How Sunscreens and Conventional Housing are Similar

How Sunscreens and Conventional Homes are Similar

I first started thinking about healthy homes in earnest in 2007.  That was the year that by happenstance I came across the Environmental Working Group’s (EWGs) annual guide to Sunscreens during its first year of publication—generally published each May just prior to the Memorial Day holiday.  I was shocked to learn how non-transparent the whole sunscreen industry was and how potentially harmful most sunscreens actually were.  

I recall thinking then that if sunscreens of all products—items marketed as substances that help make us safe and keep us safe—were full of toxins and substances that can indeed damage public health, how about all the other personal care products we use at home?  Moreover I realized that even if I were to ever develop healthy homes someday, there could be no guarantee of an occupant’s health if occupants did not make healthy choices for food, for water, for landscape and gardening, and for personal and body care.  (Fluoride anyone?….a topic for a future blog post).

Finally I remember thinking, if sunscreens weren’t particularly healthy, I knew I’d have to be very careful about the choices I would be making about the safety and healthfulness of the hundreds of building materials that would go into one of my homes.  And that realization actually led to my development of the Quality Standards my homes are built to.

Anyway, fourteen years after the publication of EWG’s first Sunscreen Guide, there is still a lack of transparency in this business, and based on the questions I get during my natural store supplement gig, there remains plenty of consumer confusion about what to buy and what to avoid in the sunscreen category.  With so much to know about this topic, this post concentrates on helping to educate you on sunscreens and skin care based primarily on what I have gleaned over the years from my multiple readings of the EWG website.  My next post on the other hand, describes how this discussion on sunscreens actually reminds me of some of the same issues surrounding today’s conventionally-built homes.

The Environmental Working Group

First things first, to discuss sunscreens I need to make everyone aware of the EWG.  The Environmental Working Group was founded in 1993, and as their website states:

At EWG, we’ve spent decades working to get toxic chemicals out of the food we eat, the water we drink, the clothing we wear and the goods we purchase.  From arsenic to asbestos, pesticides to phthalates – the list of chemicals that have been found in our homes, in our bodies and in the environment is endless.   

Enough is enough.  

We deserve to know what toxic chemicals are present in our food, water and everyday products. We’re here to make sure you get the information you need to help protect yourself and your loved ones from these chemicals.

EWG is a phenomenal group with areas of focus on topics such as Toxic Chemicals, Household & Personal Care Products, and Farming & Agriculture.  Their annual guide to sunscreens—as well as their guides on organic produce (their so-called  “Dirty Dozen” report) are must-have reference sources for your personal library.

EWG Annual Sunscreens Guide

With that said, their annual guide to safer sunscreens helps clarify a very muddled issue.  Again from their website:

Asbestos. Formaldehyde. Lead. Not exactly the words you think of when you’re purchasing your favorite personal care products.  Sadly, toxic chemicals in our cosmetics, sunscreens and skin care products have gone unregulated as far back as the Great Depression. While other countries have taken action to protect their citizens from chemicals linked to cancer and reproductive harm, the Food and Drug Administration doesn’t even require the basic safety testing of ingredients in personal care products before they’re used.  Do you know what you’re putting on your skin? We can help you find out.

The confusion with sunscreens begins with the very thing that makes shopping for them so seemingly easy and straight-forward—their Sun Protection Factor or SPF.  This year, as in years past, because of inadequate regulations governing the safety and efficacy of sunscreens and the lack of safety testing needed to approve new and more effective ingredients for use in sunscreen formulations, store shelves will include sunscreen products that either offer inadequate production or use potentially hazardous ingredients, or both.  This lack of progress toward safer sunscreens flies in the face of mounting scientific evidence linking sunscreen ingredients to negative health impacts and increased understanding about the significant harms associated with exposure to ultraviolet A, or UVA, radiation.

You got to know that according to EWG, SPF values can be an unreliable measure of the effectiveness of sunscreens.  A good sunscreen will provide equal broad-spectrum protection against both UVA and UVB rays. However, the SPF value reflects only how well a product will protect from UVB rays—the main cause of sunburn and non-melanoma skin cancers. SPF values do not reflect a product’s ability to protect from other harmful UV rays, such as UVA, which penetrate the skin more deeply and are associated with skin aging and cancer.

