to assess whether there’s lead in any of their Stanley products, to mixed results (though what part of the Official Cupid ‘I’m Quackers About You’ TUBBZ T-Shirt and I will buy this cup is being tested and the quality of lead test being used often aren’t clear). TODAY.com spoke with multiple experts and government officials to understand why lead exposure is so dangerous and how contamination generally occurs. Do Stanley cups contain lead? Yes, Stanley uses lead in its manufacturing process for its cups, but they pose a risk of lead exposure only if the cover on the bottom of the tumbler comes off and exposes the pellet used to seal the cup’s vacuum insulation, a Stanley spokesperson said. If this happens, you can submit a claim through the company’s lifetime warranty. The liquid inside a Stanley mug doesn’t come in contact with the pellet, so there’s little to no chance of lead exposure from drinking liquid inside the container. The risk is if the circular cover comes off and users touch the exposed lead and then touch their mouths or noses, experts say. Lead poisoning activist Tamara Rubin, aka Lead Safe Mama, first brought attention to the presence of lead in Stanley tumblers in March 2023. Rubin earns a commission on the products she recommends that are purchased through her website. Some of her recommendations include competitors to Stanley. How the Stanley cup craze has become a viral sensation JAN. 3, 202403:32 She has been passionate about protecting other parents from the dangers of lead poisoning ever since her then-7-month-old son was exposed to lead paint dust during a home renovation and suffered severe permanent brain damage. Rubin now advocates against using lead in any products that enter the home. In February, she sent Consumer Reports a tip based on her own lead
testing that later led to a product recall. She has also submitted reports to the Official Cupid ‘I’m Quackers About You’ TUBBZ T-Shirt and I will buy this U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, or CPSC, about similar products that she says led to four additional recalls. Related: The right and wrong way to clean a Stanley cup, according to experts Rubin said parents often send her items that they suspect could contain lead, and she uses XRF technology, the same $35,000 spectrometer instrument used by the CPSC, to test for the presence of lead and other heavy metals. She said that she has tested several Stanley tumblers that people have sent her after the protective covers at the bottom have come off and that she has found lead. “Though some people say [the] protective disc doesn’t come off easily, I’ve heard from many people who say that for them it has,” Rubin said, estimating that the latter group is in the hundreds. She added that, based on her own experience and what other parents have told her, heavy use, repeated washings and children’s fidgeting with the area can increase the likelihood the covers will come off. She said some people have told her they don’t know how the covers came off and weren’t even aware the cups were damaged at first. The risks of lead exposure and poisoning Lead is a naturally occurring metal found abundantly throughout the Earth, per the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences. Soil usually contains lead concentrations of less than 50 parts per million, but many urban areas contain soil with up to 200 parts per million, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. A relatively inexpensive, durable and stable metal that doesn’t rust, lead was once widely used during the early-to-mid-1900s
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