The word “organic” means something very different in chemistry than it does when you are talking about produce and food. Organic compounds and inorganic compounds form the basis of chemistry. Molecules associated with living organisms are organic. They always contain carbon. Organic compounds include: nucleic acids, fats, sugars, hydrocarbon fuels, proteins, enzymes, hydrogen fuel and many also contain oxygen.
Inorganics include salts, metals, substances made from single elements and other compounds that do not contain carbon bonded to hydrogen. Researching volatile organic compounds took be back to my old high school chemistry class days where I quickly discovered I better learn a trade. Thank goodness the world will always need ditch diggers, but I digress!
In 2018, a certain company (that will remain unnamed) paid a $36 million dollar fine for exceeding the acceptable levels of formaldehyde. Several class action lawsuits were filed against Lumber Liquidator…..oh crud! I meant a certain lumber laminate flooring company that had 150 boxes of laminate flooring tested. In all 150 tests, it was found that the formaldehyde tested over 20 times higher than the permissible level set by California law. The laminate flooring used by the unnamed laminate flooring company came from an unnamed country that has a long history of sending us contaminated sheetrock, canned foods and a recent pandemic.
Unfortunately, you won’t find the term volatile organic compound on very many labels. Despite almost every product you encounter containing some form of those dangerous volatile compounds; you would be hard-pressed to find it on any label.
Common items containing high levels of VOC’s: chlorinated tap water, isopropyl alcohol, paint, and cigarette smoke.
Unlikely places you will find VOC’s; any products that contains the word “fragrance.” All fragrances contain VOC’s.
Cologne, deodorant, deodorizers, hand sanitizers, shaving cream, shampoos, soaps, hand lotions, and many, many more. Again, anywhere you see the word “fragrance” there will be an abundance of VOC’s.
Think about it…What is the origin of a fragrance? If the foundation was a fruit or flower you might need a fly swatter to thwart off fruit flies and gnats. Fragrances are born in laboratories by chemists and/or Kardashians. Remember; anything placed on our skin will be absorbed into our blood stream within 26 seconds. Unnatural chemicals are not native to our body; therefore they could be hazardous disruptors to our health. The bottom line; be aware, informed and an advocate for your own health. The new car smell, the aroma of fresh paint, your favorite cologne, and that hand sanitizer you use 100 times a day……now you know!
Edward Kampf