So this may be a super silly question I'm 14wks new mom and I am just wondering if anyone out there switched shampoo during pregnancy or make up products because of the "bad" chemicals in it I read an article on here of course that had a list of "safe" products during pregnancy and of course I bought into some like the nine naturals shampoo..let's just say I can't do 9 months of buying that 24$ 8oz bottle but I also don't want to over worry about it since they say all these chemicals affect baby...opinions and please be nice!
Re: Beauty products
Surprise! BFP 3/7/2013, Missed MC, D&C @ 7w5d
BFP 12/10/2013, Natural MC @ 5w1d
BFP 2/15/2014...Katia Elizabeth is due 10/23/2014!
Surprise! BFP 3/7/2013, Missed MC, D&C @ 7w5d
BFP 12/10/2013, Natural MC @ 5w1d
BFP 2/15/2014...Katia Elizabeth is due 10/23/2014!
Lurking: I'd stay away from retinoid. I work for a skin care company, and they don't even let the pregnant women touch it (for our experiments, even with protective equipment on). It is dangerous to babies (DNA altering), and there's usually a toxicity warning on the packaging. My supervisor told me that they don't even recommend you handle it at work if you have a baby at home. Personally, I've done studies with it, and it's not even worth the efficacy.
I LOVE LOVE LOVE Arbonne! I started using the ABC line a year ago on my 2 year old who was breaking out in a rash to everything we tried. My husband and I now only use Arbonne products in our house and I have recently started working for the company as a consultant. If anyone wants more information on the products please let me know.
maureenmelone@gmail.com
This is incorrect. All of the major cosmetic companies have a toxicology and regulatory department that tests the chemicals. At the end of the day, the tox depts choose about 1/10000 of what is acceptable to put in the cosmetic. This translates to little effects when you consider it is a topical application. I'd be more concerned about fruits with pesticides and meats with antibiotics since you're actually ingesting those. EWG goes off of the ingredients list on the products and whether those ingredients can be harmful. They do not take the concentration of any specific ingredient into consideration. With that said, I wouldn't read EWG blindly...it's just giving you a list of the ingredients.
So while not FDA regulated, cosmetic companies do try to cover themselves by having clinical and toxicology tests done, so as to always have a good brand image and to prevent lawsuits. It would be pretty dumb to just throw a bunch of ingredients together and start selling it without knowing the combinatorial effects of such a product. While smaller companies do this, big companies don't.