Sawbones: A Marital Tour of Misguided Medicine - Sawbones: Tampons
Episode Date: July 16, 2024You may have heard that a new study showed tampons contain traces of metals. Dr. Sydnee and Justin go through the history of tampons, why they might contain metal, and what we still need to find out a...bout the possible effects of using them.Music: "Medicines" by The Taxpayers https://taxpayers.bandcamp.com/
Transcript
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Sawbones is a show about medical history, and nothing the hosts say should be taken
as medical advice or opinion.
It's for fun.
Can't you just have fun for an hour and not try to diagnose your mystery boil?
We think you've earned it.
Just sit back, relax, and enjoy a moment of distraction from that weird growth.
You're worth it. Alright, this one is about some books.
One, two, one, of misguided Medicine.
I'm your co-host Justin McElroy.
And I'm Sydney McElroy.
I'm opening a SOTY Sid.
No.
I'm supposed to say rip it and grip it, right?
Strike that, reverse it.
Grip it and rip it.
There it is.
Today, thank you listener.
I'll be starting off this Sawbones
like I do every Sawbones with an energy drink review.
Today we got C4 Performance Energy,
Popsicle Hawaiian Pineapple Flavor.
43 years old if you're asking.
Just yet, I mean I like the Popsicles,
but I don't like, well I don't like energy drinks
and I certainly don't like when they try to like,
have a flavor that is good other places but then when they put it in like energy drinks, and I certainly don't like when they try to have a flavor that is good other places,
but then when they put it in an energy drink,
they've perverted it.
I gotta do a show tonight, Sid.
I gotta be on point.
That's what Diet Dr. Pepper's for.
Okay.
Can I, should I start this episode
with sort of a group apology, or do you wanna do,
should we save it for the end?
Let's save it for the end. Let's save it for the end.
It's easier, yeah.
So you may have heard recently in the news,
very recently in the news, like I think,
well, I think that the study was actually published
a couple weeks ago, but I think that it has,
not even a couple, like a week ago,
but just in the last few days, it's like permeated culture.
And so, like me, you may have first heard about it
on TikTok and said, what, is that real?
And then found the study and realized that yes,
it is real, there are medals in our tampons.
Now, Sydney, there's medals in lots of things.
This is true, Justin.
And that is a fair point to bring up,
that a lot of times when a study like this
gains traction in popular culture,
there's a headline from it that's gaining the traction
and the nuance gets lost very quickly.
Yes.
Right?
And something that researchers are looking at going,
hmm, we need to study this more.
Popular opinion is going to either,
it's just gonna be one or the other, like,
oh, this is terrible or oh, this is nothing.
When the answer is usually,
we don't know if it's either or both
or none of those things yet.
It's pretty common if you're like,
especially if you have science reporters who,
I mean, obviously, I mean, one hopes to understand science
but may not be experts in their field. There's always, I mean, obviously, I mean, one hopes understand science,
but may not be experts in their field.
There's always a risk when you're synthesizing data
for that kind of thing that you are,
you're making the best assumptions you can about it,
but you may miss the forest for the trees.
I also feel like this is the kind of thing
that is going to, as experts are interviewed about it,
is going to lead a lot of reporters to maybe ask the
unadvisable question, will you still use tampons?
Which would be a wild question to ask a human in polite society, typically.
So metal and tampons though, we were talking, I diverted you.
We're saying that there is a, and that talking, I diverted you, we're saying that there is a,
and that is, I guess, what you probably assumed
when you first saw the TikTok that there is,
it's not uncommon for people to mention,
well, okay, vaccines are a pretty good example of, right?
There's things in vaccines that sound scary
and you use them for fear mongering
when you understand them, well, it's not really scary.
Exactly. This, not that, guessing from our conversations.
I think that there is some,
I'm not gonna, I don't even wanna say cause for concern,
but I do think this is something
we should be paying attention to.
Sometimes it's just like this is not something
you need to really worry about or will impact you
or that you can impact
and that's the end of that.
This is something I do think is worth paying attention to.
I certainly, I never, no, I don't wanna say never.
Sometimes you should panic, don't panic over this.
I'm not, I do not think everyone should panic.
So this is not fear-mongering,
but I do think we should be paying attention.
