To stop using toilet paper or not...............

 Use something else instead. Maybe a newspaper? A towel? Nothing?

Keep reading:

Alicia Silverstone says toilet paper carries 'risk of cancer.'





 Silverstone claims regular toilet paper "is contributing to your risk of cancer" by containing chemicals collectively known as PFAS.

"OK, so it might cost like $15 more per year," Silverstone says of PlantPaper's toilet paper. "That's the cheapest investment in your health that I can imagine." One order of 16 rolls of PlantPaper toilet paper costs $42, per the company's website.

So what's the truth? Should people be concerned about PFAS in toilet paper?


Over time, this exposure can do harm to the planet as well as to people and animals. "Exposure to high levels of PFAS is associated with higher risk of cancer, impaired kidney and liver function, reproduction and embryonic development issues, and blunted responses to vaccines," Dr. Kristin Scheible, a microbiologist and immunologist at the University of Rochester Medical Center, previously told USA TODAY.

PFAS are indeed in toilet paper, per the American Chemical Society; however, not all exposure to PFAS is necessarily dangerous − and this is true of the PFAS in toilet paper.

While Silverstone is right that, yes, many common toilet paper brands do contain PFAS, Erin Haynes, a professor of preventative medicine and environmental health at the University of Kentucky, says the risk of exposure to PFAS via toilet paper is not high enough to warrant concern.






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