
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Could companies clean up their talc? In the 1970s, talc companies worked out a plan to check their product for asbestos fibres. The problem was, mineralogist Sean Fitzgerald says the testing method they chose wasn’t sensitive enough to truly weed all asbestos fibres out. But this testing method was taken up not just in America but around the world and still informs the standards today. Companies can legally say their talc is ‘asbestos free’ if they’ve used this method, but there could still be trace amounts of asbestos fibres in the product.
Meanwhile, epidemiologist Dan Cramer starts some research into a possible association between talc and ovarian cancer – but what does the latest research say?
Presenter and Producer: Phoebe Keane
By BBC Radio 44.4
3737 ratings
Could companies clean up their talc? In the 1970s, talc companies worked out a plan to check their product for asbestos fibres. The problem was, mineralogist Sean Fitzgerald says the testing method they chose wasn’t sensitive enough to truly weed all asbestos fibres out. But this testing method was taken up not just in America but around the world and still informs the standards today. Companies can legally say their talc is ‘asbestos free’ if they’ve used this method, but there could still be trace amounts of asbestos fibres in the product.
Meanwhile, epidemiologist Dan Cramer starts some research into a possible association between talc and ovarian cancer – but what does the latest research say?
Presenter and Producer: Phoebe Keane

7,665 Listeners

882 Listeners

1,049 Listeners

258 Listeners

5,536 Listeners

1,797 Listeners

1,763 Listeners

1,041 Listeners

1,923 Listeners

414 Listeners

411 Listeners

731 Listeners

215 Listeners

850 Listeners

997 Listeners

136 Listeners

17 Listeners

3,172 Listeners

159 Listeners

730 Listeners

257 Listeners

1,003 Listeners

1,190 Listeners

70 Listeners