• @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    11 day ago

    Was the concentration in cookware a higher source of expose some time before? I know the situation with PFOA was worse before, but afaik it was even back then due to other concerns than the cookware.

    • @AA5B
      link
      English
      21 day ago

      I believe it was still mostly on the manufacturing process. Except that using pfoa in manufacturing not only caused non-degradable pollution at the source but meant there could be contamination of the cookware

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        2
        edit-2
        1 day ago

        Manufacturing for sure was a huge contributor but that’s manufacturing of products with pfoa or derivatives in general, since those were widely used. Which is still bad, but more directly relevant here, cookware hasn’t itself been much of an issue to people’s health afaik.

        It’s one of those things where it’s pretty understandable to be overly cautious and better safe than sorry, but I feel like nonstick cookware took the brunt of the worry when it wasn’t the real concern, rather the plants producing chemicals and their use in manufacturing and other products.

        • @AA5B
          link
          English
          223 hours ago

          For me, the big deal is the “forever” nature. These chemicals will continue accumulating in the environment, in the food chain, in people’s bodies, essentially forever. They don’t biodegrade and they’re getting ubiquitous enough that you couldn’t clean up the contamination if you had to.

          I also worry that it’s not a chemical, but a large class of chemicals. There are many variations and they have not been individually evaluated.

          And there have been studies showing harm in animals, including harm when the accumulation in a creature gets large enough to physically interfere with things.

          Those all add up to enough risk that we really need to cut back