Deep search
Rewards
Search
Copilot
Images
Videos
Maps
News
Shopping
More
Flights
Travel
Hotels
Real Estate
Notebook
Top stories
Sports
U.S.
Local
World
Science
Technology
Entertainment
Business
More
Politics
Any time
Past hour
Past 24 hours
Past 7 days
Past 30 days
Best match
Most recent
breast cancer, Food Packaging Forum
Toxic food packaging chemicals found in humans
Jane Muncke, managing director of the Food Packaging Forum and last author on both papers, says the data don’t prove that the chemicals detected in human samples came from food packaging, “but I would say the chain of evidence here is pretty strong.”
Hundreds of cancer-causing chemicals are found in food packaging, new study shows
Researchers have identified nearly 200 chemicals used to make food packaging that could possibly increase the risk of breast cancer. Found in plastics and paper, some of the potential mammary carcinogens include polysterene and polyamide, which are used in styrofoam to-go containers from restaurants and black plastic spatulas.
Nearly 200 chemicals linked to breast cancer found in food packaging
Food sold in shrink wrap, on cardboard trays or in paper containers might contain any of nearly 200 chemicals linked to breast cancer, a new study warns.
Scientists just figured out how many chemicals enter our bodies from food packaging
A new study details the chemicals finding their way into human bodies from contact with food. Shrink-wrap sealed around a piece of raw meat. Takeout containers filled with restaurant leftovers. Plastic bottles filled with soft drinks.
Food packaging chemicals are seeping into human bodies — here's what that means for your health
Food containers and cookware are leaching more potentially hazardous chemicals into our bodies than previously thought, new research suggests.
Hazardous chemicals in food packaging can also be found in people
Chemicals used in food packaging and linked with health problems have been detected in the human body. The chemicals can move from packaging into food.
Warning as 189 potentially cancer-causing chemicals found in food packaging
Scientists found a hundreds of chemicals in food packaging, processing equipment and cookware that could cause breast cancer.
Nearly 200 potentially cancer-causing chemicals discovered in food packaging
Despite regulations aimed at keeping harmful substances out of our food supply, researchers in Switzerland have found nearly 200 potential breast carcinogens are present in food packaging, processing equipment,
Study: Many toxic chemicals enter body via food packaging
That plastic wrap you find around the food you eat is far from benign: A new study shows that more than 3,600 chemicals leach into food during the packaging process.
Chemicals from food packaging leach into food -- affecting people’s health
A new study finds more than 3,000 chemicals used in food packaging are getting into people's bodies. Some -- including BPA, phthalates and PFAS -- have clear health concerns; others are unstudied.
More Than 3,000 Chemicals Enter Our Bodies Through Food Packaging — Here's What You Can Do About It
On Tuesday, a research team from Switzerland and several other nations published their findings in the new study, "Evidence for widespread human exposure to food contact chemicals
1d
on MSN
Hundreds of chemicals linked to breast cancer found in food packaging, alarming new study reveals
Getting rid of these known or suspected carcinogens in our food supply is a huge opportunity for cancer prevention,” said ...
8h
on MSN
‘Strong evidence’: Breast cancer linked in food packaging; scientists raise alarm
A study reveals nearly 200 chemicals linked to breast cancer in food packaging and plastic tableware. Researchers urge ...
HealthDay on MSN
1d
Almost 200 Chemicals Linked to Breast Cancer Are Found in Food Packaging
Food sold in shrink wrap, on cardboard trays or in paper containers might contain any of nearly 200 chemicals linked to ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results
Trending now
Helene now hurricane
Workers lose arbitration
Sounds nuclear alarm
Penn suspends law professor
KY sheriff pleads not guilty
Campaign office damaged
Confirms lineup
Texas AG appeal denied
Calls strike against 'LoL’
US to waive visas for Qatar
Briefed on Iranian threats
Online spending may rise
Fat Bear Week coming up
School book bans surge
Dog food recalled
Exec apologizes for outage
Shippers seek workarounds
To cut Atlanta service, jobs
China conducts ICBM test
Senate report details lapses
WA abortion pill stockpile
Study: Myopia on the rise
States with election changes
Chemical leak in OH county
First transparency report
CA new gun control laws
Israel intercepts first missile
New COVID, flu shots
Feedback