logo
Action needed on plastic additives linked to sperm decline, experts warn

Action needed on plastic additives linked to sperm decline, experts warn

The Guardiana day ago
Action must be taken to curb the use of plastic additives linked to plummeting sperm counts, a leading reproductive scientist has warned, as splits over chemical regulation contributed to the collapse of a crucial treaty on plastic pollution.
Across the world, sperm counts have been declining at a rate of about 1% a year for the past 50 years, and human fertility has been diminishing at a similar rate, studies have shown.
Increasing levels of obesity, sedentary lifestyles and ageing populations have all been held up as possible causes. But according to Dr Shanna Swan, professor of environmental medicine and public health at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York City, environmental factors play the most significant role.
Swan said the decline was 'largely, but not entirely due to toxins in the environment that have the ability to interfere with steroid hormones'.
In 2017, Swan and her colleagues published a meta-analysis showing a decline in sperm counts of almost 60% among men in North America, Europe and Australia between 1973 and 2011.
In 2023, they repeated the research, extending the study to 2018 and including previously unavailable data from Africa, Asia and South America, and made even more shocking findings.
'We separated the countries into western and non-western for analytic purposes, and in both we found a significant decline,' Swan said. 'And the other thing that we found, which was at least as alarming, was that if you looked at all of the studies going back to 1973 you see a 1% per year decline. But if you look at studies published after 2000, you see an over 2% decline.
'So the rate of decline had increased, and had increased significantly in recent years.'
Swan's warning comes amid rising alarm at the impact of chemical toxicity on human and environmental health. Two weeks ago, a report published by Deep Science Ventures, a business focused on environmental solutions, which was reviewed by Swan, warned that chemical pollution was 'a threat … of a similar order as climate change', but received far less attention.
The decline in sperm rates since about 1950 stands in an inverse relationship to the explosion in the use of plastics. Swan points out that there are now well-established links between common additives to plastics and falling sperm counts.
'Phthalates are chemicals that are put into plastic to give it flexibility and make it soft and flexible,' Swan said. 'So anytime you pick up a soft water bottle or tubing, like medical tubing, or a food container that's soft, you're going to be touching phthalates.
'Then, on the other side, the evil twin of phthalates are the bisphenols. While phthalates make plastic soft and flexible, bisphenols make it hard and inflexible. And phthalates lower testosterone and the bisphenols increase oestrogen.'
The effects of these and other endocrine-disrupting chemicals were particularly profound on foetuses and embryos developing in the womb, Swan said. She had previously carried out research into the effects of phthalates on unborn male babies, finding that exposure at a critical point in gestation could lead to subtle deformities in sexual development.
Sign up to Down to Earth
The planet's most important stories. Get all the week's environment news - the good, the bad and the essential
after newsletter promotion
The adverse effects of phthalates in the womb, known as 'phthalate syndrome', included smaller penises, a shorter distance between the genitals and anus, and – once children reached sexual maturity – lowered sperm counts, Swan said.
'We showed the link between the exposure and fertility,' she said. 'And when you see that total sperm count going down worldwide, what I believe is you're seeing an important effect of early exposure to these chemicals.'
Swan would not be drawn into commenting on the talks, which were under way as she spoke, in Geneva for a comprehensive treaty to end the plastic pollution crisis. But she said action needed to be taken on the use of plastic additives, with an urgent need for safer replacements.
'In the meantime, yes people can be careful,' she said. 'They can reuse materials. They should try to look at what they use in their takeout containers and carry little glass bottles around to get their drinks. It's very important. But it's not solving a bigger problem, which is how do we make these things that we have become dependent on in a safer way?'
Signs of a solution are not promising. Last week, after nearly two weeks of talks, negotiators left Geneva on Friday having failed to reach an agreement, after oil- and gas-producing nations objected to calls for limits to production and curbs on chemicals.
Almost 100 nations had signed a declaration calling for a 'legally binding obligation to phase out those most harmful plastic products and chemicals of concern'. But both texts drafted by Luis Vayas Valdivieso, the chair of the negotiating committee, omitted any reference to controls on chemicals.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

US health department staff urge Kennedy to protect workers after CDC attack
US health department staff urge Kennedy to protect workers after CDC attack

Reuters

time18 minutes ago

  • Reuters

US health department staff urge Kennedy to protect workers after CDC attack

Aug 20 (Reuters) - More than 750 U.S. Department of Health and Human Services staff have urged Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to guarantee federal health workers' safety after a shooting this month at CDC buildings in Atlanta, according to a letter released on Wednesday. The signatories, including former leaders at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention such as Anne Schuchat, a former principal deputy director, urged HHS to tighten emergency procedures and alerts by September 2. They also asked the CDC to do something about the online targeting of federal workers that list agency staff and their personal information. "The deliberate destruction of trust in America's public health workforce puts lives at risk. We urge you to act in the best interest of the American people - your friends, your families, and yourselves," the letter said, noting that people had signed in a personal capacity. They included nearly 400 current employees, many of whom signed anonymously for fear of retaliation, CDC physician Anna Yousaf told Reuters, speaking in a personal capacity. A spokesperson for the HHS said CDC employees' safety and well-being are a top priority for Kennedy, who visited CDC headquarters in Atlanta shortly after the shooting. Investigators said last week a man fired nearly 200 rounds at six CDC buildings on August 8, killing police officer David Rose before taking his own life. Writings found in the gunman's home expressed discontent with the COVID-19 vaccine, they said. The CDC tightened security following the attack, having most employees work from home this week and removing vehicle decals showing where they work. Wednesday's letter, also signed by staff at the National Institutes of Health and other HHS agencies, urged Kennedy to publicly disavow false or misleading claims about vaccines and infectious disease and to affirm the CDC's nonpartisan, evidence-based scientific integrity. It accused Kennedy of undermining public health by attacking CDC staff's credibility, firing key personnel and misusing data to falsely link childhood vaccines to autism. Kennedy, a longtime vaccine skeptic, has moved swiftly to reshape vaccine, food, and medicine policy as HHS secretary, most notably by firing all 17 members of the CDC's vaccine advisory panel last June. The letter from department staff also was sent to Congress and the White House, an accompanying press release said.

