AI Article Synopsis

  • Personal care products (PCPs) can expose women to endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs), and how this exposure varies may depend on socioeconomic status (SES).
  • A study focused on 751 Black women found that EDC exposure from PCPs differed significantly among SES groups, with specific product associations like vaginal powder linked to phenol mixtures in lower SES women but not in higher SES women.
  • These findings highlight the need to consider SES when addressing EDC exposure in public health initiatives targeting Black women.

Article Abstract

Personal care products (PCPs) are sources of exposure to endocrine-disrupting chemicals (EDCs) among women, and socioeconomic status (SES) may influence these exposures. Black women have inequitable exposure to EDCs from PCP use, but no study has investigated how exposure to EDCs through PCPs may vary by SES, independent of race. Using data from the Study of Environment, Lifestyle, and Fibroids, a cohort of reproductive-aged Black women ( = 751), we quantified associations between PCPs and urinary biomarker concentrations of EDC mixtures (i.e., phthalates, phenols, parabens) within SES groups, defined using modes clustering based on education, income, marital status, and employment. Information about PCP use and SES was collected through questionnaires and interviews. We used principal component analysis to characterize the EDC mixture profiles. Stratified linear regression models were fit to assess associations between PCP use and EDC mixture profiles, quantified as mean differences in PC scores, by SES group. Associations between PCP use and EDC mixture profiles varied by SES group; e.g., vaginal powder use was associated with a mixture of phenols among lower SES women, whereas this association was null for higher SES women. Findings suggest that SES influences PCP EDC exposure in Black women, which has implications for public health interventions.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.3c06440DOI Listing

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