
http://www.care2.com/greenliving/fight-perfume-pollution.html
Fight Perfume Pollution

1. Call companies to request complete ingredient disclosure and warning labels.
2. Email fdadockets@oc.fda.gov to voice your support for national fragrance regulations. Visit Environmental Health Network for more information.
3. Send letters to your congressional representatives asking them to demand analysis of fragrance chemicals, accurate labeling of all products, and expansion of right-to-know regulations, so companies will disclose all ingredients.
4. Voice your displeasure to establishments that use air fresheners.
5. If you have an adverse reaction to a fragrance, report your experience to the Consumer Products Safety Commission (800-638-2772), the FDA (202-401-9725), and the manufacturer.
6. To obtain research reports or to test the toxicity of your own product, air, or other sample, contact a reputable lab, like Anderson Laboratories (802-295-7344).
7. Take individual responsibility for what you let seep down your own drains. Wastewater plants are not equipped to handle fragrance chemicals, which contaminate waterways and wildlife.
8. By purchasing only nontoxic products, consumers send the message that companies will make more money and gain loyal customers if they start using safer ingredients.
For more information on synthetic fragrance, read Good Scents: Natural Perfumes and Easy Greening: Air Fresheners.

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17 comments
add your comment »Harsh chemicals are poison and for me they were a cause of migraines; I finally found a company that uses tea tree oil, citric acid and thyme oil in their household cleaning products.
I also received $120 in free products when I became their customer. If you don't always have the time to make your own cleaning products or cosmetics for that matter then email me for more info at nicolemillercosmetics@gmail.com
Cheers ;)
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why is this inappropriate?
I have to put ditto and bravo on all the comments about how hard it is to go out in public when I get very sick from peoples' chemicals wafting into my air space. I am one of those people adversely affected by these chemicals to the point of having Multiple Chemical Sensitivity and must wear a filtration mask when I leave my home to limit my exposure to other peoples' chemicals affecting me. I do have to ride public transportation with this condition, too. There are grocery store chains that I avoid because of the detergent aisles. I don't go out to movies (not that there are many worth going to these days) or other places, because of peoples' chemicals they're wearing. They don't realize that they're actually creating an accessibility barrier for people adversely affected by their perfumes and scented personal care products (their chemicals). I don't use commercial cleaning chemicals either. I'm very grateful to Annie Bond and others for the natural cleaning recipes posted on this site. They've been a godsend. I use these recipes exclusively, because they don't make me or the environment so sick like the stuff with the deadly chemicals. I really like the science info for why these recipes work, too. Very few ingredients are actually needed for nearly all daily housework. Fragrances and scented commercial personal care products are just as deadly as the chemical cleaners people have been brainwashed to keep buying and using.
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thanks...
Kabin
Konteyner
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Last week, my husband and I were given a "loaner vehicle" by a large Chevrolet dealer in Texas to use while our nice truck was in the repair facility. I hadn't been in the loaner until my husband took me with him to exchange vehicles. Dangling from the rear-view mirror were six, yes, SIX tree-shaped air fresheners. Even though we rolled down both windows, as an asthmatic, I was in serious trouble by the time we arrived. When I complained about the horrible, overwhelming stench, the dealer's excuse was that as a "work truck", it really smelled bad; hence, my complaint fell on deaf ears. This should be illegal!
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In recent years, I've lost my tolerance for almost all scents. I often have to be around children whose parents use extremely strong scented laundry detergent, and I get awful headaches and am often lightheaded when I'm around them. Last year, I had to stay in a hotel for work, and this hotel (Crown Plaza- Seacaucus) sprayed a scent in all areas of the hotel, including the rooms. I was nauseated and had an awful headache during the 3 days I was there. It made it extremely difficult to do my job. I really hope more awareness causes companies to lighten up on the scents (both the companies making the products and the companies that use them, like the hotels).
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For years I suffered (mostly in silence) from scent-related migraines. I figured out pretty quick and tried to avoid problem areas - mainly department perfume counters - but several times became ill in waiting/reception rooms due to someone's perfume. Even an early morning walk on the beach was spoiled by a woman who passed me leaving a 100 ft trail of heavy perfume - on the beach!
I no longer go places where there are likely to be crowds, so I've had to almost completely give up the pleasure of car shows, fairs and festivals, even farmers markets. Now that these issues are becoming more widely know, and I know I'm not alone in suffering, I still have hope that people will realize, at the very least, that these aren't the proper venues for dousing oneself with perfune,
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I'm so glad you put this article up. My son, who has always had an extremely sensitive nose, at the age of three, began crying in a crowd that we were trying to get out of because someone had on too much perfume. As a heavily scented person went by in a cloud of perfume, he yelled, "Ewwwy! What is that smell!? Get me out of here, get me out of here!!" and burst into tears, covering his poor nose, when we couldn't move fast enough because there were just too many people.
It really is a definite issue for our family. My husband gets headaches at work every day because a man with heavy cologne sits 3 cubicles away.
And have you ever used a phone after someone with perfume has been on it? (ugh!)
People can smell good without perfume, for sure.
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How about a public service announcement to those people who drown themselves in cologne when they know they will be in confined spaces. I had to go out in the hallway at my doctor's office because a woman had on so much scent my eyes were burning.
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Ever-present fragances have severely restricted my life. They make me very, very sick. I wish everything and everyone didn't stink.
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we had to switch brands of laundry detergent because the took the sent free one off the market and replaced it with obnoxious scents I emailed the company and complained
i just with more people would
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