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14 Dec 2009

Prenatal Origins of Endocrine Disruption

Posted by vickieq. Leave Comments

pregnantbelly

In the early 1990’s, it was revealed that the traditional toxicological testing protocols used to determine chemical safety had completely missed vast numbers of chemicals that penetrate the womb and interfere with the construction and programming of developing animals, including humans. Since that time, overwhelming evidence has accumulated indicating that the presence of infinitesimally small quantities of certain chemicals during the continuously changing stages of development before birth can alter one’s inherited phenotype, e.g., the ability to learn, to love, to bond, to process information, to reproduce, and even to maintain normal body weight. Because these chemicals interfere with development by disturbing the function of the endocrine system, they are called endocrine disruptors. The endocrine system is so fine tuned that it depends upon changes in hormones in concentrations as little as a tenth of a trillion of a gram to control the womb environment. That’s as inconspicuous as one second in 3,169 centuries.

Recent advances in research confirm that endocrine disruptors can interfere with the gene-controlled, normal signaling systems that determine every aspect of embryonic and fetal development. Over the past decade it has been demonstrated that there are endless ways endocrine disruptors can interfere with gene expression. They can interfere with how genes are programmed in the developing tissues of the unborn, thus changing how a teen or an adult would ordinarily respond to the normal chemical signals that control function as they mature. Disorders that have increased in prevalence in recent years such as abnormal male gonadal development, infertility, ADHD, autism, intellectual impairment, diabetes, thyroid disorders, and childhood and/or adult cancers are now being linked to fetal exposure. The increases in these disorders are also being reported in other northern hemisphere countries, constituting a problem of global proportion.

The costs of such disorders at the individual and family level can oftentimes be heart-rending and economically devastating; increasing numbers of individuals are spending their lives in a state of dependency. At the population level, the costs run into billions of dollars in lost income annually for one disorder alone. Endocrine disruptors have become an integral part of our economy and modern lifestyle, while at the same time are insidiously depleting the pool of healthy and intelligent individuals on a global scale.

Trivani’s Do No Harm Philosophy

13 Dec 2009

National Conference Call On Natural Hormonal Health In Our Toxic World

Posted by vickieq. Leave Comments

Mark your calendar to join us for this informative conference call!

On this call you will learn how to reduce your exposure to the toxic soup we live in. No matter how diligent we are about eating and living right we are constantly exposed to chemical pollutants in our daily lives that are making us sick and disrupting our hormones, and our children’s hormones.

Discussion To Include: 
- Xeno estrogens (man-made chemicals) major cause of estrogen driven breast cancer and other cancers. 
- Global cancer crisis. 
- “287″ toxic chemicals found in new born babies
- What is estrogen dominance and what causes it? And the importance of supplementing with natural progesterone to oppose estrogen dominance
- Did you know the average age for pre-menopause to start today is 35, and getting younger? 
- Why is infertility so common today? 
- Learn why sperm count in men is the lowest it has ever been
- Why are we seeing early onset of puberty today?

Please take a moment and view this seven minute video Planet in Peril with Anderson Cooper from CNN, which will lay the foundation for the conference call.

A Balanced Body Is A Healthy Body.
What you learn could dramatically change your life!

Wednesday, December 16th

6PM(pt), 7PM(mt), 8PM(ct), 9PM(et)

How To Access The Call:
616-347-8300
Access Code: 276981#

Passionately Creating Awareness,

Vickie Queen

13 Dec 2009

Must Read – Menopause, as Brought to You by Big Pharma

Posted by vickieq. Leave Comments

My words:

This is exactly why I have been educating women about natural hormonal health for the past 13 years, and will continue to do until God tells me otherwise.

Please take the time to read this very informative article. It is despicable what big pharma has done to women over the years, and continues to do to women today. Women everywhere need to take control of their own hormonal health before it’s too late. Do your own research, challenge your doctor and then make your own decision on how you want to maintain your hormonal health.

