Health

FDA Proposes Formaldehyde Ban in Hair Straightening Products Widely Used by Black Women

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The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) announced its plan to propose a new rule that would ban hair-straightening products (also known as chemical relaxers) because their use has been linked to health risks, including certain hormone-related cancers such as breast cancer and uterine cancer.

The proposed rule would prohibit hair-smoothing products with formaldehyde (FA) and other FA-releasing chemicals (such as methylene glycol) as an ingredient. If the proposed rule is issued, the FDA will invite public comments, and after a review, the agency will decide on further action, according to the FDA guidelines.

How Is Formaldehyde Released in Hair Straightening?

First, the smoothing solution is applied to the hair, followed by a heat processing step, typically with a flat-iron device that seals the solution into pieces of the hair. When the solution is heated, the formaldehyde gas, classified by the International Agency for Research on Cancer as a human carcinogen, is released.

Risk of Uterine Cancer Doubled for Women Who Used Hair Straightening Products

Evidence of the increased risk of certain types of cancer includes the results of a National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) study published in October 2022 in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute. Researchers found that women who used hair-straightening products frequently (more than four times in the previous year) were more than twice as likely to develop uterine cancer as women who didn’t use the products.

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