Perineal use of talc powder is considered cosmetic

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Perineal Use of Talc Powder is Considered Cosmetic? The U.S. Food and Drug Administration classifies talc as a cosmetic. Cosmetics are regulated less stringently by the FDA. North Little Rock, AR, June 14, 2016 -- Deane Berg, Jacqueline Fox, and Gloria Ristesund have become martyrs in the fight against Johnson & Johnson's talcum powder. Berg and Ristesund are survivors of ovarian cancer, and the cases they filed against the company have led juries in South Dakota and Missouri to conclude that Johnson & Johnson was negligent in refusing to provide warning of talc's hidden dangers. Fox, who passed away in 2015, showed the jury that Johnson & Johnson also engaged in advertising campaigns specifically designed to manipulate minorities. In the wake of those decisions, the million dollar question, taken up by thousands of women all over the world has been, “How could they do this to us?” According to Eileen Kroll, an attorney for talc's ovarian cancer victims, the answer is simple and horrifying. Because the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) classifies talc as a cosmetic, she says that, “it's truly a corporate decision of what to do with this product.” The corporate decision has been exactly what one would expect. Just as cigarette companies in the midtwentieth century fought studies implicating cigarettes as carcinogens, Johnson & Johnson has also fought the more than twenty unfavorable studies conducted since 1982 which indicate that frequent, extended perineal talc use can increase the risk of ovarian cancer by as much as 33%. Selective science has been Johnson & Johnson's modus operandi for more than two decades. Its latest proponent is the Cosmetic Ingredient Review (CIR) Expert Panel, which concluded in 2015 that “talc is safe in the present practices of use and concentration described in this safety assessment.” The study, which Johnson & Johnson claims was conducted independently, provides the company with ground to stand upon as it prepares for the next round of litigation. Johnson & Johnson is able to maintain the illusion of reasonable doubt in the face of mounting evidence for one very important reason—the archaic conditions stipulated by the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act.


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