Petitioning Pink Ribbons

It's October, and to many of us that means one thing: pink ribbons. But how many of us stop to read the labels on the products those ribbons adorn?
This post was published on the now-closed HuffPost Contributor platform. Contributors control their own work and posted freely to our site. If you need to flag this entry as abusive, send us an email.

It's October, and to many of us that means one thing: pink ribbons. But how many of us stop to read the labels on the products those ribbons adorn?

According to Breast Cancer Action, no one at Susan G. Komen for the Cure did -- BCA claims SGK's new Promise Me perfume tested positive for the hormone disruptor Galaxolide and the neurotoxin Toluene, which is banned by the International Fragrance Association.

Breast Cancer Action put together a petition urging Susan G. Komen to recall the fragrance and pledge to prevent pinkwashing, which they define as "a company or organization that claims to care about breast cancer by promoting a pink ribbon product, but at the same time produces, manufactures and/or sells products that are known or suspected to be linked to the disease."

I agree with Breast Cancer Action that while it is undeniable that organizations like Susan G. Komen have donated significant amounts of money to breast cancer prevention and research, it's also undeniable that many of them have slapped pink ribbons on products that contain carcinogens.

Petitions targeting organizations like Susan G. Komen can be very effective, but at the end of the day it's all about what we at Healthy Child Healthy World have been promoting for nearly 20 years: Read your labels, learn what the ingredients mean and vote with your dollars. It's amazing what companies will do if their products stop selling.

And finally, if you or someone you know has breast cancer, I can't recommend a better resource than "Breast Cancer: The Path of Wellness & Healing," a DVD series co-produced by Nina Montée Karp, which includes interviews with breast cancer survivors Christina Applegate and Olivia Newton-John, among others, as well as experts such as Dr. Deepak Chopra and Dr. Susan Love.

Full disclosure: Nina and her husband, Dr. Harvey Karp of "The Happiest Baby on the Block" book and DVD series, were founding members of Healthy Child Healthy World and currently serve our Honorary Board.

You can think pink while thinking green, too.

Popular in the Community

Close

HuffPost Shopping’s Best Finds

MORE IN LIFE