Re: PVC and health
Posted: April 23rd, 2020, 3:56 pm
I'm discussing possible health issues not death, nor being a scaremonger. If there are no other members with health issues here that's amazing, and I have my answer, as I have no other way of asking others with similar exposure to PVC if their health has been affected.
I know other people having checked their blood as part of finding a diagnosis, and have found high values of components used in plastic, but I've naturally been unable to find out about their PVC inclinations. There are countless possible health issues, as each and one of us has a unique physiology and way of life - this is also why treatments are becoming more and more personalised, as people react differently when using a standardised treatment. So 100 people being exposed to a specific and toxic component will likely result in many, many different health issues as their physiology is different, adding different lifestyles to the mix and perhaps 50-100 different health issues could be the outcome. Yet some are impervious to what should be harmful - I know smokers that have smoked like there's no tomorrow to their death in their 80s - without any lung cancer or respiratory system issues.
Insights about our condition is important and finding out about it is best done asking questions. Some of us have used PVC daily our entire lives/decades, and are as such more exposed than those casually exposed. Just like someone eating fish, meat, or anything every day compared to occasionally for the general population, are more exposed to the contents than those casually eating the same. As such eating fish containing heavy metals is not unhealthy for the casual eater, but is for the frequent/daily eater as the content accumulates and cross dangerous levels.
I know other people having checked their blood as part of finding a diagnosis, and have found high values of components used in plastic, but I've naturally been unable to find out about their PVC inclinations. There are countless possible health issues, as each and one of us has a unique physiology and way of life - this is also why treatments are becoming more and more personalised, as people react differently when using a standardised treatment. So 100 people being exposed to a specific and toxic component will likely result in many, many different health issues as their physiology is different, adding different lifestyles to the mix and perhaps 50-100 different health issues could be the outcome. Yet some are impervious to what should be harmful - I know smokers that have smoked like there's no tomorrow to their death in their 80s - without any lung cancer or respiratory system issues.
Insights about our condition is important and finding out about it is best done asking questions. Some of us have used PVC daily our entire lives/decades, and are as such more exposed than those casually exposed. Just like someone eating fish, meat, or anything every day compared to occasionally for the general population, are more exposed to the contents than those casually eating the same. As such eating fish containing heavy metals is not unhealthy for the casual eater, but is for the frequent/daily eater as the content accumulates and cross dangerous levels.