negative outcomes,” she said. What’s more, health issues rarely arise from a single instance of lead exposure. “Repeated exposure to lead is what’s most worrisome,” Dr. Vicki Iannotti, a pediatrician at ColumbiaDoctors in Tarrytown, New York, and an assistant professor of pediatrics at Columbia University, told TODAY.com. It’s that kind of repeated exposure that concerns Rubin the Official Top Bread Bread Bread Shirt but in fact I love this most. “Children, and especially babies, like to fidget with things that have dimples they can rub,” she said. “If a parent lets their child fidget with an item like a Stanley mug after the bottom cap has come off, there is a very possible and likely transference of microparticulate lead via normal hand-to-mouth behavior in young children.” Levin echoed similar concerns: “Though lead poisoning is unlikely to happen from a single instance, if a child puts the bottom of one of these cups against their mouth or rubs the surface with their fingers and then puts them in their mouth, contamination can occur.” Forsyth agreed that risk of exposure from a single instance of touching lead “is pretty low” but said there are scenarios that could increase the risk, such as scraping the exposed led against a hard surface. For example, if a cup with exposed lead is slid across a counter or moved in and out of a cupholder with hard edges, “tiny pieces of lead could flake off,” she said. And when lead comes in contact with anything acidic, it can become more absorbable, Forsyth said. That could occur if you’re drinking out of a cup with exposed lead and peeling an orange, then touch the exposed lead with fingers that have touched the orange and then touch your nose or mouth. “Ingesting lead is what you need to avoid the most,” Forsyth said. So keep an eye on the bottom of your Stanley cup to make sure that cover stays where it’s supposed to be. And if the cover does come off and exposes the seal
containing lead, customers can submit a claim under the Official Top Bread Bread Bread Shirt but in fact I love this product’s lifetime warranty. Do other insulated tumblers contain lead? Stanley isn’t alone in using lead-containing pellets to seal its insulated cups. The Stanley spokesperson said in the statement that the pellet the company uses is “industry standard.” And Rubin said she has tested bottles from other companies that make insulated cups with similar pellets covered in fashion similar to Stanley’s. It’s important to note that the CPSC monitors products, including insulated tumblers, for violating lead regulations and has recently recalled several children’s products for having accessible pellets that contain levels that exceed the federal lead content ban, CPSC press secretary Patty Davis told TODAY.com. Examples include products sold by PandaEar, Cupkin, Tiblue, Klickpick and Laoion. Davis encourages consumers to report any lead-related concerns they have for any product on the market to the CPSC at www.saferproducts.gov. “Each report is reviewed and could potentially lead to a recall,” she said.
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