As the material of choice for blood
bags and medical tubing, vinyl helps to maintain the worlds
blood supply and supports critical healthcare procedures such as
dialysis. As a packaging
material, vinyl helps to keep meats and other foods safe and
fresh during transportation and on store shelves, and it provides
tamper-resistant packaging for food, pharmaceuticals and other products.
Because it will not rust or corrode and breaks far less frequently
than alternative materials, vinyl is widely used in water pipes
to deliver clean, safe-to-drink water and in sewer pipes to ensure
the integrity of wastewater handling systems. Vinyls resistance
to breakdown under high electrical voltage and its ability to bend
without cracking make it the leading material for wire and cable
insulation. As an underbody coating on automobiles, vinyl has helped
to add years to the life of motor vehicles. Vinyls toughness
and durability make it the most widely used plastic for building
and construction applications such as siding, windows, roofing,
fencing, decking, wallcoverings and flooring. These are just a few
of the myriad, cost-effective uses of vinyl in everyday life.
Vinyl has been used in products for decades without any evidence
of harm to human health. Vinyl is used in medical products such
as blood
bags and medical tubing and in such food-contact
applications as meat wrap, bottles and can enamel. These products
are regulated for safety by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.
According to Bruce Burlington, MD, director, FDA's Center for Devices
and Radiological Health (CDRH), "We believe that IV bags, blood
administration sets and other uses of PVC including dialysis tubing
are safe" (Boston Globe, Feb. 22, 1999). Alternative
materials may not be available or may not offer the important performance
characteristics that vinyl offers for these and other uses. This
point was made by David Feigal, MD, medical deputy director, FDA's
Center for Biologics Evaluation & Research (CBER), who said,
we would need to see a substantial amount of testing
to make sure we weren't moving from a product with good characteristics
to one that we don't know very much about" (Washington Post,
Feb. 22, 1999).
In another example of its safety, vinyl is used in pipes certified
to meet American National Standards Institute/National Sanitation
Foundation Standard 61 for safe use in drinking water service.
Over the past several years, vinyl production has risen while environmental
releases associated with production and disposal have fallen. This
is due in part to the fact that vinyl has been regulated for decades,
ensuring that workers, local communities and the environment are
protected at each step in the life cycle of the material and the
products made from it. Just as important, the vinyl industry instituted
its own
voluntary programs to improve manufacturing efficiencies and reduce emissions
extending the impact of government efforts even further.
The vinyl industry supported strict federal standards for incinerators that are now being phased in.
For more information, visit www.vinylinfo.org
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