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Emaho Strategies — Science Communication and Content Strategy Consulting

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  • Nail Polish, Painter Syndrome and Hazardous Waste

    June 9, 2013 /

    By The Editors In a previous post, we talked about the toxic substances that may be present in lipstick.  Now, let’s take a look at nail polish. Nail polish may contain toxic chemicals potentially able to cause poisoning and Painter Syndrome. According to MedlinePlus, a service of the U.S. National Library of Medicine, the poisonous ingredients that may be found in nail polish are toluene, butyl acetate, ethyl acetate, and dibutyl phthalate (this list may not be all-inclusive). MedlinePlus states that: “Swallowing or breathing in (inhaling) nail polish may lead to nail polish poisoning. Some people intentionally sniff nail polish to become intoxicated (drunk) by the fumes. Over time these people,…

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  • Lipstick and Heavy Metals

    June 3, 2013 /

    By The Editors Cosmetics are all around us.  They have been used for thousands of years.  Are they safe? Without discussing the general/global issue of cosmetics safety, we want to bring up something about one of the most used cosmetics worldwide:  lipsticks. Although in the last century lipstick use was most prevalent in the Western world, its use is now a global phenomenon.  And now, it seems lipsticks contain a potentially unhealthy dose of toxic heavy metals. What are heavy metals?  They are high atomic weight elements that exhibit, at room temperature, the properties of a metallic substance. Minute amounts of some heavy metals, including cobalt, copper, manganese, molybdenum, vanadium, strontium,…

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    Global Threats: Water Scarcity and Uncertainty in the Estimates of Groundwater Availability

    June 28, 2015

    Skin Lightening Cosmetics and Mercury Toxicity

    November 10, 2013

    Cosmetics: A Full Ban on Animal Testing in the European Union Encourages Research on Alternative Methods

    October 13, 2013
  • The Global Tide of Disease Mongering

    May 27, 2013 /

    By The Editors A recent editorial in the British Medical Journal (BMJ 2013;346:f2809) highlights a new social health movement for healthcare reform that may prove crucial to global health in the 21st century. This new social health movement aims to counter a global phenomenon, clearly defined in the editorial: “The results of medical research are often distorted or suppressed for commercial gain, and systems that attempt to control clinicians’ behaviour through payment by results drive over-diagnosis and over-treatment.”  In other words, it aims to counter over-diagnosis and over-treatment. The new social health movement is based on a partnership model that affirms themes of mutual respect and combines the perspectives and resources…

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    Emotional Contagion and Social Networks

    June 15, 2014

    Facebook: High Connection and Low Well-Being

    August 15, 2013

    What is nature?

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  • Globesity

    May 25, 2013 /

    By The Editors What is “globesity”?  It’s the escalating global epidemic of overweight and obesity – one additional aspect of the great acceleration. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), obesity is “a complex condition, one with serious social and psychological dimensions, that affects virtually all age and socioeconomic groups and threatens to overwhelm both developed and developing countries.” The WHO adds that “Contrary to conventional wisdom, the obesity epidemic is not restricted to industrialized societies; in developing countries, it is estimated that over 115 million people suffer from obesity-related problems.” Overweight and obesity are major risk factors for a number of chronic diseases, including diabetes, cardiovascular diseases and cancer.  Globally,…

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    Global Threats: The Spread of Crop Pests

    September 2, 2013

    Climate Change: Influence on the Spread of Lyme Disease

    March 30, 2014

    The Worldwide Obesity Epidemic: Links to Bisphenol A

    June 25, 2013
  • Electronic Waste and the Global Toxic Trade

    May 23, 2013 /

    By The Editors Here we go with another major source of pollution and serious negative health effects: e-waste, which-stands for electronic waste – also called e-scrap.  Electronic waste may be defined as discarded computers (desktop, laptop, computer monitors, etc.), office electronic equipment (printers, scanners, fax machines, etc.), entertainment device electronics, mobile phones, television sets, refrigerators, and more. To make things easier and avoid long lists, we can safely say that e-waste is about anything that works with a cord or a battery — or it’s connected to something with a cord or battery (think for example computer mice, or keyboards). As technology changes come by very rapidly in great acceleration-style, the…

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    Preterm Birth and Exposure to Environmental Pollutants

    November 25, 2013

    The Global Tide of Disease Mongering

    May 27, 2013

    Do Sea Turtles Eat Plastic Marine Debris? Yes!