Vickie Queen Advocate For Natural Hormonal Health

Published: December 12, 2009


MILLIONS of American women in the 1990s were told they could help their bodies ward off major illness by taking menopausal hormone drugs. Some medical associations said so. Many gynecologists and physicians said so. Respected medical journals said so, too.

A 1950s ad for Premarin, far left; a popular 1966 book that referred to menopause as though it were a disease that could be cured with hormones; and in 2000, Lauren Hutton in an ad about menopause, from the maker of Premarin.

Along the way, television commercials positioned hormone drugs as treatments for more than hot flashes and night sweats — just two of the better-known symptoms of menopause, which is technically defined as commencing one year after a woman’s last menstrual cycle.

One commercial about estrogen loss by the drug maker Wyeth featured a character named Dr. Heartman in a white coat discussing research into connections between menopause and heart disease, Alzheimer’s disease and blindness.

“When considering menopause, consider the entire body of evidence,” Dr. Heartman said. “Speak to your doctor about what you can do to help protect your health during and after menopause.”

Connie Barton, then a medical office assistant in Peoria, Ill., was one woman who responded to such messages. She says she took Prempro, a hormone drug made by Wyeth, from 1997, when she was 53, until 2002, when she received a diagnosis of breast cancer. As part of her cancer treatment, she had a mastectomy to remove her left breast.

Now Ms. Barton, who said in an interview that she used Prempro in part because her doctor told her it could help prevent heart disease and dementia, is one of more than 13,000 people who have sued Wyeth over the last seven years, claiming in courts across the country that its menopause drugs caused breast cancer and other problems.

The suits also assert, based on recently unsealed court documents, that Wyeth oversold the benefits of menopausal hormones and failed to properly warn of the risks.

In October, a jury in a Pennsylvania state court awarded Ms. Barton $75 million in punitive damages from Wyeth on top of compensatory damages of $3.75 million.

The drug giant Pfizer, which absorbed Wyeth and its hormone drugs in a merger this year, says that Prempro is a safe, federally approved drug that did not cause Ms. Barton’s breast cancer. Chris Loder, a Pfizer spokesman, says Wyeth acted responsibly by including a clear warning about a breast cancer risk on Prempro labels and by updating the warning as new evidence emerged.

Mr. Loder also notes that Pfizer plans to appeal every product-liability case on menopausal drugs it loses, including Ms. Barton’s.

While Wyeth has faced periodic complaints about its blockbuster menopause drugs, the latest lawsuits have turned the company’s menopausal hormone franchise into the kind of case study dissected at Ivy League business schools. Lawyers have made some documents public in the suits, and The New York Times and the nonprofit Public Library of Science filed successful motions to unseal thousands of documents in July.

To be sure, even some doctors who think hormone therapy has risks say it is the most effective treatment for symptoms directly associated with menopause.

The documents that have surfaced in the Wyeth cases offer a rare glimpse inside the file cabinets and hard drives of a major drug company. And the cases demonstrate the importance of litigation in detailing exactly how drug makers operate their businesses, says Dr. Jerome L. Avorn, a professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School who has written about the subject in The Journal of the American Medical Association.

“The information coming out in litigation helps us understand how a belief in a ‘protective benefit’ of estrogens on the heart was able to spread like wildfire through the medical community,” says Dr. Avorn, who is not involved in the Wyeth litigation.

“Thousands of doctors prescribed the drugs for millions of women on that basis,” he says, adding that studies later contradicted the belief. “It will be very interesting to see whether the courts are able to connect the dots and make it clear whether this was a kind of medical ventriloquism on Wyeth’s part.”

PREMPRO is a combination of Premarin, an estrogen drug derived from the urine of pregnant mares and first approved by the Food and Drug Administration in 1942, with an additional hormone, progestin.

Part of the Premarin saga shows how a drug maker successfully and cannily expanded a franchise whose central ingredient is horse estrogens into a billion-dollar panacea for aging women. Yet several hundred pages of court documents also raise questions about another aspect of Premarin’s trajectory: how Wyeth worked over decades to maintain the image and credibility of its hormone drugs even as the products were repeatedly under siege.