Furthermore, EWG says SPF values are unreliable because the test method companies are required to use to determine a product’s SPF value is imprecise. The test methods require someone to determine a change in the skin redness of a small handful of human participants exposed to UV light in a lab. These results may differ based on the evaluator, testing instrumentation or participant skin type. And SPF testing conditions used for labeling significantly overestimate the protection provided in actual use outdoors.  

Finally, there are some ingredients in sunscreen formulations that EWG states very clearly consumers should avoid.   EWG notes in its Guide that, just about three quarters of the more than 1,800 products we evaluated for this year’s guide did not provide adequate sun protection or included ingredients linked to harm.”

In 2019, when the federal Food and Drug Administration – the agency that governs sunscreen safety – proposed its most recent updates to sunscreen regulations, (which were last updated in 2011), it found that only two ingredients, zinc oxide and titanium dioxide, could be classified as safe and effective, based on the currently available information. But in the past year, numerous new studies have raised new concerns about endocrine-disrupting effects from three other ingredients: homosalate, avobenzone and oxybenzone.

Higher Is Not Better

The FDA has long contended that SPF higher than 50 is “inherently misleading”. Australian authorities cap SPF values at 30, European and Japanese regulators at 50 and Canada at 50+.

Products with SPF values greater than 50+ also tend to give users a false sense of security. High SPF sunscreens not only overpromise protection but, according to the Food and Drug Administration, may also overexpose consumers to UVA rays and raise their risk of cancer. Many studies have found that people are more likely to use high-SPF products improperly and, as a result, may expose themselves to more harmful ultraviolet radiation than do people who rely on products with lower SPF values.

Bottom Line

My bottom line for all this is to go to EWGs website and get as well versed as you can on this topic.  When you come across a sunscreen you like or you think meets your needs particularly well, look it up in EWGs database and see how it compares.  

The Four Types of “Bad” EMFs

The Four Types of “Bad” EMFs

Back on May 20 I ended a post entitled “Man-made Electromagnetic Fields” with a promise that I would write a follow-up post on the 4 types of man-made electromagnetic fields (EMFs) most frequently associated with detrimental health effects in humans.  Here is that post.

There are 4 types of EMFs most associated with detrimental health effects.  They can all be measured by a Building Biologist using special meters, who will also use the Building Biology Evaluation Guidelines For Sleeping Areas for each to tell you if their measurements are not anomalous, slightly anomalous, severely anomalous, or extremely anomalous.   

These Guidelines are based on the experience and knowledge of the building biology community and focus on what is typically achievable rather than what is most optimal.  Moreover, the Guidelines are written for sleeping areas because that is the time of day the body regenerates, repairs and detoxifies, and is the most crucial time to reduce EMF exposures.

According to the Guidelines, fields found with ‘No Anomaly’ provide the highest degree of precaution and reflect either an unexposed natural condition or the common and nearly inevitable background levels of our modern living environment. 

Fields found with a ‘Slight Anomaly’ suggest that remediation should be carried out whenever possible as a precaution, especially with regards to those who are extra sensitive or already ill.

Fields found with a ‘Severe Anomaly’ are not acceptable to Building Biologists and call for remediation action.  Scientific studies and numerous case studies indicate biological effects and health problems within this reference range.

And finally, any field measured as an ‘Extreme Anomaly’ calls for immediate and rigorous action to reduce exposure.  Within this category, field measurements are so severe that international guidelines and recommendations for public and occupational exposures may be reached or even exceeded.

So with that said, the first type of EMF consistently found to cause biological effects in humans is Electric Fields (EFs).   Common sources of EFs are household wiring, power strips, ungrounded electronics, chargers or transformers, and lamps & lighting.  All of the AC electric wires in the walls of our homes are consistently emitting electric fields that expose occupants to electric fields proportional to the line voltage of the electric wire.  

In Chicago we are lucky—for fire safety, code specifies that all electric wiring must be in metal conduit, shielding occupants from these fields.   But it’s easy to forget that almost all extension cords or appliance cords are unshielded and therefore a source of EFs regardless of whether the switch, or light, or appliance at the end of the cord is turned on or off.  Sorry, the cords to those table lamps on each side of your bed are constantly emitting EMFs up to six to eight feet away unless they are wired with a shielded cord.  Morale of the story: one way to live a healthier life is to keep all wires away from your bed or have them shielded.