So there was a study that was published
in Environment International.
And I'm gonna talk, we're gonna talk a little bit
about the history of tampons first,
like modern history of tampons.
But I wanna talk about this study
because I think I don't wanna save that for the end.
I know that's what you wanna hear.
So Environment International published a study
called Tampons as a Source of Exposure to Metaloids.
Oh, oids was in parentheses.
So metal and oids, metal oids, both.
And researchers looked at the amount of heavy metals, including some that are toxic, in
30 different tampon brands.
This included a bunch of different brands that are popular throughout the US, EU, mainly
France, I believe in the UK.
And they also looked at both store brand and name brand tampons, and they looked at organic
and non-organic tampons, okay?
And the way that they did this is they,
if you're interested in how do you look at,
how do you figure out if there's metals in a tampon?
So-
Put a magnet into it.
Huh?
I put a magnet up to it.
Yeah, that's what they did, honey.
They held magnets to boxes of tampons
in the supermarket aisle and saw which one stuck.
Wow, easy.
That's not true.
Oh. That's not true at all.
Did you really think that's what they did?
No, I didn't when I said it,
but you played it so cool, I was like,
dang, Jamie, we didn't do it again.
So yeah, you got me twice, I guess.
No, they took little bits of tampons.
It's great, which by the way, I just, I was reading news articles about the study,
and they all link to the study.
So I was able to go directly to the study and read it.
It's all freely available from the journal, Environment International. So if you want to go
find tampons as a source of exposure to metal, you can. And you can read the entire thing for
yourself. And you can also find there's like a very helpful picture of like a tampon that has
been taken apart into all of its base components. And so it's like... Is that where you see the
metal rod inside of it? Like how did we miss this? How do we miss this? No, but it's like... Is that where you see the metal rod inside of it? Like, how do we miss this?
How do we miss this?
No, but it has like a diagram of a tampon and it's like, here is the non-woven outer
covering and here is B, the withdrawal string and C, the inner absorbent core, which has
been sort of shredded and poofed out to a big mass of cotton.
I will say this.
The applicator and the wrapper. There may be some percentage of our nation's
scientific minds that need a diagram
of how a tampon is put together.
Would we like to revisit Sally Ride
and the 100 tampons?
So anyway, they took bits of different parts
of the tampon, right?
So like the outer covering that some of them have,
which is sort of like a woven material,
the inner like poofy cotton stuff that absorbs in.
Can I, seriously, you may wanna explain
the parts of a tampon.
Okay, so a tampon, if you've never seen one,
which maybe you haven't, generally looks like,
I mean, they're described as bullet shaped.
And that often is kind of what they look like,
little, I mean, larger than that,
pieces of usually cotton, something absorbent.
Right.
They might have like,
and when I talk about like the outer woven covering,
it's like to hold the cotton.
And so when you look at the tampon,
you might not even,
it's not like you're seeing the covering.
It's just kind of the netting, mesh netting
sort of substance-like that is around
the outer cotton part, okay?
And then it has a string hanging off of it.
Right, so the cotton absorbs the menstrual product.
Exactly.
The netting sort of holds that all together.
Yeah, so that it's all one thing that you can,
and then it's got the string so you can pull it back out.
The string is of course like the Skyhook from Batman.
That's what you use for exfiltration.
Yes.
That's how you get them out on a bench.
Exactly, exactly.
That's just how you get them out.
And they can come with or without an applicator.
And an applicator can be cardboard or it can be plastic.
They made plastic ones that are like rounded at the tip
because then they're easier to insert is the idea.
But then obviously there's a lot of concern
about the environmental impact
of all these plastic applicators.
You can also find like more environmentally friendly ones
that are paper.
Yeah, edible, some edible.
Cardboard, I mean.
I've seen the E4U.
No, I've never seen edible.
And there's also tampons that don't have applicators.
So you just get the little cotton thing
and use your finger as the applicator.
Okay, can I ask a really dumb question?
Okay.
Okay, because this is something
that I didn't understand earlier
and that's about where I'm at now.
Some are small, like you were saying,
and then some are larger, like glow stick shaped.
What is the deal?
What's going on there?
What's the tubes?
What's up with the tubes?
