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Thursday, March 28, 2024

Ecowaste Coalition wants children safe this Xmas

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“Protect children from unsafe toys this Christmas.”

Officials and members of environmentalist group Ecowaste Coalition made the appeal to consumers on Tuesday to ensure that children must only be given toys that would not expose them to harm.

Ecowaste Coalition wants children safe this Xmas
RIGHT TO SAFE TOYS. To mark the Universal Children’s Day and in anticipation of the increased demand for toys this Christmas season, consumer and environmental protection advocates from the Ecowaste Coalition and Laban Konsyumer gather at San Vicente Elementary School in Quezon City to affirm the right of every child to toys that will not pose chemical and other safety hazards, which can adversely affect a child’s body, mind and health. Manny Palmero

“The market is flooded with cheap and unregistered toys whose quality, safety and suitability cannot be guaranteed. Under this situation, consumers, particularly parents, will have a huge responsibility to play in terms of picking the right toy for children that will not pose harm to their young bodies and minds,” said Ecowaste chemical safety campaigner Thony Dizon.

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In an event held at San Vicente Elementary School in Quezon City, the group emphasized society’s responsibility to provide safe toys that could help a child to discover and enhance her or his potentials to the fullest.

The event dubbed “Every child deserves a safe toy: Make it happen,” coincided with the celebration of the Universal Children’s Day on Nov. 20, the day when the UN General Assembly adopted the “Declaration of the Rights of the Child” in 1959 as well as the “Convention on the Rights of the Child” in 1989.

Ecowaste cited the findings of its recent study in collaboration with IPEN Chemicals in Products Program indicating the presence of lead and other toxic metals in 32 out of 100 sampled toys (32 percent).  

None of the samples, including a fidget spinner with 198,900 ppm of lead, provided a list of chemicals that make up a toy nor provided text or graphic warnings.

The study further revealed that the country’s toy registration and labeling requirements are not effectively enforced as evidenced by 77 percent of the samples providing zero information about their manufacturers and/or distributors, 75 percent not indicating License to Operate number on the product label, and 75 percent failing to meet other required labeling information on the packaging.

In addition to toxic chemicals lurking in toys, Dizon also pointed to other hazards that might be present in some toys. 

Toys with small parts may be ingested causing choking, or, in some instances, get pushed into the nostrils or ears.  

Toys with pointed or sharp edges may injure the eyes or cut the skin.  Toys with cords longer than 12 inches may cause strangulation. 

There are also toys with the potential to cause blunt force injury or trauma.

Consumer rights advocate lawyer Vic Dimagiba, president of Laban Konsyumer Inc., also stressed the importance of ensuring that toys are adequately and truthfully labeled.  

“The provision of complete and honest labeling information will help consumers in making an informed choice on what toy to buy for a child.  I cannot overstress the importance of product labeling information, which is an indispensable tool for making the right purchasing decision,” he said.

Dimagiba also underlined the urgency of enforcing Republic Act 10620, or the Toy and Game Safety Labeling Act of 2013, emphasizing that the over-delay in the promulgation of the law’s Implementing Rules and Regulations “is not serving the best interests of the Filipino child and is only benefiting the toy industry.”

Dr. Erle Castillo, a toxicologist at Medical Center Manila, cautioned parents against buying toys that have not passed through the quality and assessment verification of the Food and Drug Administration, the government health agency in charge of regulating toys.

“Some toys may contain undisclosed chemical ingredients such as lead that can interfere with the growth and development of a child,” Castillo, a member of the Philippine Society on Clinical and Occupational Toxicology, said. He explained that chronic exposure to lead even at low doses can affect a child’s health over time, damage brain development and result to decreased intelligence as measured by IQ points, lower school performance, and behavioral problems.

In choosing toys to be given as gifts this Christmas, Ecowaste suggested to consumers to:

• Carefully read the product label and refrain from buying unlabeled and unregistered toys.

• Choose toys that are suited to a child’s age, ability and behavior.

• Watch out for toys that may cause injury or pose burn, chemical, choking, laceration, strangulation and other safety hazards.

• Shun toys that have small parts such as button batteries and magnets that can be pulled off and get swallowed by a child.

• Steer clear of polyvinyl chloride (PVC) plastic toys that may contain banned phthalates and other hazardous substances such as cadmium and lead.

• Refrain from picking toys that have a strong chemical or perfumed smell.

• Avoid painted toys unless labeled as certified lead-safe, and.

• Avoid face paints unless guaranteed free of toxic metals and other cosmetic contaminants.

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