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Cadmium Kids' Jewelry: Toxic Metal Found

JUSTIN PRITCHARD   01/10/10 02:26 PM ET   AP

Cadmium Jewelry
Toxic metal was found in cadmium, which is commonly used for children's jewelry.

Cadmium is a soft, whitish metal that occurs naturally in soil. It's perhaps best known as one half of rechargeable nickel-cadmium batteries, but also is used in pigments, electroplating and plastic.

Lab testing organized by The Associated Press shows that it also is present in children's jewelry – sometimes at eye-popping levels exceeding 90 percent of the item's total weight.

Most people get a microscopic dose of the heavy metal just by breathing and eating. Plants, including tobacco, take up cadmium through their roots and people absorb it during digestion or inhalation. Without direct exposure, however, people usually don't experience its nasty side: cancer, kidneys that leak vital protein, bones that spontaneously snap.

Cadmium is particularly dangerous for children because growing bodies readily absorb substances, and cadmium accumulates in the kidneys for decades.

"Just small amounts of chemicals may radically alter development," said Dr. Robert O. Wright, a professor at Harvard University's medical school and school of public health. "I can't even fathom why anyone would allow for even a small amount to be accessible."

Recent research by Wright found that as cadmium exposure increased, kids were more likely to report learning disabilities.

Dr. Aimin Chen of the University of Cincinnati's medical school also has studied how cadmium affects young brains. While lead is the heavy metal most associated with harming cognitive development, Chen has concluded that cadmium lowers IQ even more than lead – though cadmium isn't harming the average American child because the typical exposure is not as large as lead.

Scientists don't know how much cadmium it takes to kill a child. The only child's death attributed to cadmium that AP found was a nearly 3-year-old boy from Toronto. According to a case study published in 1994, an autopsy showed his brain had swollen; the researchers concluded his exposure came from items around his home such as paint pigments, batteries or cadmium-electroplated utensils.

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Cadmium is a soft, whitish metal that occurs naturally in soil. It's perhaps best known as one half of rechargeable nickel-cadmium batteries, but also is used in pigments, electroplating and plastic. ...
Cadmium is a soft, whitish metal that occurs naturally in soil. It's perhaps best known as one half of rechargeable nickel-cadmium batteries, but also is used in pigments, electroplating and plastic. ...
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06:53 PM on 03/12/2010
We’ve had enough of toxic metals in kids products. Please support the Center for Environmental Health’s work in eliminating toxics from our lives. Take action today to tell your reps to support the Children’s Toxic Metals Act (HR 4428), banning cadmium and other toxic metals from jewelry for children.

Take action and write your reps here:
http://org2.democracyinaction.org/o/6016/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=2221

and Visit us here:

Center for Environmental Health
http://www.generationgreen.org
twitter.com/gengrn

More at : Rudolph Themed Charmed Bracelets Recalled http://www.thaindian.com/newsportal/lifestyle/rudolph-themed-charmed-bracelets-recalled_100333977.html#comment-83632#ixzz0i0dqzaH0
01:36 PM on 01/11/2010
Poison pet food
Poison toothpaste
Poison lead-based paint in toys
Poison jewelery

All from China.

They're trying to kill us, slowly.
09:33 AM on 01/11/2010
This is why I am for strict regulations. Lots of these toxic items were sold at Walmart and that company has plenty of money. There is no need to cut corners except that those at the top are greedy. So we might as well throw in some taxes at the upper end as well to prevent temptation.
07:59 AM on 01/11/2010
Can't blame the workers.

They are only working under orders from the companies hiring them and giving them the specs to work with...
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kurtvb
Knowledge is Power
07:42 AM on 01/11/2010
Since we do not want to get into a trade war with China, make the importing company responsible for the product they bring into the country. You import contaminated pet food, toys, kids jewelry, tooth paste, whatever, it is your fault for trusting the Chinese to sell you something that would meet US specs. The importer should be the one that guaranties safety once the product reaches our shores. Too costly to test, then by American. This is how we can change the trade deficit without affecting the WTO agreements.
07:10 AM on 01/11/2010
I bet these items came from China.
For anything that comes into contact with my food and body, I always check the labels before I purchase.
If it's "Made in China", I place it back on the shelf.
I refuse to buy toxic items from that country/region.
09:46 AM on 01/11/2010
Same here. Even our kids know to check the label and not buy "made in chine" if the ietm is meant to come in contact w/the body.
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susierr
12:36 PM on 01/12/2010
I Try to not buy items made in China, it is hard to find. I threw out a bunch of our plates and bought Corelle. The plates are made in USA, the CUPS that were in the same box are made in CHINA!
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Counterglow
Werner Heisenberg may have been right.
04:44 AM on 01/11/2010
It would have been nice to know specifically what toys, where they're being sold and where they originally came from (I'd bet on China, but certainly can't convict without evidence).