And then there's a smaller thing.
Oh, well, you're talking about the applicators?
I don't know.
I've seen the small things,
and then there's bigger things.
Sometimes it's a bigger, is that what?
So it depends on if the applicator
is an expandable one or not.
Oh, okay.
There are some really small tampons and it's because they've they've turned the applicator
into a like an ex telescoping expandable thing that you pull out and then push the plunger
in to you know force the cotton out of the applicator and into the vagina.
And then there are other ones that are just already sort of extended, which is the longer
tampons that you see.
And then there are ones that don't use any applicator, which are quite small if you look
at them packaged, like they can be very little.
They have those a lot if you go to like a gas station bathroom, convenience store bathroom,
and there sometimes are tampons you can buy in a machine,
or if they're really nice, they're free,
but they usually have to buy them.
They're usually the applicator-less ones
because they take up so much less space.
Okay. Okay.
All right, no more diversions, I'm sorry.
Yes, and if you see different sizes
in terms of like super regular, ultra, super plus,
they're talking about the amount of flow.
That has nothing to do with the size of a vaginal cavity.
That is just the flow.
Why not always just use super?
Well, it's a larger piece of cotton.
So I would say that they might not be
as comfortable to insert.
And if you don't need it,
why are you putting a larger piece of-
It's like using a bigger bandage than you need.
Right.
It's just extra bandage.
Just use the size you need.
Yeah, that's it.
But it has nothing to do with that.
I think there's been a misconception
that it has something to do with the size of a vagina
and that is not what the different sizes are for.
I knew that part.
Okay, so they looked at 30 different tampon brands
and they took these bits of the tampon,
the outer part, the cotton part, the applicator, whatever.
They acid digested them, broke them down
with some sort of microwave device.
Not a microwave, I'm assuming they didn't microwave tampons,
but they used of microwave device. Not a microwave, I'm assuming they didn't microwave tampons, but they used a microwave device.
And then they used like mass spectrometry
to measure the amounts of different metals
within these components.
And they measured arsenic, barium, calcium, cadmium, cobalt,
chromium, copper, iron, manganese, mercury, nickel, lead,
selenium, strontium, vanadium, and zinc.
The testing was done by the senior author on the paper, Katherine Schilling,
who is a laboratory expert in metals at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health.
And surprise! There are metals in the tampons. That's what they found.
They found measurable, these are in the, you could, like, there's an abstract,
so if you're not familiar with studies, which we've done an episode before on how to read studies,
if you want to, if you want to check them out,
it can be difficult to interpret them sometimes
if you're not an expert in various scientific fields.
But there is always an abstract,
which is like a little summary.
And so you can usually read the abstract
to get like a basic idea of what happened here.
So they found measurable concentrations
of all 16 metals assessed.
We detected concentrations of several toxic metals,
including elevated mean concentrations of lead, cadmium, and arsenic.
It differed by region, so US versus EU versus UK,
organic versus non-organic, and store versus name brand.
All of these things were different in terms of what level of what metal they found.
No category consistently had lower concentrations of all or most metals.
So there was no like absolute winner, so to speak.
I don't want to use the word safest because then that implies that there's danger in the others, right?
So I don't want to use that. I think it would be...
Least metals, yes.
There was no routinely less metallic brand.
And most, here's what's interesting.
So while in like non-organic tampons, lead was higher,
the organic ones had more arsenic.
So there was no like routinely,
again, don't wanna use the word safe,
routinely lower category.
We can't talk about safe unless we know there's a harm
and I want to stress that I do not know that there is a harm
from anything they found in this study
and they say the same thing in their discussion.
We don't know what this means.
We know that there is no safe exposure level to lead.
So like different things, metals,
that we find in the environment,
we have like acceptable levels
of exposure, right?
That are okay, we know it's okay.
We know we can be exposed to X amount of this
and you're not gonna be harmed by it.
There is no level like that for lead.
We're not supposed to be exposed to lead in the environment.
So if there's lead in the tampons,
that's not great because-
All lead is bad.
We kind of just say we shouldn't have any lead in anything.
Because lead is stored in bones, it can replace calcium,
it can be retained in the body for decades, and it is associated with neurological, renal, cardiovascular, immunological.
