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This is why I simply tear open the tea bags and dump them into a fine mesh stainless steel basket and set it in the cup.
I have yet to find loose leaf tea tasty enough to repeat buy but I do have 3-4 flavors of bagged tea I always keep stocked.
The biggest downside to doing my favorite bagged teas this way is it’s a pain to clean out the metal basket when I just want another cup the next day, but to me the trade off on sidestepping the microplastic issue is worthwhile
Looks like the risk comes from boiling tea bags made of these materials. Cold steep chads keep winning
So... Psychopaths?
You're a monster. I just wanted you to know that.
These "materials" included cellulose, which is just plant fiber.
Are we really going to start calling plant fibers "bioplastics" now in an effort to scare people?
Polymerized cellulose is by definition a biobased polymer, this isn't anything new. The study doesn't make any claims that polymerized cellulose is harmful. Calling them "plant fibers" is incorrect as they aren't derived directly from a plant, like say, cotton. These are manufactured using cellulose.
One thing to note with all these articles; so far, there are no major comprehensive studies that definitively show microplastics are a danger to the body, or show what levels are considered acceptable or not.
Considering the entire world population hasn't just collectively died in the last 50 years, I'm leaning towards the effects of microplastics being negligible, or at least a hell of a lot less dangerous than other established risks like processed meat or direct sunlight.
We tried that approach with leaded gasoline and paint, asbestos building materials, cigarettes, and a variety of other things over the past several generations. They didn't kill the entire world population, but things didn't turn out so well for the people who waited for definitive studies. Good luck with your gamble.
There's no gamble though. Microplastics are unavoidable. I guarantee that you and every other poster here are filled with them.
Just assuming that reducing even a little bit of microplastic won't make a difference is a gamble in itself.
Meanwhile cancer rates are sky rocketing and we don’t know why.
Perhaps leaning on the conservative side is smarter than going balls out on plastic because we are too ignorant to know the actual effects.
If we find that all the plastic pollution is what’s causing so much cancer then there’s nothing we can do about it because it’s already too late with how prevalent plastic pollution already is.
Pretty much every case of damage due to pollution is caused by ignorance and I don’t see this situation being any different.
Stroke rate increasing as well.