What gives?
07:09 AM on 01/11/2010
China is a good bet, they are notorious for their unregulated manufacturing and food processing.
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Counterglow
Werner Heisenberg may have been right.
11:24 PM on 01/11/2010
And it now looks like China is, indeed guilty of attempting once again to poison our children:

http://news.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=10/01/11/1956259

What company is it that stocks its shelves extensively with Chinese-made goods? WalMart, was it? Hmmm.
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jsgaetano
Semper Fidelis Tyrannosaurus!
04:22 AM on 01/11/2010
More of that good ol' conservative style "industry self-regulation".
03:52 AM on 01/11/2010
If the advertising gurus want to know why Americans have cut back on consumer spending, part of it is because they are tired of buying toxic c.rap (usually from China) that falls apart the first time you use it.

P.S. I'd like a few more specifics about which items have this problem. Maybe a link to the site so we can double check it would be nice.
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Artemis34
Women can vote against the GOP or against their ow
03:19 AM on 01/11/2010
International trade is meant to have products produces where the best environment is for producing that product, in the country that is best suited, and everyone benefits.

I'm not sure what the Chinese are most apt to product, but this is not it. Also not it, drywall, toothpaste, mouth wash, children's toys, pet food, infant formula, milk products...

Carolab had an idea to make a US government instrument that citizens can buy that pays 6%, you could put in your IRA / 401k, etc. This would allow Americans to buy our own national debt.

Once the US owns its own debt, then "Free" trade can be replaced with fair trade.
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imusintheevening
With,without,who'll deny it's whatthe fights about
02:27 AM on 01/11/2010
A great example of what results when the Republican utopia of a free, unregulated market is allowed to flourish.
09:33 AM on 01/11/2010
Bush's fault.
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zombywulf
Pirate Captain Church of Saint Jerry
02:17 AM on 01/11/2010
More poisen from the Peoples republic I see
01:32 AM on 01/11/2010
Discovery of cadmium in children's jewelry provides a great learning experience for children as young as three. Conscientious parents can explain in terms according to the age group the scientific, health, safety and economic implications of cheap baubles and then redirect the child toward more practical, sustainable or generous uses of the $5-10, such as buying heirloom organic seeds and donating extra produce to a soup kitchen, while having fun gardening with a parent.
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thegirlnextdoor
01:13 AM on 01/11/2010
Rudolph the Red Nosed Raindeer is a hazard to our children. Great. What next?
01:42 AM on 01/11/2010
You almost made a tune out of it.

"Rudolph the Red Nosed Raindeer is a hazard to our children"....His cadmium will made you very dumb.... All of the other children, nails glowed in the dark.....
12:57 AM on 01/11/2010
Don't tell me... Wait... It's China right?
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treetracker
01:25 AM on 01/11/2010
I read an article some time ago about scrap metal coming from India being used in other countries (there were several named in the article, but I don't recall them now). Anyway, the scrap metal that was being reused to make other things (buttons for elevators, etc.) contained radioactive material. There was no information where or how the material ended up in the scrap metal, but it is an on-going problem. And you can bet if it's not happening here already, it will be soon. We have way too many things made overseas that are shipped here. Not to mention scrap metal imported here.

And unless the metal it tested, no one will ever know. Google "scrap metal radioactive" for more info on this problem. Scary!

And when you consider how little the CPA has done under the last administration and who knows how up to speed they are since Obama came in...but I'll bet there are not enough people to check all this stuff.
01:44 AM on 01/11/2010
Wouldn't that be ironic. We send them our electronic garbage, ruining their ground water and lives. They in turn make junk trinkets out of our garbage that little children here can succk on destroying their health. Sounds like a vicious cycle has emerged indeed.