It's so many different.
It can result in neurobehavioral impact in adults and children, even in low levels, decreased cognitive function.
So like lead is bad for humans, generally speaking.
Arsenic is a known carcinogen, meaning cancer causing substance.
It's associated with heart disease and respiratory neurology, again,
all of these different things.
Cadmium has effects on the kidneys and the heart.
And all three government bodies,
this is all from the study by the way,
all of these facts I'm giving you.
All three government bodies
where they found these tampons,
the places where they purchased the study.
So the EU, the US and UK,
regulations around tampons are not extensive
and do not require regular product testing.
Okay, so I gotta ask a question
because it's occupying my mind.
And you may have no insight into this,
in which case that's fine.
But I feel like history will look back on this maybe,
possibly, and be like, wow, we're really lucky
that we found the metal in the tampons.
I can't believe, why did they look at tampons for metal?
What made them think like we should check
and then all of a sudden tampons they found
had not just some metal,
but lots of different kinds of metals.
What on earth made them think to check tampons for metal?
Well, so tell you what, that kind of gets us
into the history of tampons.
Okay, fair enough, okay, good, good, sorry.
So I think this is a good lead in to the rest
of what I wanted to talk about in this episode.
All right, perfect.
Let me just finish off with this study to go into this.
We don't know the implications of this.
The concern here-
Well, it's obvious to you.
Is that there's metal in tampons.
Is that the metal is in the tampons.
And that we know that specifically
the lining of the vagina is good at absorbing things.
So like we have done studies on administering medication
sometimes through the vagina
as a way of absorbing a medication.
Does that happen regularly?
Do we do that?
We don't know.
I mean, yes, there are cases where we can administer a medication vaginally that happen regularly? Do we do that? We don't know. I mean, yes, there are cases
where we can administer a medication vaginally.
There are some cases we do that.
But generally speaking, the reason they've done that
and what they found is that the way you absorb it,
it's directly into the bloodstream and it's much faster.
It's really good at that.
And it doesn't pass through the liver.
So when you, most things like you ingest through your mouth,
they have like first pass metabolism through the liver
where your liver will detoxify them.
Because remember, that's why you don't need
to detoxify yourself because you are doing it for you
in your liver and kidneys.
Unless the toxins are getting in through your vagina,
in which case you maybe should invest
in some charcoal foot pads to get them out.
There you go.
But we know that the vagina is very good
at absorbing things.
And so while we have certain levels
for these different substances in food and drink,
and we have certain levels in these substances for textiles.
So like zinc, for instance, is in textiles frequently.
We don't have vaginal safety levels for metals and metalloids.
It's different.
The amount you're gonna absorb through your skin
is different than through the vagina.
And so this is a, we don't know what the health consequences are. for metals and metalloids. It's different. The amount you're gonna absorb through your skin is different than through the vagina.
So we don't know what the health consequences are.
We do know that while it is brief contact,
hopefully, with the tampon itself, right?
I mean, we are advised, generally,
those of us who use tampons,
to not use them for more than eight hours
because of other risks associated with tampons.
A typical menstruator, they did this math,
will use around 7,400 tampons
or possibly more in their life
if you are someone who uses them.
So that's a lot of contact with tampons.
Yeah.
No one has ever checked for this stuff before. No one had ever studied it.
And we do limit these, like other products are tested for these metals
that you put on your skin and in your body, but not this product that you put in your body.
in your body.
So I just wanna say for right now, no one and the authors of the study
and many of the doctors who were interviewed
to comment on this and doctors from various areas
of specialty surrounding either like reproductive health
or OB-GYNs or toxicologists,
nobody right now is saying, stop the tampons.
I mean, I'm sure somebody is,
but the experts are not saying stop the tampons.
What everyone is saying is,
oh, we probably shouldn't have metal in the tampons,
even if this doesn't necessarily mean
it's having some horrible impact on our health right now.
Nobody's proven that. No one has proven that the metal in the tampon
can be absorbed enough in levels through the vaginal walls
that you will have health impacts.
I know, well, I'm just saying, I don't want you to,
I don't want everybody to run to the doctor and go,
I've used tampons for 10 years, test me for lead.
No one is suggesting that we need to do that right now.