Pfizer representatives say court documents paint an unfair picture of Wyeth’s practices and that plaintiffs’ lawyers have cherry-picked documents for out-of-context comments to sway juries.

Still, the documents offer a snapshot of Wyeth’s efforts. Taken together, they depict a company that over several decades spent tens of millions of dollars on influential physicians, professional medical societies, scientific publications, courses and celebrity ads, inundating doctors and patients with a sea of positive preventive health messages that plaintiffs’ lawyers say deflected users’ attention from cancer concerns.

Even as evidence mounted of an association of the drugs with cancer — first in the 1970s with Premarin and endometrial cancer, then in the 1990s with Prempro and breast cancer — Wyeth tried to contain the concerns, the court documents show. (A note handwritten in 1996 by a Wyeth employee responding to a new report of breast cancer risks associated with hormone therapy said: “Dismiss/distract.”)

In 2002, researchers halted the largest clinical trial ever conducted of women’s health because participants who took certain combined hormones had an increased risk of breast cancer — as well as a higher risk of heart attack, stroke and blood clots in the lungs — compared with those taking a placebo.

Other parts of the same federal study, called the Women’s Health Initiative, later found that hormone drugs increased the risk of dementia in a subset of participants, those age 65 and older.

Sales of Wyeth’s hormone drugs peaked at about $2 billion in 2001, but after results of the 2002 study came out sales plummeted.

Pfizer is now fighting the Prempro litigation along with lawsuits over its progestin drug, Provera. Mr. Loder, the Pfizer spokesman, says Pfizer and Wyeth had fully informed patients, doctors and regulators of the risks of their menopause drugs, based on the best available science at the time of the disclosures.

Irene Fisher has taken Prempro for 16 years to control the hot flashes and night sweats of menopause. She says, “The benefits are worth a small risk.”

“They provided accurate warnings, performed studies on benefits and risks, and kept the F.D.A. fully informed,” he says.

But last month, a federal appellate court in St. Louis ruled in the case of a plaintiff named Donna Scroggin that Wyeth’s inaction over accumulating evidence — and the company’s attempts to mitigate cancer concerns by trying to undermine unfavorable scientific reports — could allow a jury to find Wyeth guilty of malicious conduct and award punitive damages.

For its part, Pfizer contends that two state judges in Pennsylvania have reached the opposite conclusion: that juries should not be allowed to award punitive damages because there was insufficient evidence of corporate misconduct.

Whichever direction the different cases ultimately follow, the court papers associated with them illustrate a pattern in the history of hormone therapy. First, many doctors enthusiastically prescribe hormone therapy drugs. Then a few researchers publish studies cautioning about risks, causing sales to fall. And finally, some doctors start prescribing a new iteration of hormone drugs.

For example, Prempro now comes in lower doses. Prempro labels say the drug should be prescribed for the shortest duration appropriate for the treatment goals and risks of the individual woman; previous labels on Wyeth’s hormone drugs for decades gave the same advice. The current label also says that using estrogens, with or without progestins, may increase a woman’s chance of heart attack, stroke, breast cancer and blood clots.

MENOPAUSAL hormone therapy has long been pitched as a way to stave off what some doctors viewed as the undesirable aspects of female aging.

In the popular 1966 book “Feminine Forever,” Dr. Robert A. Wilson, a gynecologist, used disparaging descriptions of aging women (“flabby,” “shrunken,” “dull-minded,” “desexed”) to upend the prevailing idea of menopause as a normal stage of life. Women and their physicians, Dr. Wilson wrote, should regard menopause as a degenerative disease that could be prevented or cured with the use of hormone drugs.

“No woman can be sure of escaping the horror of this living decay,” Dr. Wilson wrote. “There is no need for either valor or pretense. The need is for hormones.”

Premarin had been available for decades, but Dr. Wilson’s book propelled the idea of hormone “replacement” into the popular consciousness and onto physicians’ prescription pads. The revivifying drugs promised to inhibit the ravages of time on the appearance and the psyche, Dr. Wilson wrote.

