Lots of items are made from toxic substances. Choose glass or metal. I use glass straws at my house and almost exclusively glass for everything else.
As a female hoping to one day give my husband spawn, I need to take extra care of my body.
I don’t say that lightly as it’s already been 9+ years and we’ve yet to have our first.
I’m honestly surprised humans can still reproduce at the rate we are since pretty much everyone is exposed to some body disruption throughout their life.
Theres a photo of the sports bottles they used in the study - you have to find the study this article is siting and then locate the “materials” portion of the study and select the “fig” to view what bottles were used. They are like the squeezy bottles from Space Jam, not like the hard plastic 32oz “no BPA” ones. Though I would be very interested to see a study done on the hard plastic bottles. I use those
From the study:
They don’t specify the brand of the bottles. It says there were “polyethylene” and “biodegradable polyethylene” bottles.
Lots of items are made from toxic substances. Choose glass or metal. I use glass straws at my house and almost exclusively glass for everything else. As a female hoping to one day give my husband spawn, I need to take extra care of my body. I don’t say that lightly as it’s already been 9+ years and we’ve yet to have our first. I’m honestly surprised humans can still reproduce at the rate we are since pretty much everyone is exposed to some body disruption throughout their life.
Bet it's in the bottled water too.
Theres a photo of the sports bottles they used in the study - you have to find the study this article is siting and then locate the “materials” portion of the study and select the “fig” to view what bottles were used. They are like the squeezy bottles from Space Jam, not like the hard plastic 32oz “no BPA” ones. Though I would be very interested to see a study done on the hard plastic bottles. I use those