Energy saving light bulbs 'contain cancer causing chemicals'

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Fears have been reignited about the safety of energy saving light bulbs after a group of scientists warned that they contain cancer causing chemicals.


Their report advises that the bulbs should not be left on for extended periods, particularly near someone’s head, as they emit poisonous materials when switched on.


Peter Braun, who carried out the tests at the Berlin's Alab Laboratory, said: “For such carcinogenic substances it is important they are kept as far away as possible from the human environment.”


The bulbs are already widely used in the UK following EU direction to phase out traditional incandescent lighting by the end of this year.


But the German scientists claimed that several carcinogenic chemicals and toxins were released when the environmentally-friendly compact fluorescent lamps (CFLs) were switched on, including phenol, naphthalene and styrene.


Andreas Kirchner, of the Federation of German Engineers, said: “Electrical smog develops around these lamps“I, therefore, use them only very economically. They should not be used in unventilated areas and definitely not in the proximity of the head.”

British experts insisted that more research was needed and urged consumers not to panic.

Dr Michelle Bloor, senior lecturer in Environmental Science at Portsmouth University, told the Daily Express: “Further independent studies would need to be undertaken to back up the presented German research.”

The Department for the Environment insists the bulbs are safe, despite the fact that they contain small amounts of mercury which would leak out if the glass was broken.

Advice on its website states: “Energy efficient light bulbs are not a danger to the public.
“Although they contain mercury, limited at 5mg per lamp, it cannot escape from a lamp that is intact.
“In any case, the very small amount contained in an energy efficient bulb is unlikely to cause harm even if the lamp should be broken.”

The latest report follows claims by Abraham Haim, a professor of biology at Haifa University in Israel, that the bulbs could result in higher breast cancer rates if used late at night.

He said that the bluer light that CFLs emitted closely mimicked daylight, disrupting the body's production of the hormone melatonin more than older-style filament bulbs, which cast a yellower light.

The Migraine Action Association has warned that they could trigger migraines and skin care specialists have claimed that their intense light could exacerbate a range of existing skin problems.

Are windows still okay?
 

CDNBear

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Sep 24, 2006
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But the German scientists claimed that several carcinogenic chemicals and toxins were released when the environmentally-friendly compact fluorescent lamps (CFLs) were switched on, including phenol, naphthalene and styrene.

How are these chemicals passing through the glass?
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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No idea unless they are released from the plastic body from the heat they create?

Light bulbs are apparently dangerous in many ways....

The US Consumer Product Safety Commission estimates that light bulbs caused 13,427 injuries just in 2008. Its collection of the year’s case reports range from the predictable(“cut hand on light bulb”)to the graphic(“a piece of the glass went into elbow that got infected abscess”).

There are party traumas(“24 year old male was at go-go bar and dancer kicked light bulb and it fell on patient, believes some of it is stuck in ear”), reinforcements that beauty is pain (“burn to hand, mom at home with hot lamp on ‘doing eyebrows,’ lamp knocked over”), and scenarios that read like slapstick(“changing light bulb, stepped on dog’s back, falling backwards onto coccyx, low back pain, coccyx, neck”).

The odds a person will visit an emergency department due to an accident involving a light bulb in a year are 1 in 22,500. It’s just one of the issues that keep medical professionals busy, so it’s probably inevitable that misspellings and shorthand find their way into the reports (“touched a lite bulb with wet finger and got electric shock”).

Book of Odds: Everyday Hazards: Light Bulb Accidents are No Joke

Book of Odds: Everyday Hazards: Light Bulb Accidents are No Joke
 

CDNBear

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Sep 24, 2006
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No idea unless they are released from the plastic body from the heat they create?
There's one right next to me, you're right, it does seem to have a coating. But when I scratched it with my gerbers, it didn't come off as a coating would. After closer inspection, it seems to actually be frosted glass.

The ones tested must be different.
 

CDNBear

Custom Troll
Sep 24, 2006
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Even the base is glass where the igniter and ballast is?
No, mine seems to be ceramic, and barely warm to the touch.

But if that is where the issue is, it would be helpful, if the article made mention of that. Non?
 

SLM

The Velvet Hammer
Mar 5, 2011
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So, save the planet, endanger your family. Is that the gist here?

You know, these CFLs are starting to remind me of those pharmaceutical commercials. The ones where they hawk their goods, but don't actually tell you what it's for, then they hit you with "possible side effects" (most of which would scare the daylights out of any sane human being).
 

Cliffy

Standing Member
Nov 19, 2008
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I wonder when they will come up with the dangers of LEDs. Probably not until they have replaces the compact florescent.
 

SLM

The Velvet Hammer
Mar 5, 2011
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Maybe this is a dumb question, but would the design of these bulbs in the EU/UK even be the same as the ones in NA?

Is the flaw in the design?
 

CDNBear

Custom Troll
Sep 24, 2006
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So, save the planet, endanger your family. Is that the gist here?

You know, these CFLs are starting to remind me of those pharmaceutical commercials. The ones where they hawk their goods, but don't actually tell you what it's for, then they hit you with "possible side effects" (most of which would scare the daylights out of any sane human being).
Anal leakage scares the shyte outta me...pun intended.

One the contrary Cliffy. LEDs can enhance your health.
The base of the one in the article, doesn't appear to be ceramic.