As the popularity of estrogen grew, an increasing number of women developed cancer of the uterine lining, the endometrium. In 1975, an F.D.A. panel concluded there was a link between Premarin and endometrial cancer. The company then sent a letter to doctors trying to mitigate such concerns, documents show.

“Dear Doctor,” wrote Dr. John B. Jewell, at the time the medical director of Ayerst, the Wyeth predecessor. “It would be simplistic indeed to attribute an apparent increase in the diagnosis of endometrial carcinoma solely to estrogen therapy.” Women may still receive “proven benefits,” he wrote, by using “the lowest maintenance dose needed to control the menopausal symptoms.” He added that the company planned to study the issue further.

F.D.A. officials then met with company officials, saying they were “incensed” that the letter was “intended to obfuscate the issues,” according to a 1976 memo signed by the F.D.A. and the company. The F.D.A. said it would issue a bulletin saying there was a clear link between estrogen therapy and endometrial cancer. In 1976, the maker of Premarin added a warning to the label about the risk of endometrial cancer.

But the company never conducted further studies on the risk of developing endometrial cancer, according to the St. Louis appeals court decision.

The company instead focused its risk research on the possibility of breast cancers associated with hormone replacement therapy. But two studies published in the mid-1970s in The New England Journal of Medicine reported that taking estrogen therapy had increased the risk of endometrial cancer by at least five times.

Reports in 1975 about endometrial cancer “resulted in a precipitous decrease in estrogen use,” according to a history of hormone therapy in The American Journal of Medicine in 2005.

In 1980, researchers at Boston University Medical Center estimated that the use of hormone therapy had caused more than 15,000 cases of endometrial cancer in the United States between 1971 and 1975 alone.

This represents one of the largest epidemics of serious iatrogenic disease” — meaning disease caused by physician-administered treatments — “that has ever occurred in this country,” the authors wrote. (Mr. Loder said Pfizer was not familiar with that report.)

Today, physicians prescribe Premarin to women who have had hysterectomies and therefore are not at risk for endometrial cancer.

BY the mid-1990s, after a few studies had reported a protective effect of hormone drugs on the heart, Wyeth had begun to reposition menopausal hormone therapy as a preventive health choice that could help inhibit heart disease and other maladies, according to court documents.

That marketing strategy coincided with the introduction of Wyeth’s new combination hormone drug Prempro, which included a progestin hormone to keep estrogen from causing excessive cell growth in the uterine lining.

In one commercial from a Wyeth research institute, the model Lauren Hutton runs down a beach and warns of the health risks of estrogen loss.

“My doctor said if you don’t replace estrogen that you lose at menopause, your risk for certain age-related diseases could increase,” Ms. Hutton said in the commercial. In a voice-over, a narrator told viewers about studies looking into the connections between menopause and heart disease, memory loss and sight loss.

“Believe me,” Ms. Hutton said, “the time to protect your future is now.”

Sally Beatty, a spokeswoman for Pfizer, said this was a “help seeking” ad, of the type encouraged by the F.D.A. She added that the promotion did not mention any specific drugs, not did it suggest that drugs could cure the ailments described.

The labels for Premarin and Prempro at the time said the drugs were approved to treat moderate to severe symptoms of menopause like hot flashes, night sweats and vaginal dryness and to prevent osteoporosis.

But Wyeth also positioned its menopausal hormone drugs as having larger protective benefits, court documents show.

Wyeth used proxies to promote a wide range of health benefits from hormone therapy, paying millions of dollars to influential doctors and medical groups and helping them develop abstracts for medical conferences and articles for medical journals, according to court documents.

The company also paid $12 million to sponsor continuing medical education programs from 2002 through 2006 at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. The programs, including an assertion that the Women’s Health Initiative and another heart-risk study “miss the mark on quality of life,” reached thousands of doctors.

Doctors were aware in the 1990s that hormone therapy could increase a woman’s risk of breast cancer, says Dr. Carol Bates, the director of the primary care program at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston.

