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The ABCs of Baby Bottles

Are Plastic Baby Bottles Safe?
by Lambeth Hochwald

ou thought it was tough enough to get breastfeeding figured out. Now your baby has graduated to bottle-feeding in the middle of the biggest crisis to hit the baby bottle market in years. Turns out your average plastic bottle may not be the smartest delivery system for your baby’s milk or formula since clear plastic baby bottles are made of polycarbonate, which contains a chemical called Bisphenol A (BPA), the substance that makes the plastic hard and clear in the first place.

We asked two pediatricians to weigh in on the pros and cons of the plastic bottles available today. Relax, your next shopping trip just got a little easier.

Q: As a new parent or parent-to-be, what’s your best advice on how to select a baby bottle?

 

A: When you have so many reasonable alternatives today, it seems prudent to buy BPA-free/polycarbonate-free baby bottles, suggests Ari Brown, MD, a pediatrician in Austin, Texas, and author of Baby 411: Clear Answers and Smart Advice for Your Baby's First Year. “Based on the fact that there is some health concern in infants, limiting or avoiding BPA where you can is a good idea,” she says.

Q: So what are my options?

A: You’ll want to check the label and make sure the bottle is BPA-free. Or choose either glass or frosted plastic. These are all ways to avoid bottles that contain BPA, Dr. Brown says. “Most of the popular bottle brands offer BPA-free alternatives.”

Q: At the end of the day, how concerned should parents be about all the new studies of plastic baby bottles?

 

A: There is some cause for concern since, in animal studies, even low-level BPA may be linked to anything from early puberty to breast cancer. “The National Toxicology Program and National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences convened an independent review panel of polycarbonate bottles that noted ‘some’ concern for adverse health effects on fetuses and infants, including the potential cause of neurological and behavioral problems in infants and children,” Dr. Brown says. “And, while ‘some’ is certainly open for interpretation, it is more than ‘negligible’ or ‘none’ which were cited for other age groups and health concerns related to BPA exposure.”

  Next Page: Already Using Plastic Bottles? Some Tips...     Pages: 1, 2   Next »
 

 

 

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