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Have you ever stopped to think about how many of your daily
activities involve exposure to consumer products? From morning until night,
you are in contact with a variety of personal care products and household or
workplace chemicals. Brushing your teeth, washing and styling your hair,
using sunscreen or lip gloss, washing your hands, doing the laundry, cleaning up the house, and routine yard work all include
the use of chemicals. You probably don’t think about the potential hazards
of using these consumer products, but there is an element of risk involved
in all of them.
Most of us never give the safety of these and other products around us in our daily lives at home, work, or school a second thought—that is, until an accident happens. Then it is vital to know that the shampoo we splashed into our eye, or the household cleaner that the curious toddler just drank, or the highway accident involving a chemical spill that we passed on our way to school won’t cause any serious harm to people, animals or the environment. Many of us take the safety of consumer products we trust and
use each day for granted. That fact alone illustrates The questions continue. Which products need special warning
labels to help prevent injury or instructions on how to treat accidental
exposures? Which materials in workplaces will require special handling to
prevent injury to workers? Which materials are safe to introduce into our
environment – our air, soil, and water? Scientists answer these and many
other important questions through product safety research and testing.On first thought, safety testing of products that we use on a daily basis may not seem as critical to our health as medical research against cancer, AIDS, or heart disease. However, both product safety testing and basic medical research are part of the same scientific effort – to protect and improve human and animal health. While medical research often leads to new products and therapies to treat people or animals already sick, product safety research is aimed at preventing harmful effects or health problems from occurring. Researchers use a variety of methods, including non-animal systems (cell and tissue cultures, mathematical models, and computer models,) laboratory animals, and clinical testing with human volunteers, to ensure product safety. Like pieces of a puzzle, each type of testing is interrelated and may provide important information to help scientists piece together a more complete picture of the safety of a new ingredient or product. Today, new technology has greatly reduced the need to use animals in safety research. Scientists continue to develop new non-animal methods in hopes of replacing animal tests wherever possible. In most cases, animal tests are still the only reliable way to provide necessary information. Work continues, however, to develop improved methods that reduce the number of animals needed and minimize or eliminate and discomfort for test animals.
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Let’s learn more about Product Safety Testing… |
| Why do household products have to be tested? |
| Who requires safety testing? |
| What are the steps to testing the safety of a product? |
| What types of tests are conducted? |
| What does "Cruelty-Free" really mean? |
| Product safety testing glossary |
| Additional resources |