    August 10, 2013
  • Lead Poisoning Epidemics and Outbreaks: A Global Problem

    May 17, 2013 /

    By The Editors When we think epidemics, we think infectious pathogens.  However, there are other epidemics – one of them is the lead epidemic.  Lead poisoning accounts for at least 0.6% of the global burden of disease (WHO, 2009).  The Blacksmith Institute considers lead pollution one of the world’s worst pollution problems.  In much of the Western world, the problem is almost contained.  However, in countries with little regulation, there are devastating lead epidemics and, at times, lead outbreaks. Lead is a toxic, naturally occurring  heavy metal found in small amounts in the earth’s crust. Because of its abundance, low cost, and physical properties, lead and lead compounds have been used in…

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    Electronic Waste: A Global, Interactive Map

    December 17, 2013

    The Worldwide Obesity Epidemic: Links to Bisphenol A

    June 25, 2013

    It’s Not Warming, It’s Dying: A New Campaign to Raise Awareness of Climate Change

    August 14, 2014
  • The Global Environmental Impact of Clothes Production

    April 30, 2013 /

    By The Editors Sandblasting is not all. Textile factories use dyes that have a huge environmental and human health impact.  In this video, you can see a dye-blue river in China.  You can also see Indian children with grey hair – one of the effects of pesticides used in cotton fields.  Follow a T-shirt journey around the globe:  The T-shirt may travel through three continents to go from cotton balls to wearable fashion.

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    Soils Are Threatened: Can We Halt The Problem?

    December 4, 2015

    Fine Particulate Matter: The Global Toll

    October 18, 2013

    Food-Borne Parasites: The “Top Ten” List

    July 1, 2014
  • Global Shortage of Baby Formula

    April 28, 2013 /

    By The Editors Chinese families — aware of the dangers posed by baby formula contaminated with melamine and other harmful substances — prefer to buy brands produced and sold in other countries.  That is, if they can afford it.  Many can. The increasing demand from Chinese families has resulted in the current global shortages and subsequent imposed limits on purchases.  In January, the New Zealand Food Safety Authority started to investigate the online trade in China of Kiwi-made baby formula.  At about the same time, Woolworths – a chain of Australian supermarkets – limited sales of all baby formula to four tins per transaction.  And, in February, the Hong Kong’s government set limits…

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    Reducing the Foodprint by Eating Misfits

    June 4, 2013

    The fertile top layers of soils keep disappearing, a new study shows

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    Arsenic in Rice: Links to Genetic Damage

    July 27, 2013
  • The Blue Jean Distressed Look: Sandblasting Versus Eco-Aging

    April 27, 2013 /

    By The Editors Sandblasting is used to make new blue jeans look distressed.  Unfortunately, sandblasting kills people. In 2011, a rigorous study published in the journal Chest showed that formerly healthy young people exposed to silica sand, used in the sandblasting of jeans, developed silicosis — a disabling and potentially fatal lung disease for which there is no cure.  The young people either became disabled or died. According to the American Lung Association, “Silicosis is a lung disease caused by inhaling tiny bits of silica. Silica is a common mineral that is part of sand, rock and mineral ores like quartz. People who work in jobs where they could breathe in…

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    Nail Polish, Painter Syndrome and Hazardous Waste

    June 9, 2013

    Air Pollution: The Most Widespread Environmental Carcinogen

    October 19, 2013

    Asthma in Children: Effects of Exposure to Diesel Exhaust Particles

    October 12, 2013
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