But based on the results of observational studies that had been published, many physicians, herself included, believed that the drugs’ ostensible ability to reduce heart attacks and perhaps Alzheimer’s would outweigh a breast cancer risk, she says.

“In the 1990s, there was actually tremendous pressure to put women on hormone therapy, and it came from a good place,” Dr. Bates says. “But it was taken a bit to the extreme.”

HORMONE therapy — aimed at the symptoms it effectively treats and with full disclosure about its possible risks — has many advocates. Dr. Lynne T. Shuster, the director of the women’s health clinic at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., says such regimens can be very worthwhile for treating hot flashes, night sweats and vaginal dryness associated with menopause.

And some users agree.

Irene Fisher, a kitchen and bath designer in Baldwin, N.Y., says she has been taking Prempro for 16 years to control hot flashes and night sweats.

“I always feel good when I take it,” she says. The benefits are worth a small risk, Ms. Fisher says, adding that she has an annual mammogram to check for breast cancer and that “I think you have to know your own body.”

But many women were not so fully informed in the 1990s.

In 1996, for example, a federal study reported that breast cancer risk may have been “substantially underestimated.” Wyeth reacted with plans to dismiss it as “just one more paper,” and try to “overshadow” it by directing journalists to other studies, according to documents cited in the court of appeals decision in Missouri.

In 1997, Wyeth began working with DesignWrite, a company in Princeton, N.J., that is paid by drug makers to develop manuscripts for publication in medical journals. The specific objective of a publication plan for Premarin was to “increase physician awareness on the multitude of benefits that hormone replacement therapy provides” and “diminish the negative perceptions associated with estrogens and cancer,” according to a 1997 DesignWrite proposal prepared for Wyeth.

Over the next decade, Wyeth paid DesignWrite to prepare at least 60 articles for publication in medical journals on the potential benefits of hormone therapy for cardiovascular disease, Alzheimer’s disease, diabetes, colon cancer, vision loss and other health problems, the court documents show.

In response to an e-mail query, Michael Platt, president of DesignWrite, wrote that the articles were all medically and scientifically accurate and valid and peer reviewed.

But Wyeth’s and DesignWrite’s effort hit an obstacle in 2002 when researchers reported the results of the Women’s Health Initiative.

The National Institutes of Health ultimately decided to start using the term “menopausal hormone therapy” instead of “hormone replacement therapy,” says Marcia L. Stefanick, a professor of medicine at the Stanford University medical school who was principal investigator on the Women’s Health Initiative study at her institution.

While the drugs are effective at treating symptoms like hot flashes, she says, the word “replacement” implies that women need hormone drugs after menopause. “But there is no good evidence that women need this after menopause,” In 2003, Wyeth added a “black box” warning to the label saying Prempro should not be prescribed to prevent cardiovascular disease.

The same year, the F.D.A. approved a lower dose version of Prempro so women would have more options.

Today, many doctors who once offered hormone therapy to women without symptoms like hot flashes limit the use of the drug to those with symptoms, prescribing low doses for a short time.

“Right now, the big difference is we do not recommend hormone therapy for good health or health promotion or anti-aging,” says Dr. Shuster of the Mayo Clinic.

And even with lower-dose hormones, doctors do not have a uniform view on what constitutes the optimal duration.

Dr. Adriane Fugh-Berman, an associate professor at the medical school of Georgetown University, considers both Premarin and Prempro examples of drugs that gained widespread popularity before science had established the full extent of their risks.

“Where there has always been a push is where there isn’t data,” says Dr. Fugh-Berman, who has been a paid expert witness for plaintiffs in the hormone litigation. “Now, low-dose hormones are being pushed.”

LIKE Dr. Wilson, the gynecologist in the 1960s who identified the evils of menopause, contemporary voices are advocating hormones as an anti-aging treatment.

The actress Suzanne Somers, for example, has identified her own lineup of maladies, which she calls the Seven Dwarves of Menopause: “Itchy. Bitchy. Sweaty. Sleepy. Bloated. Forgetful. All Dried Up.”