The second kind of EMF to be concerned about is Magnetic Fields (MFs).  Common sources of MFs around the home are High Voltage Power Lines, your Circuit Breaker Panel, Faulty Home Wiring, Transformers or Chargers for Cell Phones/ Laptops/ Home Electronics, and point sources like electric motors used to run your AC or Furnace or Electric Meters.    

Back in high school and college Physics classes, I learned that every AC electric current produces by definition alternating magnetic fields.  These fields emanate perpendicular to current flow and drop off quickly with distance, though still potentially harmful to health if within 6-8 feet.  Magnetic fields permeate most materials unhindered—including the human body—which is why they are difficult to contain and why they are implicated in numerous human biological effects ranging from hormonal imbalances to various cancers.  Only special metal alloys that are very magnetically conductive will shield. 

The third type of EMF linked to adverse health effects is Radio Frequency Fields (RF).  Examples of RF Radiation around the home are Cordless Phones, Baby Monitors, Smart Meters, Mobile Phones (3G/4G/5G), Microwave Oven, Bluetooth Devices, and WiFi.  It is this category of EMFs that has exploded in the past ten years and has been linked to adverse health effects in hundreds, if not thousands of research studies.

One final EMF to be concerned about—and I think the most underappreciated and pernicious—is something colloquially called ‘Dirty Electricity’ (DE).  Common household sources of DE are CFL and LED light bulbs, Inverters for Solar Panels, Variable Speed motors typically used to power HVAC equipment, any Smart appliance, Smart Meters, Gaming Devices, Dimmer Switches, and any battery-powered Direct Current device that has a switch mode power supply.

Dirty Electricity is important enough and complex enough to merit multiple posts so we won’t dwell on it here but will cover much more thoroughly soon.  The authority on this topic is Dr. Samuel Milham, whose book Dirty Electricity, Electrification and the Diseases of Civilization is fascinating, eye-opening, and a must-read.  Here is a link to a fairly recent interview of Dr. Milham by Dr. Joseph Mercola.

Amazon Just Began Sharing Your Internet

That’s right. Starting yesterday, Amazon began using Ring, Alexa and Echo products to take part of your bandwidth and make it available to your neighbors. And they started to do so without your consent and probably without your knowledge. This feature is called “Amazon Sidewalk”, and among other things, Amazon Sidewalk will:

Take a chunk of your bandwidth and give it to others.

Increase toxic electrosmog both indoors and outdoors.

Make our sidewalks more radio frequency polluted so for those already electrically sensitive, even a walk in their own neighborhoods could make them sick;

Increase harm to our pollinators and plants; and

Use your home’s energy to power others’ internet access.

With this new technology comes privacy concerns that could be particularly vexing. Consider the wealth of intimate details Amazon devices are [already] privy to. They see who knocks on our doors, and in some homes they peer into our living rooms. They hear the conversations we’re having with friends and family. They control locks and other security systems in our home.

Extending the reach of all this encrypted data to the sidewalk and living rooms of neighbors requires a level of confidence that’s not warranted for a technology that has never seen widespread testing. Last, let’s not forget who’s providing this new way for everyone to share and share alike. As independent privacy researcher Ashkan Soltani puts it: In addition to capturing everyone’s shopping habits (from amazon.com) and their internet activity (as AWS is one of the most dominant web hosting services)… now they are also effectively becoming a global ISP with a flick of a switch, all without even having to lay a single foot of fiber.

Turning Amazon Sidewalk OFF

Amazon’s decision to make Sidewalk an opt-out service rather than an opt-in one is also telling. The company knows the only chance of the service gaining critical mass is to turn it on by default, so that’s what it’s doing.  Luckily, there is an easy way to opt out, by following these instructions:

1.  Open the Alexa app

2.  Open “More” and select “Settings”

3.  Select “Account Settings”

4.  Select “Amazon Sidewalk” and

5.   Turn Amazon Sidewalk “Off”

Protect Your Health & Privacy, Save Energy

I believe this is a harbinger of things to come, with more and more Big Tech companies trying to secretly shove wireless apps down our throats while trying to impinge on our personal data and privacy.  And of course in so doing, ever increasing our exposure to wireless gadgets that add to the electronic smog within our homes creating a less healthy home.

In short, I urge you to consider turning off this feature today if you want to better protect your Health, better protect your Privacy, and save Energy.

