Sanitary Products

*I got this im my mail and thought it’d be worth the read. *

IMPORTANT
Please pass this on to as many women as possible. If you are a woman and use pads, but especially if you use tampons, read this and pass it on to your friends. For the men receiving this email, please forward it to your friends, significant others, sisters, mothers, daughters, etc.) Thanks!
Check the labels of the sanitary pads or tampons that you are going to buy the next time and see whether you spot any of the familiar signs stated in this email. No wonder so many women in the world suffer from cervical cancer and womb tumours. Have you heard that tampon makers include asbestos in tampons? Why would they do this? Because asbestos makes you bleed more, if you bleed more, you’re going to need to use more. why isn’t this against the law since asbestos is so dangerous? Because the powers that be, in all their wisdom (not), did not consider tampons as being ingested, and, therefore, didn’t consider serious or dangerous.
This month’s Essence magazine has a small article about this and they mention two manufacturers of a cotton tampon alternative. The companies are: Organic Essentials @1-800-765-6491 and Terra Femme @1-800-755-0212.
A woman getting her Ph.D at University of Colorado at Boulder sent the following: “I am writing this because women are not being informed about the dangers of something most of us use: tampons. I am taking a class this month and I have been learning a lot about biology and women, including feminine hygiene. Recently we have learned that tampons are actually dangerous (for other reasons than TSS! ). After learning about this in our class, most of the females wound up feeling angry and upset with the tampon industry, and I for one, am going to do something about it. To start, I want to inform everyone I can, and email is the fastest way that I know how.
HERE IS THE SCOOP:
Tampons contain two things that are potentially harmful: Rayon (for absorbency), and dioxin (a chemical used in bleaching the products). The tampon industry is convinced that we, as women, need bleached, white products in order to view the product as pure and clean. The problem here is that the dioxin, which is produced in this bleaching process, can lead to very harmful problems for a woman. Dioxin is potentially carcinogenic (cancer-associated) and is toxic to the immune and reproductive systems. It has also been linked to endometriosis and lower sperm counts for men. For both sexes, it breaks down the immune system.
Last September, the Environmental Protection Agency EPA (reported that there really is no “acceptable” level of exposure to dioxin given that it is cumulative and slow to disintegrate. The real danger comes from repeated contact (Karen Couppert “Pulling the Plug on the Tampon Industry”). I’d say using about 4-5 tampons a day, five days a month, for 38 years is “repeated contact”, wouldn’t you? Rayon contributes to the danger of tampons and dioxin because it is a highly absorbent substance. Therefore, when fibres from the tampons are left behind in the vagina as usually occurs), it creates a breeding ground for the dioxin. It also stays in a lot longer that it would with just cotton tampons. This is also the reason why TSS (toxic shock syndrome) occurrs.
WHAT ARE THE ALTERNATIVES?
Using feminine hygiene products that aren’t bleached and that are all cotton. Other feminine hygiene products pads/napkins) contain dioxin as well, but they are not nearly as dangerous. So, what can you do if you can’t give up using tampons? Use tampons that are made from 100%. UNBLEACHED COTTON. Unfortunately, there are very few companies that make these safe tampons. (You can get them in Oz - they are called “Cottons”). They are usually only found in health food stores. Countries all over the world (Sweden, Germany, British Columbia, etc.) have demanded a switch to this safer tampon, while the U.S. has decided to keep us in the dark about it. In 1989, activists in England mounted a campaign against chlorine bleaching. Six weeks and 50,000 letters later, the makers of sanitary productsswitched to oxygen (one of the green methods available) (MS magazine, May/June 1995).
WHAT TO DO NOW:
Tell people. Everyone. Inform them. We are being manipulated by this industry and the government, let’s do something about it! Please write to the companies: Tampax Tambrands); Playtex; O.B.; Kotex. All the 800 numbers are listed on the boxes. Let them know that we demand a safe product?
ALL COTTON UNBLEACHED TAMPONS… REMINDER:
In order not to lose the impact of this email, I suggest that anyone who wants to forward it to your friends, PLEASE copy this mail and paste it to a NEW message. That way it will not distort the whole message with all the forward arrows. Please do this with consideration and seriousness.”
Thanks
Olivia Herring Library Officer 1
Mathematics and Physical Sciences Library M210
University of Western Australia
Tel: (08) 9380 2352 Fax: (08) 9380 1139

I work for the company that makes most of the tampons being sold. Therefore, I feel I am obliged to reassure you all.

I can tell you straight away that Tampax, made by the Procter & Gamble Corporation, contains no asbestos whatsoever.

Furthermore, the corporation is perfectly aware that dioxins are harmful - after all, they were used as chemical weapons by the US Army in Vietnam (they are better known as Agent Orange).

Therefore, in the manufacture of Tampax tampons, the corporation uses a process known as Elemental Chlorine-Free bleaching. This technique ensures that no Tampax tampon contains dioxins.

Therefore you can rest assured that Tampax tampons are a reliable, high-quality, hygienic and above all safe product. The above post is little more than an internet hoax.

When I get back to the office I will post a more detailed reply.

False information about tampons and pads is spreading on the Internet, and we take your concerns very seriously. We are deeply committed to the development of products which will improve the lives and health of women. And we have a great interest in ensuring the safe use of our products. I hope you’ll help us by forwarding the following information to your friends and posting it on Internet bulletin boards, etc.

There is NO asbestos in Tampax Tampons, nor has there ever been. Tampax Tampons, Always Pads and Alldays Pantiliners DO NOT contain dioxin because chlorine gas is not used in the bleaching process. We buy pulp, cotton and rayon from outside suppliers who exclusively use chlorine dioxide (not chlorine gas), oxygen and/or hydrogen peroxide in a process called “Elemental Chlorine Free,” or “ECF” bleaching. Chlorine dioxide has different chemical properties and reacts differently with pulp than does chlorine gas. The bleaching processes in the US and Europe are nearly identical. Neither process uses chlorine gas.

Purification (bleaching) is an essential part of the process required to make pulp, cotton and rayon in pads and tampons pure and absorbent. By cleaning the fibers, we remove impurities and produce a better product with fewer raw materials - a clear benefit for the environment. Fiber whitening is a result of this process, but not its goal.

Rayon is made from cellulose which comes from trees and has been used in Tampax Tampons for more than 25 years. Extensive testing by a number of leading scientists at Harvard, Dartmouth, University of Minnesota and the Centers for Disease Control has determined that rayon and cotton are equally safe materials for tampons.

We test all of our cotton fiber supplies to ensure they do not contain any detectable levels of pesticides used in growing cotton. We use surgical grade cotton and/or rayon fibers to make Tampax Tampons.

Tampon and pad use is widely accepted by medical professionals for menstrual protection. To date no reliable evidence has ever proven a causal link between tampons and endometriosis, cancer, or low sperm count. We regularly review our pad and tampon safety information with independent experts - medical consultants and scientists - to be sure Tampax, Always and Alldays remain products women can use with confidence.

While the Internet is an excellent resource for health and medical information, users must be aware that some of what they read may not be factual or based on sound scientific research. Many sites are now devoted to investigating pad and tampon rumors and sharing the truth. To learn more, visit the websites below:

http://tampax.com/en_us/pages/ques_main.shtml?pageid+tp0005