FemmeToxic...Demanding safer cosmetics!
FemmeToxic's goal is to educate young Canadian women about the potential dangers of cosmetics ingredients and provide people with the tools they need to create personal change and to influence national legislative reform. Refuse to be “toxified”! Demand safer cosmetics!

Café-rencontre May 15!

Mammography as a screening tool: The pros and cons and all the confusion

In the spring of 2002, the late Lanie Melamed, BCAM board member, wrote an article for the BCAM Bulletin about the confusion surrounding mammography. In her article titled "Mammography: Questions, Realities, Risks", Lanie wrote...

"The new evidence is unsettling and confusing. Some researchers believe that screening saves lives; for others the question is unresolved. Once again women are left with personal choices. After weighing the evidence each must decide what she wants, what risks she can live with, whom to believe, what and how much to read. Unhappily, there are no easy answers and no consensus about what or who is correct."

Eleven years later we are still asking the same questions. It was long believed that cancers caught "early" by mammography were less likely to be fatal. It is now known that some cancers are more aggressive than others, and that the time of diagnosis or the size of the tumour may have little to do with long-term prospects. Please join us on May 15 to discuss the pertinent issues that surround mammography and make sense of the confusing messages about this loaded subject.

Date: May 15
Time:7 p.m.
Location:
24 Mont-Royal West
Suite 603
Montreal, Quebec H2T 2S2


A Toxic Lexicon

A Toxic Lexicon

Do you know the difference between a toxin and a toxicant?
It turns out that many of us use these terms interchangeably. But there is a difference between a toxin and a toxicant—a big difference! Although popular usage may have us thinking that a toxin and a toxicant are the same, it’s essential for Femme Toxic readers know their meanings.

Why? In our work, we talk about the effects of toxic substances and how they affect your body and your health. We want you to be well-informed!
Who better to helps us explain this difference than two former BCAM and Femme Toxic public health interns, Amy Elefson and Natalie Martin.


No Poo

Kicking the Shampoo habit

Stop using harmful chemicals on your hair…but how?

“No Poo.” It’s a growing trend, and the name, well, says it all. However unappealing the moniker may be to some, it’s still a powerful reminder of the toxic junk that we use to make our hair shiny, full-bodied, and smooth. Can we shake the bad shampoo habit? Is it really possible to clean your hair naturally?

We asked Dipti Karmakar, a biomedical researcher, to share her scientific expertise on the potentially harmful chemicals in many store brand shampoos. Read below to learn how better living through chemistry can be simple and lead to healthier hair.


Dying for us; Considering the women that make our stuff

Written by Adria Vasil originally posted in Toronto NOW.  
Our only recourse in the face of the toxins assailing us in everyday life?   I mostly consider myself an optimist: the kind of girl that laughs a lot, even in the face of adversity. Then I spend some time digging though the toxic trail the chemical industry has hoisted upon the world and it makes me want to swathe all our women and children in nontoxic bubble wrap.

What's brought on my latest bubble-wrap urges? Well, just this week, a US congress-mandated committee on breast cancer and the environment issued a report telling us we need to get our shit together on environmental pollutants and breast cancer. It noted only 7% of all 84,000 registered chemicals have had complete toxicological screenings. And of the very few that have been screened, 216, stuff like BPA and pesticides, are linked to breast cancer tumours but only a fraction of the billions spent on breast cancer research goes to environmental health links or prevention.

Many of those chems of concern are hormone disruptors – the topic of a conference I went to in Toronto last week put on by the National Network on Environments and Women's Health. I talked about it in my latest Ecoholic column on this diverse family of chemicals and what the feds are (or aren't) doing about them. I heard from scientists like James Brophy and Margaret Keith, who spend their time testing workers in Southern Ontario for elevated rates of breast cancer and boy, have they found some.

Dr. #Tungsten in the liver with Molybdenum

Happy New Year!

Here's hoping that you all understood my Clue reference. (Best board game EVER!)

So last time, I was able to infuse some much needed pop culture references into the blog post thanks to Schmidt and New Girl.

However, coming up with something funny this week  was a bit more challenging. How does one make jokes about the liver and enzymes?? 

I remember when I wrote my first post for this blog, I googled "funny chemistry jokes" and I was able to find some funny chemsitry cat jokes. But no luck this week, so hopefully this opening will prove somewhat amusing........

AAAAAAAAAND back to #Tungsten.

 


#Tungsten, Schmidt, and Oxidative Stress

Hello again! The terrible beast called school and final period had me in its terrifying grip for the past 3 weeks. But fear not! I survived…(until I see my grades that is…)

Anyway, to more light hearted things! My group and I finished our #tungsten project!!!! ( yes I am hashtagging, quickest way to inject cool to any subject).

We had the oral presentation, which went really well and we handed in the final paper about 2 weeks ago. Somewhat of bitter sweet moment, because I am going to miss my #tungsten buddies very much and I will of course miss #tungsten…

Thankfully, I was watching New Girl last Friday, and witnessed  Cece giving  Schmidt a #tungsten carbide bracelet because, as my dear Schmidt put it, #tungsten  is a “badass metal”. You can only imagine how excited I was; #tungsten in pop culture! It made me feel exceptionally relevant and hip.


BCAM Conversations: Amy Elefson and Natalie Martin, Intern

After the recent launch of Breast Caner Action Montreal's interactive Chemical Detective project, BCAM caught up with the two Public Health graduate students, Amy Elefson and Natalie Martin, who helped us make it happen. Chemical Detective provides a step-by-step guide to understanding the environmental toxicants that surround us. This presentation is essential for anyone who wants to know more about reducing toxic exposures in their household, but it's particularly useful for new parents, providing essential tips for recognizing toxic chemicals in our domestic environment: our household cleaners, personal care products, and other items that we use everyday. 

Read below for board member Deborah Ostrovsky's conversation with Amy and Natalie as they share their musings on public health, activism and the state of science today.

BCAM: You're both pursuing Public Health. What inspired you to do internships with BCAM?


The adverse health impacts of tungsten.

 

In last week’s post I left you with a question…

What would you do if you were exposed to a potentially toxic environmental agent?

In this post I am going to elaborate a bit more on tungsten’s health impact in the mammalian organism, in rats specifically.

From these rat studies we will then  try to draw some conclusions about  tungsten's bio-reactivity   in the human body.


after a long hiatus...

this feels soooo awkward, its like talking to a long lost friend again. I have to apologize for my absence..

I remember when I came to Rosanne with the idea i had for this blog. I wanted to find a fun and user-friendly manner of  vocalizing science in way that was accessible. This in my head was essential, because how are women expected to make informed decisions about the issues that concern them the most, if the literature isn't presented in a manner that is accessible to them?


Fertility Research

Fertility is an under-researched area in cancer care, and there are limited data on how the oncology system deals with the fertility concerns of young adults with cancer. The Faculty of Social Work at the University of Toronto is seeking Canadian female cancer survivors for a web-based doctoral survey study. Visit http://www.cancerandfertility.com/ for more information or access the online survey directly at http://fluidsurveys.com/s/fertility.