DAVAO CITY – Environmental health groups today cautioned consumers seeking fairer skin to be watchful of banned skin whitening cosmetics which are sold here.
The Interface Development Interventions (Idis) and the EcoWaste Coalition issued the warning against dangerous cosmetics with undisclosed amounts of mercury after finding them on store shelves in Davao City.
The groups said the banned products are still sold in the market despite the ocular inspections conducted by the City Health Office and the Food and Drugs Administration (FDA) Region XI in some retail outlets last April.
The World Health Organization (WHO) describes mercury as “toxic to human health” and lists it among the “ten chemicals of major public health concern.”
Ann Fuertes, executive director of IDIS said “the continued sale of banned mercury-laden skin whitening products is a serious threat to public health and should stop at once.”
“Cosmetics retailers should only offer registered products that are safe from mercury and other substances that are damaging to human health,” said Fuertes in a statement.
She said exposure to mercury “even at very low doses” is detrimental to health and should be avoided.
Thony Dizon, Coordinator of the EcoWaste Coalition’s Project Protect also called on local officials to “take immediate action to cut the supply of these dangerous cosmetics and severely penalize those involved in the illegal trade of mercury-added skin lightening creams.”
In test buys conducted last November 11, Dizon, who was then visiting Davao City, managed to buy nine skin whitening products that were among those banned by the FDA for violating the 1 part per million (ppm) threshold limit for mercury under the ASEAN Cosmetics Directive.
The products were obtained from cosmetics and herbal product retailers at DCLA Shopping Center and from a kiosk at Plaza Luisita for P50 to P150 each.
Among these nine products were Bihuayn, Erna, Jiaoli, S’zitang and Yinni skin whitening creams.
Subsequent screening in Quezon City using an X-Ray Fluorescence device detected mercury up to 5,445 ppm in the samples, way above the allowable limit of 1 ppm.
The top three samples with the highest mercury content were a S’Zitang two-jar skin whitening cream in gold box with 5,445 ppm, Yinni Green Tea Quickacting Whitener & Speckle Remover Package with 5,085 ppm and a S’Zitang single jar skin whitening cream with 4,899 ppm.
Health studies have indicated that exposure to mercury – even in low amounts – may have toxic effects on the nervous, digestive, immune, respiratory and urinary systems, may damage the skin and may present “a threat to the development of the child in utero and early in life.”
Direct users of mercury-laced skin whitening cosmetics may experience skin discoloration, rashes and scarring and reduced skin’s resistance to bacterial and fungal infections, while repeated applications can cause damage to the brain, the nervous system and the kidneys.
Mercury compounds in skin whitening cosmetics can enter the human body, mainly via skin absorption as well as inhalation.
The EcoWaste Coalition has published the “Beauty and the Risk” report in February this year documenting the widespread sale of contraband mercury-containing skin whitening cosmetics in 50 cities, including in Davao City and 11 other cities in Mindanao.
To curb the illegal trade in mercury-containing skin lightening cosmetics, the report stressed that Filipinos should “take pride in our natural skin complexion.”
“There is beauty and dignity in our ‘kayumangging kaligatan,’ so refrain from using skin bleaching, lightening or whitening products, particularly contraband cosmetics that have not gone through formal notification or registration with the FDA and not guaranteed safe from mercury, hydroquinone and other harmful substances,” the report said.
The groups also urged the authorities to conduct frequent surprise inspections on a regular basis to rid the market of these contraband goods, as well as pass an ordinance to systematically address issues and concerns on toxic chemicals. (davaotoday.com)