Someone is probably suggesting that right now. Someone is probably suggesting
that we need to do that right now.
The experts are not suggesting
that you need to do that right now.
All right, got it.
So let's talk about how did we get here.
Okay.
But first we gotta go to the billing department.
Well, let's go.
The medicines, the medicines,
that escalate my cough for the mouth.
I'm gonna get my cards for the mouth.
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Alright, catch me up on these.
Okay.
So we have done a whole history of menstruation
on this show before, kind of like how we've treated,
you know, bleeding in general from the vagina.
Throughout history are like sort of perceptions of it,
what it's meant to us culturally
and from religious perspectives and all that.
There's a whole episode on it.
It's very old.
It's from like 2014.
That's how long ago, the decade ago that we did that episode.
And I will say right now, like in that,
so I'm not gonna rehash that history
since we've talked about it before.
I will say that if you decide to go back
and listen to that episode,
there's a lot of gross stuff that we've done through the years, as you can imagine, to try to, you know, stem
the flow of menstrual blood.
I also would like to say right now that in that episode, I equate people who have periods
with women quite frequently.
So I would like to apologize for that and note that if you choose to listen to it, that
is in the episode.
And that was a less educated version of myself.
The word tampon is probably from the middle French
for plug.
French was my guess.
Yeah.
Temple.
For a plug.
Specifically, this would have often referred to the plug as like the stopper on a bottle,
or like at the end of the muzzle of your rifle.
Mm. Yeah.
Tampon.
Tampon.
That's where that comes from. Originally, it's interesting. So, up until, I mean really, the 1900s,
when we see what we think of today as tampons invented, something
that we called a tampon was not, one, had nothing to do with menstruation, had nothing
to do with collecting menstrual blood, and two, was really more used as a device to keep
stuff out.
It was mainly something that was used for contraception, what they called a tampon.
And occasionally kind of like a pessary, meaning like a medicated device that you would insert in
the vagina for some other sort of illness or infection or to treat some sort of problem.
So you would soak it in something and then insert it into the vagina to treat
something. So, and this could range from like, you might soak it in honey, like a linen,
a piece of linen soaked in honey, and you would insert it and that would be a tampon
to treat some sort of problem. There was a period where goose fat was recommended, specifically
for contraception for a while, rock salt.
Oh no.
I know, which is terrible.
I mean, it must have been very uncomfortable.
This was specifically for contraception because rock salt,
which, and I mean, they wouldn't have known this
at the time, but it is indeed sperm cytol.
Okay, well, that's a pretty good job.
We have many better ways to-
But they're just goofy little worms ways to prevent pregnancy.
They're not hard to kill.
They're goofy little worms.
Well, that's what I was gonna say.
Like we have way better ways now.
Please do not use rock salt as contraception.
Please don't do this.
Please do not do this.
This would be bad.
There are stories in all these time periods
about like maybe things that would be like tampons of the time being used
for mensies, but we actually don't know if any of them are true.
They may all be apocryphal.
So if you hear about things like blood moss, a specific kind of moss that supposedly was
used as like an early tampon, we don't actually know if that's true.
We don't know, there is a mention that Hippocrates specifically mentioned how to like create a tampon
with like some lint and a stick or something.
There is no evidence that that had anything to do.
I mean, like probably he did do that,
but it had nothing to do with menstruation.
So there's been this conflation,
like this retroactive conflation of every time a tampon
is mentioned, it must've had something to do with a period.
That probably wasn't true.
I mean, it's certainly possible.
I have to think that there were people who at the time
were not able to write history,
were not able to put down in word what we could read today,
who came up with the idea of inserting different things
into the vagina as a way to with the idea of inserting different things into the vagina
as a way to stop the flow of menstrual blood.
But that was not widespread or well known.
I just think it's weird that there were all these years,
or not well documented at least,
there were all these years that, as far as we know,
tampons were being used, something like a tampon,
but not associated with menstruation at all.
I think that's a very interesting point.
Well, part of that, I wonder if part of it is like,
well, I don't know, I'm not smart enough
to try to guess why.
I know that it was much more a like,
the idea that we would be out and about during menstruation,
I think is relatively a new, more of a new concept.
You know what I mean?
