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Download fileOccupational Exposures to Phthalates among Black and Latina U.S. Hairdressers Serving an Ethnically Diverse Clientele: A Pilot Study
journal contribution
posted on 2021-06-03, 06:13 authored by Meleah
D. Boyle, Lucy K. Kavi, Lydia M. Louis, Walkiria Pool, Amir Sapkota, Linyan Zhu, Anna Z. Pollack, Stephen Thomas, Ana M. Rule, Lesliam Quirós-AlcaláHairdressers may be differentially
exposed to phthalates through
hair salon services provided and products used, yet no U.S. studies
have investigated these exposures in this population. We characterized
concentrations and exposure determinants to nine phthalate metabolites
in postshift urine samples among 23 hairdressers from three Black
and three Dominican salons, as well as a comparison group of 17 female
office workers from the Maryland/Washington D.C. metropolitan area.
Overall, hairdressers had higher metabolite concentrations than office
workers. The geometric mean (GM) for monoethyl phthalate (MEP) was
10 times higher in hairdressers (161.4 ng/mL) than office workers
(15.3 ng/mL). Hairdressers providing select services and using certain
products had higher GM MEP concentrations than those who did not:
permanent waves/texturizing (200.2 vs 115.4 ng/mL), chemical straightening/relaxing
(181.6 vs 92.1 ng/mL), bleaching (182.3 vs 71.6 ng/mL), permanent
hair color (171.9 vs 83.2 ng/mL), and Brazilian blowout/keratin treatments
(181.4 vs 134.6 ng/mL). Interestingly, hairdressers providing natural
services had lower GM MEP concentrations than those who did not: twists
(129.1 vs 215.8 ng/mL), sister locs/locs (86.0 vs 241.9 ng/mL), and
afros (94.7 vs 203.9 ng/mL). Larger studies are warranted to confirm
our findings and identify disparities in occupational phthalate exposures.