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A silent epidemic

Multiple chemical sensitivities

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Ever have a bad reaction to a scent like so-called air freshener or the fragrance from laundry soap or fabric softener?

There's a good reason for that.

These product contain actual neurotoxins, chemicals that disrupt the normal functioning of the nervous system.

Some people are made very sick by these products. They literally have the same reaction one would have from exposure to toxic gas. Severe headaches, dizziness, inability to think clearly, "speediness", and a feeling of drunkenness come over them. People with certain kinds of asthma can even have life threatening reactions.

The Center for Disease Control knows about the dangers of these products and bans their use in their agency's offices.

But what about the rest of the public?

Why aren't we being told about the grave dangers of these products?

One word: money.

Do you know how much money the makers of these products - companies like Proctor & Gamble, Unilver, and Johnson & Johnson spend on advertising each year?

Literally, these manufacturers keep TV, radio and newspapers companies in business. The mass media will never report their dangers because billions in ad revenue are at stake.

If you or someone who lives with you are irritated by certain products, get them out of your house before they create a chronic condition. Even better, just get rid of them.

If you are exposed to anything at work, at home or socially that gives you a reaction like this, do everything you can to get away from it - or have it removed permanently.

I realize this is easier said than done, but the stakes are high. Small problems can grow into much bigger problems.

You don't have to be a 9/11 rescue worker, an oil refinery worker or Gulf War vet to develop this disease. Anyone can get it

More info:

Complete Interview with Christine Oliver MD

Dr. Anne Steinemann.com

The Chemical Sensitivity Foundation

American Academy of Environmental Medicine

Masked Canaries

Multiple chemical sensitivity: a 1999 consensus

A definition of MCS from Christine Oliver MD

Associate Clinical Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School in Boston
Associate Physician in the Department of Medicine (Pulmonary and Critical Care Division) at the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH)
President of Occupational Health Initiatives, Inc.