McDonald's settles with Colorado resident who claims they contracted E. coli after visiting restaurant
McDonald's settles with Colorado resident who claims they contracted E. coli after visiting restaurant

The Independent

time20 minutes ago

  • The Independent

McDonald's settles with Colorado resident who claims they contracted E. coli after visiting restaurant

A Colorado man has reportedly settled a lawsuit claiming he got E. coli after eating at McDonald's during a multi-state outbreak of the bacteria linked to the chain. Eric Stelly sued the fast food chain in October, shortly after federal health officials disclosed an E. coli outbreak across multiple states linked to McDonald's Quarter Pounder burgers and other items that contained contaminated onions. The suit claimed Stelly suffered from symptoms of E. coli poisoning, including nausea, cramps, and bloody stool,s after eating at a McDonald's in Greeley. "Never did I expect to suffer like this from eating a burger," Stelly told USA Today when he filed his suit. "I hope my lawsuit can shed light on how this happened so that McDonald's can fix the problems and prevent them from happening again." The terms of the reported settlement over the claims could not be disclosed, Stelly's lawyer told The Denver Post. The Independent has contacted McDonald's for comment and confirmation on the outcome of the suit. Colorado was especially hard hit by the outbreak, which ended in late 2024. There were 30 Colorado residents, one of whom died from complications, among the 104 people across 14 states who got documented infections from the outbreak. Health officials concluded that fresh, slivered onions being served at McDonald's restaurants were the 'likely source' of the outbreak. Among 81 people interviewed as part of disease surveillance, 99 percent said they had eaten at McDonald's, with 84 percent recalling a dish with slivered onions, according to the CDC. Stelly wasn't the only Colorado resident who said they got sick from McDonald's as part of the outbreak. Kamberlyn Bowler, a 15-year-old high school freshman at the time, was flown to a hospital and given emergency dialysis after eating McDonald's Quarter Pounders three times in the weeks before the outbreak was detected. 'It's pretty scary to know that we put so much faith and trust that we're going to be eating something that's healthy and for it to be broken,' her mother, Brittany Randall, said at the time. Federal health officials cleared McDonald's in December. 'There were no new illnesses associated with consumers eating at McDonald's following our swift and decisive action on October 22, 2024,' McDonald's executives said in a statement at the time. 'This reinforces the importance of our values, particularly in moving quickly to do the right thing and to always put people first. Most forms of E. coli bacteria are harmless to humans, but certain strains can make people sick with diarrhea, urinary tract infections, pneumonia, sepsis, and other illnesses, according to the CDC. People get infected with the bacteria after swallowing them, often through coming into contact with contaminated food or water.

A hearing aid before the age of 70 can dramatically reduce risk of dementia, new research finds
A hearing aid before the age of 70 can dramatically reduce risk of dementia, new research finds

The Independent

time20 minutes ago

  • The Independent

A hearing aid before the age of 70 can dramatically reduce risk of dementia, new research finds

People who use a hearing aid before the age of 70 can dramatically reduce their risk of dementia, new research shows. Dementia, which is the loss of cognitive functioning, affects more than six million Americans and leads to more than 100,000 deaths each year, according to the National Institutes of Health. As the U.S. population ages, dementia cases are expected to double by 2060, NIH says. Age-related hearing loss is a risk factor for developing dementia, and a research letter published in JAMA Neurology on Monday found that using hearing aids could reduce this risk. After studying nearly 3,000 participants over up to two decades researchers found those with hearing loss who used hearing aids had a 61 percent lower risk for dementia among those younger than 70 years at the time of their hearing loss diagnosis. 'This finding highlights the importance of early intervention for HL [hearing loss] for possible prevention of dementia,' the authors of the study wrote. But the study noted only 17 percent of people with moderate to severe hearing loss use hearing aids. UCLA Health gave three possible theories for the link between hearing loss and dementia including that hearing loss causes the brain to deteriorate faster. Additionally, your brain works harder to understand conversation when you can't hear well. Straining your brain regularly like this can impact your cognitive function. Hearing loss can also limit your social engagement as conversing in noisy environments is less enjoyable. Your brain may struggle to be intellectually stimulated without socialization. Age-related hearing loss affects one in three people older than 60, according to the American Academy of Audiology. One in two people older than the age of 85 has hearing loss. Common signs of hearing loss include asking people to repeat things, difficulty hearing and understanding speech in noisy settings, and turning the TV or radio up louder than normal. The American Academy of Audiology warns untreated hearing loss can be connected to cognitive decline as well as depression, anxiety, paranoia and poor social relationships.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store