Loading video...

Video Failed to Load

Go Home

Here is how I avoid microplastics…

354,668 views • 1 year ago •via X (Twitter)

10 Comments

Kevin Bae's profile picture
Kevin Bae1 year ago

This is a little over the top. If there are so many microplastics in the air that we have to wash dishes prior to every use wouldn't that mean we should all wear N95 masks 24/7? If it's landing on the dishes we surely are inhaling them.

Tassos ©️'s profile picture
Tassos ©️1 year ago

I am sorry but this is paranoia to another lever. Yes, to filtering your water, but the rest is what will leave you with paranoia and OCD

Paul Saladino, MD's profile picture
Paul Saladino, MD1 year ago

Even though it may seem extreme, I believe it’s worth our best effort when trying to limit our exposure to microplastics. Microplastics have been shown to be very harmful to humans and were recently found in carotid arteries of humans with atherosclerosis and even human testicles…

mordin solus, m.d.'s profile picture
mordin solus, m.d.1 year ago

Any chance the tubes that carry the water inside the filter are made of plastic?

Paul Saladino, MD's profile picture
Paul Saladino, MD1 year ago

Yes, but the water gets contaminated with microplastics after sitting in a plastic bottle for a very long time. Drinking from a RO filter will never be as bad as drinking from plastic bottles.

Neophyte 🦅 🇺🇸's profile picture
Neophyte 🦅 🇺🇸1 year ago

FYI:

Dylan Singh's profile picture
Dylan Singh1 year ago

Just put yourself in a sauna and melt all the plastics in your body. Then use those plastics and make a waterbottle. Reusable :)

Chilo Alaniz's profile picture
Chilo Alaniz1 year ago

Do you use or recommend a home air filter? Curious cause you mentioned microplastic dust I imagine we inhale that

Trent McKendrick's profile picture
Trent McKendrick1 year ago

So, I have a question.. if a plastic bottle takes 1000’s of years in ocean water to even start to breakdown. How is spring water, Fiji for example, going to make the bottles susceptible to micro plastics? Is your assumption from leakage into the bottles from caps snapping off from the seal, or factory defects and micro pieces floating in the water?

Paul Saladino, MD's profile picture
Paul Saladino, MD1 year ago

@MaxiTurned It’s very difficult to completely avoid microplastics today but that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t try… our biggest exposure comes from these three things and I believe it’s worth the effort

Related Videos