Overload: America’s Toxic Love Story

With all due apologies to the Environmental Health Trust (EHT), I am going to cut and paste the guts of an email I was tardy in opening and I just finished reading because it is time-sensitive and important, me thinks, for everyone to see. That email references EHT’s request to register and join them for a free showing of a movie entitled Overload: America’s Toxic Love Story. When you register, EHT will send you a streaming link on June 23 that you can use at your convenience any time between tomorrow and June 30, 2021 to watch this movie for free. You can register here

What exactly is “Overload”? Quoting from the EHT email I mention above:

Before starting a family, Soozie Eastman, daughter of an industrial chemical distributor, embarks on a journey to find out the levels of toxins in her body and discover if there is anything she or anyone else can do to change them. Soozie has just learned that hundreds of synthetic toxins are now found in every baby born in America and the government and chemical corporations are doing little to protect citizens and consumers.


With guidance from world-renowned physicians and environmental leaders, interviews with scientists and politicians, and stories of everyday Americans, Soozie uncovers how we got to be so overloaded with chemicals and explores whether there is anything we can do to take control of our exposure.


Just as she feared, extensive blood testing reveals alarming levels of chemicals such as organophosphates and PBDEs in her body, so she undertakes a rigorous detox regimen of dietary changes, exercise, and informed product choices designed to manage and minimize her toxic body burden. But can she hit the reset button or is it too late? Register to watch this film at your convenience between June 23-30, 2021, and be amazed by what you learn! Then join us on June 30, 2021, at 7:00 p.m. MT for a discussion with the film’s director Soozie Eastman

Amazon Began Sharing Your Internet Yesterday

A repost of my last post which got screwed up some how….below is this post in its original form and words:

That’s right. Starting yesterday, Amazon began using Ring, Alexa and Echo products to take part of your bandwidth and make it available to your neighbors. And they started to do so without your consent and probably without your knowledge. This feature is called “Amazon Sidewalk”, and among other things, Amazon Sidewalk will:

  • Take a chunk of your bandwidth and give it to others;
  • Use your home’s energy to power other’s internet access;;
  • Like almost anything wireless—and like what we have introduced in previous posts and will cover in much greater detail in future posts—will emit wireless radiation that can bring potential health risks to you, your loved ones, your pets and your neighbors;
  • Increase the electromagnetic fields (EMFs)—or better said, increase ourelectromagnetic pollution or electromagnetic smog — both inside and even up to a half mile outside of your home
  • For those who are already electrically-sensitive, force some of those people to become shut-ins with no safe public place to go–even a walk in their own neighborhood could make them sick; 
  • Expose our children to even more EMFs as they walk down their own sidewalk or play outdoors; and
  • Give off radio-frequency radiation which some believe harms our pollinators and plants.

Here’s a summary of what Amazon Sidewalk does and some of the potential complications beyond any health-related concerns many indeed have about this latest wireless technology. Privacy concerns could be particularly vexing.  Quoting from the article:

Consider the wealth of intimate details Amazon devices are [already] privy to. They see who knocks on our doors, and in some homes they peer into our living rooms. They hear the conversations we’re having with friends and family. They control locks and other security systems in our home.

Extending the reach of all this encrypted data to the sidewalk and living rooms of neighbors requires a level of confidence that’s not warranted for a technology that has never seen widespread testing.

Last, let’s not forget who’s providing this new way for everyone to share and share alike. As independent privacy researcher Ashkan Soltani puts it:  “In addition to capturing everyone’s shopping habits (from amazon.com) and their internet activity (as AWS is one of the most dominant web hosting services)… now they are also effectively becoming a global ISP with a flick of a switch, all without even having to lay a single foot of fiber.”

Turning Amazon Sidewalk OFF

Amazon’s decision to make Sidewalk an opt-out service rather than an opt-in one is also telling. The company knows the only chance of the service gaining critical mass is to turn it on by default, so that’s what it’s doing.  Luckily, there is an easy way to opt out, by following these instructions:

1.  Open the Alexa app

2.  Open “More” and select “Settings”

3.  Select “Account Settings”

4.  Select “Amazon Sidewalk” and

5.   Turn Amazon Sidewalk “Off”

Protect Your Health & Privacy, Save Energy

I believe this is a harbinger of things to come, with more and more Big Tech companies trying to secretly shove wireless apps down our throats while trying to impinge on our personal data and privacy.  And of course in so doing, ever increasing our exposure to wireless gadgets that add to the electronic smog within our homes creating a less healthy home.

In short, I urge you to consider turning off this feature today if you want to better protect your Health, better protect your Privacy, and save Energy.