In books with titles like “The Sexy Years” and “Ageless,” Ms. Somers has promoted the use of “bio-identical” hormones, which can be prescribed by doctors in customized doses and can be prepared individually by pharmacies.

But Dr. Shuster of the Mayo Clinic says the hormones have not been extensively studied for safety and efficacy. And, unlike branded hormone therapy, she says, they have not been approved by the F.D.A.

Women, Dr. Shuster says, should not assume that compounded hormones are safer than F.D.A.-approved menopausal hormone drugs. Nevertheless, with sales of more than two million books, Ms. Somers has become a menopause guru to millions.

“I think I had a lot to do with making the word ‘menopause’ mentionable,” Ms. Somers, 63, said in a phone interview last week. She said the compounded hormones were safe, and she sent some articles from medical journals to back up her point.

In fact, much of Ms. Somers’s description of menopause as a deficiency that can be rebalanced with hormones sounds like a modern take on “Feminine Forever.”

“Hormones,” Ms. Somers said last week, “are the juice of life.”


11 Dec 2009

Man-Made Chemicals Blamed As Many More Girls Than Boys Are Born In Arctic

Posted by vickieq. Leave Comments

Twice as many girls as boys are being born in some Arctic villages because of high levels of man-made chemicals in the blood of pregnant women, according to scientists from the Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme (Amap).

The scientists, who say the findings could explain the recent excess of girl babies across much of the northern hemisphere, are widening their investigation across the most acutely affected communities in Russia, Greenland and Canada to try to discover the size of the imbalance in Inuit communities of the far north.

In the communities of Greenland and eastern Russia monitored so far, the ratio was found to be two girls to one boy. In one village in Greenland only girls have been born.

The scientists measured the man-made chemicals in women’s blood that mimic human hormones and concluded that they were capable of triggering changes in the sex of unborn children in the first three weeks of gestation. The chemicals are carried in the mother’s bloodstream through the placenta to the foetus, switching hormones to create girl children.

Lars-Otto Reierson, executive secretary for Amap, said: “We knew that the levels of man-made chemicals were accumulating in the food chain, and that seals, whales and particularly polar bears were getting a dose a million times higher than that existing in plankton, and that this could be toxic to humans who ate these higher animals. What was shocking was that they were also able to change the sex of children before birth.”

The sex balance of the human race – historically a slight excess of boys over girls – has recently begun to change. A paper published in the US National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences earlier this year said that in Japan and the US there were 250,000 boys fewer than would have been expected had the sex ratio existing in 1970 remained unchanged. The paper was unable to pin down a cause for the new excess of girls over boys.

The Arctic scientists have discovered that many of the babies born in Russia are premature and the boys are far smaller than girls. Possible links between the pollutants and high infant mortality in the first year of life is also being investigated.

Scientists believe a number of man-made chemicals used in electrical equipment from generators, televisions and computers that mimic human hormones are implicated. They are carried by winds and rivers to the Arctic where they accumulate in the food chain and in the bloodstreams of the largely meat- and fish-eating Inuit communities.

The first results of the survey were disclosed at a symposium of religious, scientific and environmental leaders in Greenland’s capital, Nuuk, yesterday, organised by the Patriarch of the Orthodox Church, Bartholomew I, which is looking at the effects of environmental pollution on the Arctic.

Dr Reierson said the accumulation of DDT, PCBs, flame-retardants and other endocrine disrupters has been known for some time and young women had been advised to avoid eating some Arctic animals to avoid excess contamination and possible damage to their unborn children.

Dr Reierson, said blood samples from pregnant women were subsequently matched with the sex of their baby. Women with elevated levels of PCBs in their blood above two to four micrograms per litre and upwards were checked in three northern peninsula’s in Russia’s far east – the Kola, Taimyr and Chukotka – plus the Pechora River Basin.

To check the results the survey was widened and further communities, including those on Commodore Island, were investigated. The results were now in for 480 families and the ratio remained the same.

