EWG Survey: Men’s Use of Personal Care Products Doubles Since 2004

07/28/2023

Men’s use of personal care products has doubled since 2004, according to new consumer survey commissioned by the Environmental Working Group.

Specifically, the average adult man in the U.S. uses 11 different personal care products each day – nearly twice as many as 20 years ago, and some of these products use ingredients linked to serious health harms.

The new survey revealed that the average adult uses 12 personal care products in a day, and 12 products could be made with as many as 112 unique chemical ingredients, some of which may pose serious health risks.

The survey also showed that on average, women use 13 products daily, up from 12 in 2004. And the average man uses 11, up from six in 2004. 

“Our concern is that the safety of ingredients is still assessed one at a time, which doesn't match how consumers are exposed to consumer products, dozens at a time and over a lifetime,” says Homer Swei, PhD, EWG senior vice president, Healthy Living Science, at a news conference

The analysis showed that U.S. consumers are exposed, on average, every day to two ingredients linked to cancer and to two linked to chemicals that can harm reproductive and development systems. Consumers are also exposed to 15 fragrance chemicals a day, seven of which are chemicals that could cause an allergic reaction.

“Many of the ingredients used in cosmetics and personal care products are also found in other consumer products. When industry declares ‘safe as used,’ they are not looking at the reality of the total amount or how often people are being exposed across all products they bring into their homes,” says Swei.

Despite consumers’ use of more individual products in their daily routine, EWG found that the number of unique chemicals they’re exposed to has decreased. The 2004 survey found people were being exposed to 126 individual chemical ingredients in personal care products a day, 14 more than in the new survey.

“Consumers are exposed to potentially hundreds of chemicals a day through multiple sources of exposure from many different kinds of consumer products,” adds Sydney Swanson, EWG Healthy Living Science analyst. “But one positive finding of our analysis is that the number of chemicals in personal care products seems to be trending down.”

Consumers are better educated today, and they are asking manufacturers for cleaner products. The survey found that a large majority of adults – 85%– are concerned about the safety of ingredients across all product categories included in the questions.  

Many are doing their own independent research to find better products for themselves and their families. 

To help people looking for products without harmful ingredients, EWG created its EWG VERIFIED mark for products free from chemicals of concern, but the onus should not be on consumers – better regulation is needed, the Group states.

Regulation of personal care products

States have led the way in regulating the personal care industry. After more than 80 years of federal inaction, California banned 24 chemicals from use in personal care products in 2020 with the landmark Toxic-Free Cosmetics Act. In 2022, California prohibited the entire class of PFAS from being added to cosmetics.

Assembly Bill 496, authored by California Assemblywoman Laura Friedman (D-Glendale), was introduced in the California legislature this session. The bill would ban the sale of cosmetics and other personal care products that contain 26 additional chemicals known to harm human health.

At the federal level, the Modernization of Cosmetics Regulation Act of 2022 was signed into law by President Joe Biden as part of the spending bill. As a result, the Food and Drug Administration can now require manufacturers to report serious health problems caused by cosmetics. 

The law also requires companies to keep records showing product safety and labeling of fragrance allergens for all cosmetics, among other stringent new requirements. The 2022 law also requires the US Food and Drug Administration to standardize tests for asbestos in products containing talc.

“These reforms were urgently needed and long overdue,” says Melanie Benesh, EWG vice president of government affairs. “Cosmetics have been some of the least regulated consumer products for too many years.” 

“Consumers will now have more information when purchasing cosmetics, since fragrance allergens will now be listed on product labels. But the hard work of ensuring consumers are fully protected from harmful ingredients will fall to the states, which can continue to ban toxic chemicals from cosmetics.”

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