
New study finds cancer-causing chemicals in popular beauty products for women of color
New research has shed light on cancer-causing chemicals being found in a variety of women's beauty products, particularly in those marketed to women of color.
The new
study
, published recently in Environmental Science & Toxicology Letters, analyzed the personal care products used by Black and Latina women and found that more than half used products that contained formaldehyde-releasing chemicals.
What does the research say?
A recent study has highlighted that many Black and Latina women frequently use beauty products containing cancer-causing chemicals, extending beyond just hair straightening products.
Operation Sindoor
Armed forces maintaining strong vigil after Pak ceasefire breach: MEA
Pakistan violates ceasefire: Loud explosions, sirens haunt J&K- what we know so far
Behind the scenes of ceasefire: Calls from Pakistan, Washington
The study involved surveys from 70 Black and Latina women in Los Angeles, who submitted pictures of the ingredient labels of personal care products they used via a dedicated app. Alarmingly, the study found that 53% of participants utilized at least one product that listed formaldehyde releasers. Many reported using these products daily or several times per week.
The carcinogen was identified in 58% of the haircare products surveyed, but it was also found in various shampoos, lotions, body soaps, and eyelash glues.
What are the findings?
The findings, published in the peer-reviewed journal Environmental Science & Technology Letters, indicate that several lotions, cleansers, and other beauty items marketed to these demographics contain formaldehyde and formaldehyde-releasing preservatives, substances that are recognized as carcinogens.
The
Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) previously indicated that formaldehyde poses an "unreasonable risk of injury to human health."
Prior studies have already documented this carcinogen's presence in hair straightening products, especially affecting Black women and women of color disproportionately. This latest research is significant as it expands the known range of products containing formaldehyde.
The experts' take:
According to Dr. Robin Dodson, the lead author of the study, the implications are serious: 'These chemicals are in products we use all the time, all over our bodies.
Repeated exposures like these can add up and cause serious harm.' She emphasizes the challenge for consumers in identifying which products contain formaldehyde, as many preservatives have complex names and do not explicitly state "formaldehyde" on labels.
One preservative to be cautious of is DMDM hydantoin.
While the European Union and ten U.S. states have enacted or proposed bans on formaldehyde, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) suggested a national ban in 2023, but no action has been finalized. Dr. Dodson argues for an even more comprehensive approach: 'Ideally, companies shouldn't be putting these chemicals in products in the first place.'
Study finds cancer-causing chemicals in Delhi bread
Get the latest lifestyle updates on Times of India, along with
Mother's Day wishes
,
messages
, and
quotes
!
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
10 hours ago
- Time of India
Walk THIS way to live longer, according to longevity experts
Want a longer, healthier life? A new study reveals that the pace of your daily walk matters. Research from the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, focusing on predominantly low-income and Black individuals, found that brisk walking for just 15 minutes daily can cut mortality risk by nearly 20%. Want to live longer? Walk. Want to boost heart and brain health, maintain a healthy weight, and reduce your risk of chronic disease? Walk. Yes, that's right. Walking is perhaps the simplest and most effective form of low-impact exercise for overall health. Walking can also help you live longer. Yes, it's really a magic pill for longevity. But just walking won't help. A new study has found that walking a certain way can help with longevity. A new analysis found that the pace of the daily walk can boost longevity. The findings are published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine . Walking and longevity Regular walking is linked to overall health and well-being. A novel analysis using data from the Southern Community Cohort Study, involving 79,856 predominantly low-income and Black individuals across 12 southeastern US states, found that regular walking, at a faster pace, can significantly reduce mortality. They found that walking, particularly at a brisk pace, is an effective form of physical activity for improving health. 'While the health benefits of daily walking are well-established, limited research has investigated the effects of factors such as walking pace on mortality, particularly in low-income and Black/African-American populations. Our research has shown that fast walking as little as 15 minutes a day was associated with a nearly 20% reduction in total mortality, while a smaller reduction in mortality was found in association with more than three hours of daily slow walking. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Indonesia: Unsold Sofas at Bargain Prices (Prices May Surprise You) Sofas | Search Ads Search Now Undo This benefit remained strong even after accounting for other lifestyle factors and was consistent across various sensitivity analyses,' lead investigator Wei Zheng, MD, PhD, said, in a statement. Medithon | Breaking Barriers: Women's Health & Preventive Care The researchers asked the participants to report the average time they spend every day to 'walk slowly (such as moving around, walking at work, walking the dog, or engaging in light exercise)' and to 'walk fast (such as climbing stairs, brisk walking, or exercising)'. They found that the protective effect of fast walking extended to all causes of death but was most pronounced for cardiovascular diseases. Why walking is effective Boosts heart efficiency: Walking fastly is considered an aerobic exercise, which improves cardiac output, increases oxygen delivery, and enhances the efficiency of the heart's pumping action, leading to better overall cardiovascular health. Reduces the risk factors of cardiovascular disease: By walking regularly at a fast pace, it reduces the risk factors associated with cardiovascular diseases, such as body weight and composition, obesity, hypertension, and dyslipidemia. Highly accessible: Walking is a convenient, low-impact activity that can fit into the lifestyle of individuals of any age and fitness level. 'Public health campaigns and community-based programs can emphasize the importance and availability of fast walking to improve health outcomes, providing resources and support to facilitate increased fast walking within all communities. Furthermore, the findings of the reduced mortality associated with fast walking pace were supported by previous studies conducted in middle- and upper-middle-income populations. Individuals should strive to incorporate more intense physical activity into their routines, such as brisk walking or other forms of aerobic exercise,' lead author Lili Liu, MPH, added.