He said full results for the widening of the survey would not be published until next year but preliminary results for Greenland showed the same 2:1 ratio in the north.

Aqqaluk Lynge, the former chairman of the Inuit Circumpolar Conference who hails from Greenland, said: “This is a disaster, especially for some 1,500 people who make up the Inuit nations in the far north east of Russia.

“Here in the north of Greenland, in the villages near the Thule American base, only girl babies are being born to Inuit families.

“The problem is acute in the north and east of Greenland where people still have the traditional diet.

“This has become a critical question of people’s survival but few governments want to talk about the problem of hormone mimickers because it means thinking about the chemicals you use. ”I think they need to be tested much more stringently before they are allowed on the market.”

Trivani Products Carries A Do No Harm Philosophy


2 Dec 2009

New Study Finds Synthetic Musks in Umbilical Cord Blood. Why?

Posted by vickieq. Leave Comments

180_BodyBurden

Today, Campaign for Safe Cosmetics founding member Environmental Working Group released a new study that found 232 chemical contaminants in umbilical cord blood samples from 10 newborn American babies. Among the findings: two synthetic musks, components of fragrance, were found in 7 of the 10 cord blood samples.

Artificial musks commonly added to fragrances and personal care products can be absorbed through skin or inhaled, and concentrate and persist in our bodies – so our many small exposures can add up fast. Synthetic musks have also been found in human breast milk and fatty tissues, and are ubiquitous in wastewater and rivers.

The cosmetics industry and other industries that use “fragrance” in their products use a whopping 9,000 tons of synthetic musk annually, despite the fact that little is known about the safety of these chemicals. Unfortunately, preliminary research raises concerns: musks may disrupt hormones and are toxic to aquatic life.

Because of a loophole in labeling law, the ingredients in “fragrance” are considered trade secrets, so companies don’t have to tell us what’s in scents – often dozens or even hundreds of synthetic chemical compounds like synthetic musks and other ingredients linked to harm.

Biomonitoring studies like this one make clear that chemicals – many of which have never been tested for long-term safety or are known to be harmful – used in everyday products are ending up in our bodies and in our ecosystem. At the same time, cancer, infertility, and behavioral and developmental illnesses linked to many of these chemicals of concern are on the rise.

As consumers and citizens, we can fight the fragrance loophole. Here are three ways you can make a difference:

  1. Contact the manufacturer of a cosmetic product in your bathroom that lists “fragrance,” “perfume” or “musk” on the ingredient label, and ask the maker to use non-toxic ingredients and fully disclose all ingredients on products labels. Click here for contact info, talking points and a short response form so you can let us how your conversation went!
  2. This holiday season, choose gifts free of synthetic fragrance. Consult the list of companies that have signed the Compact for Safe Cosmetics, and use EWG’s Skin Deep database to run an “advanced search” of products without synthetic fragrance.
  3. Check out our DIY cosmetics recipes for creative, fresh gifts for you and yours!

Thank you for making a difference in 2009, whether you wrote a letter to a company or Congress, contacted the FDA or switched out your old products for safe alternatives. You’re a vital part of our work for safer cosmetics and smarter laws that protect our health.

Wishing you a healthy, happy holiday season and New Year!

- Mia, Lisa, Marisa and the entire Campaign for Safe Cosmetics team

8 Nov 2009

Video With Anderson Cooper And Why Trivani’s ‘Do No Harm’ Philosophy Is So Important Today

Posted by vickieq. Leave Comments

Anderson_Cooper pic

After watching Trivani’s main video, please take a moment and view this video with Anderson Cooper/Anchorman with CNN. After viewing Anderson’s video, I’m sure you’ll have a better understanding of the urgency in sharing Trivani’s ‘do no harm’ philosophy with everyone you know!



Live Your Life On ‘Purpose’ With Trivani!

8 Nov 2009

Trivani’s Main Video

Posted by vickieq. Leave Comments

little boy with hands on head BIG

If you have a heart for children, care about your health and the health of your own children, and are wanting to make a substantial income then you need to take a closer look at Trivani’s three missions: Purpose Health and Prosperity, each being essential to one another.

