During the Democratic
convention the Reverend Al Sharpton quoted a shocking statistic:
One third of the children in Harlem suffer from asthma. This shouldn’t
be completely surprising since asthma cases have been consistently
increasing over the years, especially in the cities, escalating
recently during the rollback of some key environmental laws, but
it is a trend we must turn back.
While parents have only limited control over
the environment where they raise their children, there is a personal
environmental decision they can make that may dramatically reduce
the symptoms their children experience. It all comes down to detergent,
and not just any detergent. It is the detergent that they use
to wash their children’s clothes and sheets. The biggest
selling detergents in the United States contain large amounts
of irritating phosphates, which are not only a major irritant
to the skin and respiratory system, but a source of serious pollution,
and a component in global warming.
If you are wondering if your laundry detergent
contains phosphates just read the label, it is listed there. In
most industrialized countries phosphate detergents are outlawed
for good reason, but in the United States the chemical industry
has a strong lobby and cheap phosphates help manufacturers keep
their costs low, so their use continues. The next time you walk
though the laundry detergent section of your supermarket, take
a deep breath and notice how much the smell irritates your nose
and lungs.
What kinds of detergent contain low, or no phosphates?
Baby detergent! No mother would dream of washing their newborn’s
clothes and sheets in the family’s powdered detergent! That
would give their baby’s delicate skin rashes, not to mention
an increase in crying and crankiness. There are many readily available
natural detergents that are phosphate-free and it’s worth
the time to find them.
We have noticed tremendous improvements for both
children and adults when their clothes and sheets are consistently
washed in a phosphate-free detergent. By itself this change may
not alleviate all of the symptoms of asthma and those related
skin rashes, but it clearly removes an insidious irritant from
the equation.
It might be helpful to explain why this simple
change is so effective. Testing in Europe shows that, while sleeping,
people are between two thousand and ten thousand times more sensitive
to chemical and electromagnetic pollution than while they are
awake. When a child’s pajamas are washed with a chemical
irritant and they sleep on bedclothes containing those same toxins,
their immune system is challenged nightly, during a time when
they are most vulnerable. Their body’s nutritional reserves
are consumed in that battle and they are less able to defend themselves
from the pollutants they encounter during their day. Asthma and
allergies are not produced by a single irritant, but by an accumulation
of minor irritants that eventually overwhelm the body’s
ability to adapt. It is not a huge leap to imagine that removing
a respiratory irritant from the sleeping environment, where a
person spends one third of their time, is going to produce an
improvement in a child’s ability to breathe.
Drs. Ralph & Lahni DeAmicis
are Naturopathic Physicians. Their educational program, The 10
Minute Herbalist, seeks to put the knowledge of everyday good
health into everyone’s hands. Information about their program
and publications is available at www.SpaceAndTime.com.
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