The Murky Truth About Leaching Plastic Bottles

Bottled water.
(Image credit: stock.xchng)

Harvard School of Public Health researchers have found that college kids who drank from polycarbonate bottles showed a two-thirds increase of the chemical bisphenol A (BPA) in their urine. This is a potentially harmful chemical already banned in Canada.

On one hand, the findings aren't as scary as the headlines have implied. The two-thirds increase merely means the level of BPA in urine rose from negligible to a sliver above negligible, a level still thousands of times lower than so-called low doses tested on rats. No study has convincingly shown adverse effects from BPA on human health.

Latest Videos From
Christopher Wanjek
Live Science Contributor

Christopher Wanjek is a Live Science contributor and a health and science writer. He is the author of three science books: Spacefarers (2020), Food at Work (2005) and Bad Medicine (2003). His "Food at Work" book and project, concerning workers' health, safety and productivity, was commissioned by the U.N.'s International Labor Organization. For Live Science, Christopher covers public health, nutrition and biology, and he has written extensively for The Washington Post and Sky & Telescope among others, as well as for the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, where he was a senior writer. Christopher holds a Master of Health degree from Harvard School of Public Health and a degree in journalism from Temple University.