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5.10.2008
Sunil C Perera
Sri Lankan women will receive smooth and technically developed
cotton sanitary pads after facing a number of health issues
due to the available disposable sanitary pads.
Director of the Momiji Natural Corporation Japan , Mrs.Rie
Ito who recently introduced Cotton sanitary pads to local
women said disposable sanitary pads make a huge impact on
human health .
The
impact on human health can be illustrated by looking at
a small part of the production process of these products.
The chlorine that is used to bleach the cotton is toxic
to workers and may cause cancer. In addition to this, the
vestigial chlorine in the pad or tampon may cause irritation
to or allergies in the wearer. For an intensive research
paper on the environmental impact of sanitary product production,
see Comparative Life Cycle Assessment of Sanitary Pads and
Tampons , she said.
Addressing
local media she said the largest issue with both pads and
tampons is disposal. The average woman probably uses about
7000 sanitary pads in her lifetime. “This is not a
published statistic- it is one that I have just calculated
based on the fact that a woman has her period for 30 years
of her life, for a average of 60 days a year and uses an
average of 4 pads a day. These pads and tampons go into
landfills and since they are often made in part of non-biodegradable
products like rayon they contaminate the soil and the aquifers
as well as use up precious land, she noted.
Toxic Shock Syndrome (TSS)is a disease associated with the
use of tampons.
It is caused by Staphylococcus aureus, a bacterium.
The toxins that this bacterium produces cause fever, rigors,
vomiting, diarrhoea, muscle aches and rashes to start with,
which rapidly deteriorate into extremely low blood pressure
and a rapid breakdown of the body’s vital organs.
TSS affects between 1-2/100,000 women in the 15-44 age annually
in the USA Statistic showed an 18% increase in the incidence
of TSS in the USA from 2002 to 2003.
TSS is also associated with the use of inter-uterine contraception
devices, people who have had nasal surgery, and people who
develop this infection after an operative procedure.
Women in the USA put 11.3 billion "disposable"
menstrual products per year into landfills or burn them.
500 years is the time that one "disposable" menstrual
pad will take to partially biodegrade.
An individual woman throws away about ten thousand paper
pads or tampons in her lifetime.
French nurses experimented with the first "disposable"
menstrual products from cellulose surgical gauze during
the First World War.
"Disposable" menstrual products are not sterilized.
Chlorine is used as bleach for paper pulp. 400-700 million
pounds of toxins are dumped every year dumped into U.S.
waterways, she said.
In World War 1, Chlorine was used as a weapon of war.
Dioxins are a bi-product of the chlorine bleaching process.
They do not break down and are also suspected to be carcinogenic.
There is evidence to show that dioxins damage the liver
and its functioning and also depress human immune systems.
The process that uses chlorine to produce plastics, paints,
dyes, bleaching agents, cleaning solvents, aerosols, deodorants,
refrigerants, and wood preservatives also produce CFCs that
deplete the ozone layer.
She said recently introduced Cloth Sanitary pads could minimise
these issues and end impact on human due to the disposable
sanitary pads.
She
said Green Menstruation is a philosophy that attempts to
manage a woman’s monthly period in an environmentally
friendly manner. It deals with the use of alternative sanitary
products, alternative and natural remedies for stomach cramps,
back and leg pains, oedema, PMS and irregular periods.
An estimated two million seabirds and one hundred thousand
marine mammals die annually from swallowing plastics including
tampon applicators.
“If you can afford it, pay the extra for the organic
cotton products.If not, don’t throw away your pads
to contaminate the earth.... burn them , she said.
Replying
queries she said these pads are very popular in Japan and
it is reusable pads .In the long term it is less expensive
to buy and produce menstrual pads compared to disposable
menstrual pads.
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