A Clear Rap for Plastic Wrap
RUMOR
Student Claire Nelson finds carcinogens and harmful chemicals leach from plastics in microwave.
STATUS
Busted!
ORIGINS
Versions of this e-mail hoax have been circulating for a number of years.
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WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Contrary to this e-mail hoax, consumers can be confident that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration carefully reviews new substances intended for food contact before allowing them on the market. New plastics and plastic additives, such as DEHA, are permitted for food use only after FDA reviews the scientific data and is satisfied that they are safe for their intended use.
As part of its review, FDA assesses the migration potential of these substances. Based on the results of extensive testing and review, FDA permits the use of DEHA in food-contact applications. Also contrary to the e-mail, DEHA is neither regulated nor classified as a human carcinogen by the U.S. Occupational Safety & Health Administration, the National Toxicology Program or the International Agency for Research on Cancer, the leading authorities on carcinogenic substances.
According to FDA, �While it is true that chemicals used to make plastics can leach into food from plastic containers and films, all of the regulated chemicals used to make plastics for food contact, including DEHA, have been reviewed by FDA and have been found safe for their intended use.�
Although a real student named Claire Nelson did receive an award for a school project in the late 1990s, the award was based on her systematic approach to exploring a question, not for identifying a danger to human health as suggested in the e-mail hoax.
MORE RESOURCES AND INFORMATION
- Plastics and the Microwave
FDA Consumer - November/December 2002, a magazine published by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration - Microwaving Plastic
American Cancer Society - Plastics in the Microwave
Plastics Division of the American Chemistry Council (ACC) - Frequently Asked Questions: Using Plastics in the Microwave
Plastics Division of the American Chemistry Council (ACC) - No Link Between Microwave Cooking and Cancer, Expert Says
Jean Weese, Ph.D., Extension Food Scientist, Alabama Cooperative Extension - DEHA in Food Containers & Packaging
Phthalate Information Center - How Things Work: Microwave Ovens
Louis A. Bloomfield, Ph.D., Professor of Physics, University of Virginia
- Plastics, Microwaves, and Dioxins�OH MY!
BreakTheChain.org - Don�t Use Plastic for Heating Foods in a Microwave Oven Because of Exposure to Dioxins � Unproven! & Fiction!
TruthOrFiction.com




Plastic Wrap in Microwave Ovens PLEASE READ THIS! As a seventh grade student, Claire Nelson learned that di(ethylhexyl)adepate (DEHA), considered a carcinogen, is found in plastic wrap. She also learned that the FDA had never studied the effect of microwave cooking on plastic-wrapped food. Claire began to wonder: "Can cancer-causing particles seep into food covered with household plastic wrap while it is being microwaved?" 
