Drinking water from plastic bottles carries a risk of harmful chemicals leaching into the water, potentially disrupting hormones. — Whalespan
Drinking water from plastic bottles carries a risk of harmful chemicals leaching into the water, potentially disrupting hormones.
⚠ High risk
We can't find evidence that holds up here. Proponents are reasoning from mechanism or analogy rather than direct human data, and the most credible skeptics raise objections we can't dismiss.
✕NOTSUPPORTED
⚠
High-risk intervention — consult a physician before acting.Drug-drug interactions, dose-dependence, and screening contraindications apply.
“I avoid plastic bottles I mean there's definitely enough leaching and it's it's exactly what you said it's in the nanogram levels which sounds really tiny but I mean men's natural estrogen is about 20 nanograms per liter we're already in the nanogram level in the nanogram range so as soon as you start drinking a thousand nanograms per liter of phthalates in these plastic bottles stored at room temperature I mean it's having an impact”
“but this kind of stuff even though it's cold in the airport you just don't know how long this has been in this plastic bottle if it's been warm if it's been in the Sun how much of the things in this plastic that are harmful for you that are disrupting your hormones are leeching into the water”