Ten Products You Should Ban from Your Home Forever

You would never cross the street without looking both ways, walk alone down a dark alley alone at three a.m., or tell your child to accept rides from strangers. So why let hazardous, toxic, and even carcinogenic chemicals into your home everyday?

The message driven home for millions of Americans each day via TV and internet commercials is this: No need to scrub or scour. With just one squeeze of the spray bottle, you can wipe away dirt, grime, and bacteria.

Alas, there’s that dark alley again. Air fresheners, disinfectants, and cleaners found under your sink are more dangerous than you think. Mix bleach with ammonia, for example, and you’ve got a toxic fume cloud used by the military in WWI. And they weren’t cleaning kitchens.

Here is a list of the ten products you should ban from your home—forever—along with suggested alternatives.

1. Non-Stick Cookware
When non-stick pans were first introduced into American households in the 1960s, they were thought to be a godsend. Gone were the days of soaking pans for hours and scouring pots with steel wool. In the forty years since then, however, we’ve learned that the ease of cleaning comes at a steep price: the coating that makes Teflon pans non-stick is polytetrafluoroethylene, or PTFE for short. When PTFE heats up, it releases toxic gasses that have been linked to cancer, organ failure, reproductive damage, and other harmful health effects.

The problems with PTFE-coated pans seem to occur at high temperatures, so if you must use Teflon, cook foods on medium heat or less. Avoiding non-stick pans altogether is the safest option. If you’re able to do so, try anodized aluminum, stainless steel, or cast iron pans with a little cooking oil. SustainLane reviewers like LeCreuset cast iron pans and more cost-effective ones like Lodge Logic. Using a lower setting on the stove will reduce the chances that your food will burn, which is how it usually gets stuck to pans the first place. If you’re worried about the extra calories cooking oil adds, try baking or steaming your food.

2. Plastic Bottles
By now you’ve heard of dangers of BPA in those ubiquitous neon water bottles. BPA mimics the effects of hormones that harm your endocrine system. While the company at the heart of the controversy has switched to BPA-free plastic, those aren’t the only toxic bottles. Single-use plastic bottles are even worse for leaching chemicals, especially when you add the heat of the sun (think about bottles left in your trunk) or the microwave. Aside from the fact that bottled water sold across state lines is not as regulated as tap water, the bottles themselves are spawning grounds for bacteria and are a source of needless waste. Each year, more than one million barrels of oil are used to manufacture the more than 25 billion single-use plastic water bottles sold in the U.S. Choose a reusable, stainless steel or glass bottle instead. SustainLane users have reviewed several water bottle alternatives.

12 readers liked this story.
From Around the Web:
03.02.2012
wendy carol
You can get very cost effective solutions to # 3,4,5,6,and 8 from Melaleuca. Their stuff works better than Seventh Generation and Tom's and costs less.
10.13.2011
krazychemist78
This is stupid. Nevermind the dangers from heating aluminium. Boric acid is also toxic to children. Anything is toxic in the right amounts - the dose makes the poison. More alarmist hype trumpeting untested, "natural" products that make the suburban greenies feel good.
10.12.2011
Candice
I can't believe you wrote about the poisonous effects of nonstick cookware, then suggested using aluminum instead! Aluminum cookware should not be used at all, what with aluminum's connection to Alzheimer's disease. Shame shame shame on you for suggesting it! I use stainless steel and cast iron for cooking, glass and stone for baking. Another thing that should have been mentioned is that people don't seem to realize "microwave safe" on plastic only means the container won't melt in the microwave. It does NOT mean that the chemicals won't leach into your food when warmed up in that container! Not giving people enough information is as bad as giving people incorrect information. In this article you've done both. Though your intentions were good, this could have (and should have) been written better.
07.21.2010
Skyte
Although water bottles may be toxic, I am constantly amazed when I see/hear people complaining about how they are filling our landfills & littering. For Pete's sake, why are they not a 10 cent bottle DEPOSIT item??? Can't that same plastic be recycled somehow? Come on, people! Some states even may ban them, not put a deposit on them. Some people need bottled water, for several or many very practical reasons. Many areas don't even have safe drinking water unless it's bottled.Travel- other areas often have minerals in their water that can make you ill. If you aren't someplace with running tap water you trust available, it's great to find bottled water, instead of drinking soft drinks. From plastic bottles! & water for an emergency preparedness kit? I use bleach & Windex, I'm just careful. I don't use pesticides, as I have pets. Medications & laundry & dish soap- toxic to fish & animals. Glass breaks & gets left in public. Aluminum- Altzheimers. Cars & highways? CDs+DVDs. Electronics.
07.11.2010
istan taylor
Since the purpose of these products is to kill pests, you can bet that many of them have ingredients in them that are also harmful to humans. For example, the active ingredient in Round-Up—a weed-killer popular with gardeners—is known to cause kidney damage and reproductive harm in mice. These people a NUTS. Look up the MSDS (material Saftety Data Sheet) for Glyphosate (the active chemical in round up. They made this up. They are in same group as AIDS denyiers and the snake oil of homeopathic remedies. I do agree bottle water for most part is at best a complete waist of money
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