Good Morning J.,
It can be so overwhelming when you start looking into this.
I think for me, as a nurse, I understand that my skin is one of the largest organs in my body. Everything I do to it may or may not have an immediate and/or long term effect on my health. I will be honest, that even with my nursing background and limited understanding of the whole biochemistry and pathophysiology of many different things, it is just that, LIMITED.
Probably because we do constantly get mixed messages and mis-information.
The cosmetics database mentioned by a couple of others is a great resource. I also like the Environmental Working Group site, sorry I can't think of their web address. www.Mercola.com and www.naturalnews.com
But probably the first thing I ever read that gave me a better understanding of all this is a book called "The Hundred Year Lie" by Randall Fitzgerald. He does a great job of laying of the timeline of how and when certain chemicals were introduced to society and the resulting medical and/or environmental issue. NOT saying necessarily there is a cause and effect but makes you go HUMM. . .
Some of the facts he presents are:
- As of 1999 there are more than 25,000 cosmetic chemicals in use but less than 4% of these chemicals have been tested for safety in humans.
- Even if and when a chemical may be tested and proven safe it is for that chemical alone. Rarely, if ever, are chemical food, drug, cosmetic additives/chemicals tested together to check the synergy of them together.
- Things that have a fragrance may have over 100 different chemicals making up that fragrance that are protected by copyright laws and do NOT have to be listed on the label.
- Things that say "unscented" or "fragrance free" usually still contain chemicals to mask the odors of the other ingredients.
There is no regulation on the phrases "natural" or "botanically based".
My feeling is the lab made version of cucumber juice is still man-made chemicals and in the long term may be harmful or at least not as helpful as once thought. This has been proven over and over again in the vitamin/supplement industry. The man-made synthetic version of Vitamin C is not as effective as eating an orange or even an apple. The synthetic version of Vitamin E, was found NOT to be helpful and overall harmful to those with heart issues.
We just do the best we can with the info we have at the time. Just keep asking questions and reading. Take that mommy gut feeling and listen to what makes sense to you, not what someone is trying to convince you is right.
Good Luck and in good health,
Lori