Time of India
11 hours ago
- Time of India
The assault on American Science: NIH funding turmoil puts decades of progress at risk
Washington, June 17 (IANS) For decades, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) has been the bedrock of America's scientific progress, driving breakthroughs in cancer treatment, infectious disease prevention, and cutting-edge biomedical innovation. Its grants have powered laboratories across universities, supported generations of researchers, and sustained the nation's position as a global leader in science. That stability is now in jeopardy. Last week, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) briefly froze all outside NIH research funding for the fiscal year, a move reversed within hours but not before sending shockwaves through the research community. For many scientists, the whiplash underscored an unsettling reality: This was not an isolated misstep but another strike in what they see as a systematic, politically driven effort to weaken the country's public research infrastructure. Escalating pressure on research The freeze follows a year marked by abrupt grant cancellations and targeted funding cuts. Programmes in areas such as HIV prevention, Black maternal health, and oncology have faced reductions or outright halts. In July, the National Cancer Institute announced revisions to its budget plans signalling substantial cuts to cancer research, a decision likely to ripple through laboratories already operating on narrow margins. Such interventions have reshaped the funding landscape, particularly for universities and medical schools, which receive the bulk of NIH grants. Adding to the instability, the administration has shifted from multi-year funding cycles to lump-sum disbursements, a change that significantly reduces the number of projects that can be maintained. Universities as a political target Higher education institutions, long reliant on NIH support, are emerging as central targets in this funding turbulence. Several high-profile universities have reportedly conceded to administrative pressure, while others now face mounting uncertainty about the future of their research programmes. The relative silence from influential scientific bodies has deepened unease among researchers, who fear that the lack of coordinated resistance is enabling deeper structural changes. Implications for cancer and medical research The potential consequences for cancer research are particularly stark. With approval rates for new grants expected to plummet, in some areas to just a small fraction of applications, decades of progress risk being reversed. Advances that transformed survival rates for childhood cancers could stall, leaving a generation of patients without the benefit of cutting-edge discoveries. Legislative risks to funding stability The threat extends beyond executive decision-making. The administration could invoke a Senate rescission motion to permanently revoke appropriated NIH funds. This tactic requires only a simple majority, allowing sweeping cuts without the bipartisan consensus normally needed to overcome a filibuster, thereby accelerating budget reductions with minimal procedural resistance. Psychological and operational strain The ongoing uncertainty is straining researchers both mentally and operationally. Many now face the prospect of scaling back their teams or abandoning projects midstream. The laborious process of writing grant proposals — often months of work — has become an increasingly discouraging gamble when the odds of funding approval are so low. Risk to America's innovation engine The NIH's role extends far beyond academic research. Its funding underpins innovation clusters, fuels the biotechnology sector, and supports medical advancements that contribute directly to the nation's economic competitiveness. Disruption of this funding pipeline could dismantle the ecosystems that have made the United States a global scientific powerhouse, and rebuilding them, experts warn, would be all but impossible. Emerging resistance While major institutions have largely avoided direct confrontation, grassroots networks of scientists are stepping into the vacuum. Public-facing initiatives are working to explain the value of federal research investment to local communities, while internal campaigns within the NIH are challenging leadership over perceived failures to safeguard congressionally mandated funding. An uncertain horizon The events of the past week have made clear that the contest over NIH funding is no longer about short-term budget disputes. It is a struggle over the direction, independence, and future of American science itself. If current trends continue, the repercussions will reach far beyond research laboratories, altering the nation's economic resilience, technological leadership, and public health outcomes for decades to come. Ready to navigate global policies? Secure your overseas future. Get expert guidance now!


News18
18 hours ago
- News18
Over 1,200 Indians died in Canada during 2020-2024: Govt in Parliament
New Delhi, Aug 7 (PTI) A total of 1,203 Indian citizens have died in Canada over the five-year period from 2020-2024, and most of the deaths were a result of natural causes like old age or medical illness, the government informed Parliament on Thursday. Also, during the period, the mortal remains or ashes of 757 Indians have been successfully brought back from Canada to India with the MEA's assistance, Minister of State for External Affairs Kirti Vardhan Singh said in a written response to a query in the Rajya Sabha. The Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) was asked the number of Indian citizens who have died in Canada over the last five years and the causes of these deaths as per official records. 'As per the information available with the Ministry, a total of 1,203 Indian citizens died in Canada over the five-year period from 2020 to 2024. Most of the deaths were a result of natural causes like old age or medical illness. There were also unnatural deaths due to accidents, violence, suicide, murders, etc.," the minister said. In his response, Singh also shared year-wise data on the number of such deaths — 120 deaths in 2020; 160 (2021); 198 (2022); 336 (2023) and 389 (2024). He said the government of India attaches high priority to addressing and resolving the issues pertaining to transportation of mortal remains of Indian nationals. The MEA has a well-established mechanism or SOPs to coordinate with all Missions or Posts abroad to assist Indian nationals in distress including in cases of deaths, local cremation or burial or transportation of mortal remains to their hometowns in India and settlement of insurance or compensation claims, Singh said. PTI KND KND KVK KVK view comments First Published: August 08, 2025, 00:15 IST Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.