Popular on Parenting.com
 
Photo Galleries
 
Quick Poll

Which is worse:

12 hours of labor
A 12-hour car trip with a colicky baby


Parenting Magazine

In the December/January Issue

Blogs

The Daily Fave

Cookies for Kids' Cancer, The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, Thanksgiving, Nintendo DS, dinosaurs, and more! Updated frequently!
Blog

The Parenting Post

Rocks In My Dryer: "I wrote out a long list of questions for my then-83-year-old paternal grandfather, and I gave him a small, hand-held tape recorder." Updated daily!
Health

7 Nighttime Illness Soothers

Why kids get sicker at night -- and how to help