Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Fast fashion
Fast fashion - Credit: luanateutzi / DepositPhotos - License: DepositPhotos
Tech
Science
microplastics
fast fashion
plastic fibers
health damage
Plastic Soup Foundation
Barbo Melgert
University of Groningen
Maria Westerbos
Tuesday, 1 November 2022 - 16:30

Share this article:

Increasing evidence that microplastics in clothes may be harmful to health

Tiny plastic particles that come off of synthetic clothing are not only bad for the environment but there is also growing evidence that they cause health damage if people inhale them or ingest them through their mouths. The Plastic Soup Foundation analyzed hundreds of publications on the health risks of microplastics and summarized them in a report titled “Do clothes make us sick?”

According to the researchers, the honest answer is: “We don’t know for sure yet, but the scientific evidence is piling up.” Loose fibers of synthetic materials like polyester, nylon, acrylic, and polyamide are, in any case, abundant in our living environment, indoors and outdoors.

In the report, the Plastic Soup Foundation cites studies that show that microplastics can penetrate deep into the lungs and possibly cause inflammation. High exposure to nylon fibers can lead to Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis, another bowel disease. Research among workers at nylon mills in the US and Canada showed that 4 percent develop lung disease after prolonged exposure. These people have reduced lung capacity, shortness of breath, and cough a lot.

Young children, in particular, get full exposure to microplastics while playing. Researcher Barbo Melgert of the University of Groningen, who contributed to the report, showed with her own research that especially young lung cells are inhibited in their development if they come into contact with nylon fibers too much. “It’s worrying that children inhale twice as many plastic fibers as adults because their lungs are still developing,” she said.

Some of the microplastics around us come from clothing. The Plastic Soup Foundation, therefore, sees part of the solution in the clothing industry. The organization advocates for stricter regulations and, simultaneously, wants to make consumers aware of the risks of “fast fashion” - cheap clothing that often falls apart quickly. By delivering better quality, the clothing industry can do something about this. As far as the Plastic Soup Foundation is concerned, the clothing industry must reduce the plastic fibers in their clothing by half within five years.

“It must be banned to market clothes that wear out so quickly and lose so much fiber that they look like the emperor’s new clothes after five washes,” said Plastic Soup Foundation director Maria Westerbos.

More like this

Image
Orange tops at a clothing store.
"Ultrafast" fashion booms on King’s Day, fueling overconsumption warnings
Image
Two disposable vapes on a blue background
Hundreds of Dutch shops still selling illegal vapes
Image
A man is taking a plastic container out of the microwave
Greenpeace: “Safe to heat” containers release hundreds of thousands of microplastics
Image
The provincial flag of Groningen flies in Winschoten with a seismogram printed on it in protest of gas extraction and the resultant earthquakes. 20 Sept. 2019
Earthquake damage linked to school absence and mental health issues in Groningen teens
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Truck drivers face constant parking shortages as deficit reaches 4,400 spaces
  • Netherlands advised to stop criminal prosecution for school truancy
  • More teens, parents turn to hotlines over organized crime, bullying, depression
  • Teen sentenced to two years in juvenile detention for fatal Amsterdam-Zuidoost shooting
  • Strikes threaten Father’s Day shopping as Gall & Gall, Etos, Kruidvat face walkouts

Top stories

  • 15-year-old girl suspected of murdering parents in Groningen remains in custody
  • Storm warning joins heat warning: Temps up to 35°C, with hail, gusts, & downpours
  • No NS trains for 4 hours on Wednesday as workers strike against social benefits cuts
  • Dutch police failed to investigate over 10,000 serious crimes in 2024: Court of Audit
  • Pinkpop expects extreme heat at festival; Race events adjust plans amid marathon deaths

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content