Naughty by Nature
Ever thought about the toxins in your sex toys?
By Emily Gertz
06 Dec 2005
So you're an Enlightened Green Consumer. You buy organic food and carry
it home from the local market in string bags. Your coffee is
shade-grown and fair-trade, your water's solar-heated, and your car is
a hybrid. But what about the playthings you're using for grown-up fun
between those organic cotton sheets -- how healthy and environmentally
sensitive are they?
Peace and coital unto you.
Photo: Lise Gagne/iStockphoto.
Few eco-conscious shoppers consider the chemicals used to create their intimate devices. Yes, those things
-- from vibrators resembling long-eared bunny rabbits to sleeves and
rings in shapes ranging from faux female to flower power. If these seem
like unmentionables, that's part of the problem: while some are made
with unsafe materials, it's tough to talk about that like, well, adults.
But it's necessary. Unlike other plastic items that humans put to
biologically intimate use -- like medical devices or chew-friendly
children's toys -- sex toys go largely unregulated and untested. And
some in the industry say it's time for that to change.
Love Stinks
Many popular erotic toys are made of polyvinyl chlorides (PVC) --
plastics long decried by eco-activists for the toxins released during
their manufacture and disposal -- and softened with phthalates, a
controversial family of chemicals. These include invitingly soft
"jelly" or "cyberskin" items, which have grown popular in the last
decade or so, says Carol Queen, Ph.D., "staff sexologist" for the San
Francisco-based adult toy boutique Good Vibrations. "It's actually
difficult for a store today to carry plenty of items and yet avoid
PVC," Queen says. "Its use has gotten pretty ubiquitous among the large
purveyors, because it's cheap and easy to work with."
In recent years, testing has revealed the potentially serious health
impacts of phthalates. Studies on rats and mice suggest that exposure
could cause cancer and damage the reproductive system. Minute levels of
some phthalates have been linked to sperm damage in men, and this year,
two published studies linked
phthalate exposure in the womb and through breast milk to male reproductive issues.
A study in 2000 by German chemist Hans Ulrich Krieg found that 10
dangerous chemicals gassed out of some sex toys available in Europe,
including diethylhexyl phthalates. Some had phthalate concentrations as
high as 243,000 parts per million -- a number characterized as "off the
charts" by Davis Baltz of the health advocacy group Commonweal. "We
were really shocked," Krieg told the Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation's Marketplace
in a 2001 report on the sex-toy industry. "I have been doing this
analysis of consumer goods for more than 10 years, and I've never seen
such high results."
The danger, says Baltz, is that heat, agitation, and extended shelf
life can accelerate the leaching of phthalates. "In addition,
[phthalates are] lipophilic, meaning they are drawn to fat," he says.
"If they come into contact with solutions or substances that have lipid
content, the fat could actually help draw the phthalates out of the
plastic." Janice Cripe, a former buyer for Blowfish -- a Bay Area-based
online company whose motto is "Good Products for Great Sex" -- confirms
the instability of jelly toys: "They would leak," she says. "They'd
leach this sort of oily stuff. They would turn milky" and had a "kind
of plasticky, rubbery odor." She stopped ordering many jelly toys
during her time at Blowfish, even though their lower prices made them
popular.
Spend Your $.02
Discuss this story in our blog, Gristmill.
So what's being done to protect consumers?
Well, nothing. While the U.S., Japan, Canada, and the European Union
have undertaken various restrictions regarding phthalates in children's
toys, no such rules exist for adult toys. In order to be regulated in
the U.S. under current law, sex toys would have to present what the
federal government's Consumer Product Safety Commission calls a
"substantial product hazard" -- essentially, a danger from materials or
design that, in the course of using the product as it's made to be
used, could cause major injury or death. But if you look at the
packaging of your average mock penis or ersatz vagina, it's probably
been labeled as a "novelty," a gag gift not intended for actual use.
That's an important semantic dodge that allows less scrupulous
manufacturers to elude responsibility for potentially harmful
materials, and to evade government regulation. If you stick it
somewhere it wasn't meant to go, well -- caveat emptor, baby!
It's a striking lack of oversight for a major globalized industry. The Guardian
recently estimated that 70 percent of the world's sex toys are
manufactured in China, and the CBC's 2001 report suggested the North
American market might be worth $400 million to $500 million.
More detailed figures can be hard to come by. "In the U.S., all of the
companies that manufacture adult novelties, whether they're mom-and-pop
or large corporations, are privately held," explains Philip Pearl,
publisher and editor in chief of AVN Adult Novelty Business, a trade magazine. "None are required to publish financial information, and none do."
Queen thinks the lack of agreed-upon standards is a major problem. She
and the staff at Good Vibrations have often had to fall back on
marginally relevant regulations. "I remember trying in the early '90s
to track down information on an oil used on beautiful hand-carved
wooden dildos -- was it safe to put into the body?" she says. "The
closest comparison we could find was the regulation governing wooden
salad utensils!"