Please take a moment and view this video, which explains all three of Trivani’s mission.

With Trivani You Can Make More Than A Great Living; You Can Change the Life Of A Starving Child Forever!

8 Nov 2009

Trivani Webcasts – Learn More About Trivani’s Three Missions: Purpose Health and Prosperity

Posted by vickieq. Leave Comments

Join us every night except Thursday, Saturday and Sunday for a webcast that will explain how simple it is to live your life on ‘Purpose’ as a Trivani Distributor.

Here’s how to access the webcast:

6PM(pt), 7PM(mt), 8PM(ct), 9PM(et)
Click on this link
http://www.trivaniworldgroup.com
Type in your name and then type in the word ‘guest’ for the password.

With Trivani You Can Make More Than A Great Living; You Can Change A Child’s Life Forever!

8 Nov 2009

Trivani Opportunity Meetings In Hawaii and Torrance, Calif.

Posted by vickieq. Leave Comments

Trivani really is taking off around the globe! Don’t miss out on getting in on the ground floor of this amazing company that is touching and changing lives!

I will not be at either one of these events, however please mention my name at the check-in table, where you will be warmly greeted! Thanks.

Passionately Creating Awareness,

Vickie Queen

Honolulu, Hawaii
Date: November 10, 2009
Time: 6:00 p.m.-8:00 p.m. (door opens at 5:30 p.m.)
Presenter: Bob Steed, Trivani’s CEO
Location: Waikiki Resort Hotel, Orchid Room
2460 Koa Ave.
Honolulu, Hawaii 96815

For the Hawaii meeting, please RSVP to Izumi Hamada at izumih@trivani.com or Naoko Muldowney at naoko.trivani@gmail.com

Torrance, California
Date: November 14, 2009
Time: 10:00 a.m. Pacific Time
Presenter: Shane McClellan, VP of Global Sales and Marketing
Location: Double Tree Hotel Torrance/South Bay, Horizon Room
21333 Hawthorne Boulevard
Torrance, California 90503

8 Nov 2009

Trivani Events Coming Up In San Diego November 14th and 15th

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World’s First Humanitarian Network Marketing Company Is Turning Business Into Benevolence

Trivani is a company with a unique vision to use the power and profit of network marketing to spread humanitarian aid around the world. Trivani fulfills its humanitarian goals through three main missions: Purpose Health and Prosperity - Each is essential to the success of the others.

Sponsor a Child by Using Trivani Products

Find Your Purpose

Long after you’ve used up your first bottle of Trivani shampoo, the good that it did for you and for the world lingers on. A portion of every sale of a Trivani product goes towards supporting a starving child, building clinics, schooling, shelters and so much more.

The Bad News

What You Don’t Know Could Hurt You And Your Children

How safe are your personal care products? The answer might surprise you! Many of the products you use every day contain chemicals that are toxic and even potentially cancer causing. These hidden dangers can also disrupt your hormones, and your children’s hormones.

The Good News

The ‘Do No Harm’ Philosophy

Trivani has a unique approach called the ‘do no harm’ philosophy, which ensures that every Trivani product contains no known harmful ingredients and causes no known harmful interactions. Why give yourself and your loved ones anything less than the best?

Prosperity

Trivani’s incredible compensation plan has payouts at the top of the industry, helping to generate vast funds for humanitarian projects across the globe.

Trivani has two events coming up this weekend in San Diego County:

Saturday, Nov. 14th

10:00AM-12:00PM

Del Mar Branch Library

1309 Camino Del Mar

Del Mar, CA  92014

Sunday, Nov. 15th

2:00PM-4:00PM

Controversial Bookstore

3063 University Ave.

San Diego, CA 92104

Presenters: Carl Snyder and Vickie Queen

*Please rsvp Carl for either event at (619) 697-6700.

At these events you’ll learn how to use Trivani’s ‘do no harm’ products to make a significant difference in the lives of needy children. It’s easier than you think.