Taking Things Into Their Own Hands
Metis Black, president of U.S.-based erotic-toy manufacturer Tantus Silicone, has written on the health risks of materials for Adult Novelty Business.
"Self-regulation -- eventually we've got to do it," says Black, who
adds that creating safe toys is what got her into the business about
seven years ago. "Just like children's teething toys, we're going to
have to start doing the dialogue" within the industry, Black says, to
"discuss what's in toys and how it affects customers." Otherwise, she
feels, government regulators will step in.
Just duckie.
Photo:
Big Teaze Toys.
While the industry wrestles with such issues, some manufacturers and
suppliers aren't waiting for regulations. Tony Levine, founder of Big
Teaze Toys, says he's made his products -- including the cutely
discreet, soft-plastic vibrator
I Rub My Duckie
-- phthalate-free from the start. "While working at Mattel as a toy
designer, I was made very aware of the concerns of using only safe
materials for children's products," he says. "This training has stuck
with me ... We take great pride in using only the materials which meet
strict toxicity safety standards for both the U.S. and the E.U."
Meanwhile, if customers select jelly playthings at Babeland, a retailer
with stores in Los Angeles, New York City, and Seattle, the staff gives
them a tip sheet on phthalates, and recommends using a condom with the
toy. "Our goal is to help people make an educated choice, and give out
as much information as we can find -- without alarming people," says
Abby Weintraub, an associate manager at the company's Soho store.
Babeland staff also steer willing customers toward phthalate-free
alternatives, such as hard plastic, or the silicone substitute VixSkin.
Some manufacturers are also using thermoplastic elastomers instead of
PVC. Vibratex recently reformulated the popular
Rabbit Habit dual-action vibrator -- made famous on Sex and the City
-- with this material. Vibratex co-owner Daniel Martin says the company
has always used "superior grade," stable PVC formulations, and still
considers the products safe, but acknowledges that customers are eager
for phthalate-free tools. While alternative materials can be more
expensive, Weintraub says when people have the option of choosing them,
many do.
The owners of the
Smitten Kitten,
a Minneapolis-based retailer, opted not to carry jellies, cyberskins,
or other potentially toxic toys at all when they opened about two years
ago. "They're dangerous to human health, to the environment," says
co-owner Jennifer Pritchett. "It's part of our philosophy to put good
things in the world, and it's counter to that to sell things that are
toxic."
No Sex Please, We're Skittish
Life imitates art.
Photo: Debra St. John/
babeland.com.
So what are the other alternatives for eco-conscious pleasure-seekers?
The most ecologically correct choices may be metal or hardened glass
dildos -- which, with their elegant, streamlined shapes (and sometimes
hefty price tags) can double as modernist sculptures if you grow weary
of their sensual charms. "The glass is going to be more lasting,
possibly safer, and less toxic than something that's plastic," confirms
Babeland marketing manager Rebecca Suzanne.
And the eco-choices don't stop there. If you want to do your part for conservation while getting a buzz, go for the
Solar Vibe,
a bullet vibrator that comes wired to a small solar panel. Some
vibrators come with rechargeable power packs, says Suzanne, "which is a
little bit better alternative to the typical battery-run toy, where you
just toss the batteries ... into the landfill."
What about accessories? The Smitten Kitten takes pride in its
"animal-friendly" inventory of bondage and fetish gear. "We have some
floggers that are made of nylon rope ... natural rope, and rubber,"
says Pritchett. "The same with the paddles, collars, cuffs, and
whatnot. Totally leather-free, animal-product-free."
A few manufacturers are bringing green values directly to the adult-toy
market via products that might not be out of place in the cosmetics
aisle of a natural-foods mega-retailer. Offerings include Body Wax's
candles made from soy and essential oils, and Sensua Organic's fruit-flavored or unflavored
lubes
-- one of a few lubricant lines touting either organic or all-natural
formulations. "People enjoy having the option," says Weintraub. "It's
like, 'I use organic face wash. Maybe I want to use organic lube,
too.'"
Pritchett feels health and eco-conscious retailers are a shopper's best
ally for staying safe and healthy. "So many of us are used to shopping
for organic food, or ecologically safe building products, or
cosmetics," she says. When people realize it's possible to shop for sex
toys the same way, "you can see a light bulb go off -- they realize
it's a consumer relationship and they can and should demand better
products."
Choosing the most eco-correct erotic toy can seem fraught with
compromises -- more akin to picking the most fuel-efficient automobile
than buying a bunch of organic kale. With no government assessment or
regulation on the immediate horizon, it's up to you, the consumer, to
shop carefully and select a tool that's health-safe, fits your budget,
and gets your rocks off. Meanwhile, pack up that old mystery-material
toy and send it back to the manufacturer with a note that they can stick it where the sun don't shine.