Rather than just like staying in your boudoir.
That was part of it.
And depending on what cultural or religious tradition
you were in, you may very specifically have been
sort of put in a very specific place
to stay while you had your period.
That's where Shades Lounge has come from.
Actually, a lot of people don't know them.
Pop is on chairs is what I was thinking.
Uh-uh, none of this is true.
And I mean, the other part of it is just that,
generally speaking again, not always,
but generally speaking, the people who were writing
the history were not people who minstrated,
generally.
Not exclusively, but generally.
The standard use of cotton or some sort of absorbent material for tampons came around
in the 19th century, but again, this was for contraception.
But these things that we were calling tampons in the 19th century, these
cotton things used for contraception, probably did look like what we think of as tampons
today.
So probably if you saw that, you would say, oh yeah, that's a tampon.
There is a treatise called, Illustrations and Proofs of the Principle of Population
from 1822.
A lot of P's in there, I don't know.
And Francis Place wrote this advocating that we should use-
Are you telling me it's places, illustration,
improves the principle of population?
Yep.
Basically saying instead of a sponge,
which was commonly used for contraception,
we should use a tampon.
And you could make it with lint, flax, cotton, wool,
anything soft and absorbent,
and you would insert it like you would a sponge,
and it would, you know, soak stuff up.
So, so.
The menses, right?
No pregnancy occurred.
Menses? No, no.
This is all again for contraception at this point.
Nobody is talking about periods.
Oh, okay, gotcha, dig it.
This was from the Lancet, by the way.
This was published in the journal, the Lancet.
Wow.
During the 1800s, there were other devices
similar to tampons that were created,
but again, a lot of this was to control,
even when we started to use them for things
other than contraception, because primarily
this was to prevent pregnancy, they were used
for non-menstrual
vaginal discharge.
So you will find like a vaginal tampon tube mentioned in 1879, but it is not for periods.
It is for other like infections or whatever that might cause some sort of discharge.
And you would saturate the cotton with some sort of discharge. And you would saturate the cotton
with some sort of chemical
or something you were hoping would be a medication.
It was 1879, so here it was.
No, probably not honey.
1879, probably not honey.
No, I mean, that was when we were like.
Laudanum.
Mercury, you know, I mean,
something corrosive and dangerous.
Laudanum.
They put the mercury on their like,
hey, this is really absorbent now,
gotta stick with this.
Anything metal, guys.
Metal, that's the main thing.
That's the secret.
Metal.
And like a lot of these things were not,
you wouldn't use them outside of a hospital.
So when I'm talking about like the tampons that they used
for these other cases outside of contraception,
these are things that would be inserted in a hospital by like a doctor or a nurse or a midwife.
Like the nurses may be sewing them and making them themselves and then administering them in the hospital.
And you would again soak them in some kind of antiseptic or something like that to treat some sort of infection or whatever. It isn't until the 1920s that supposedly the idea that, hey, these things that we're putting in there
for all these other reasons might be good at managing menstrual flow wasn't even like, there's this story of John Williamson, who was an employee at
Kimberly Clark, the company that made a bunch of different products.
And he poked holes in a condom and stuffed it with a pad, with a menstrual pad, and then
said, I think this should be a new thing.
And...
He was well known as an office prankster
So he could have been joshing everybody. We don't know
But that was not picked up. Nobody wanted to do anything about that. We didn't do anything about it. Wait, so wait, hold on wait
This guy
This guy this ad this paragraph you rubby this dude is just like he goes to the bosses office
He's like I've been in tampons, they're like out.
And on his way out, he's like,
hey everybody, tell history, tell history
that I tried to do this.
You gotta wonder how people even find out about this.
Right, like what is the, he's like hey, tell history.
I feel like he was telling his grandkids this
and it's all a lie.
This is, you run into these, you do run into these like,
this may be true, maybe not, but like,
when I've researched people, you always find like these these, like, this may be true, maybe not, but like when I've researched people,
you always find like these paragraphs are like,
okay, pal, you are just, like,
the cat that invented B-Dough invented like a bajillion
other things, like, wow, okay, this just seems like
it's from your story, but all right.
In 1931, Earl Hoss, a physician in Colorado,
made a cardboard applicator tampon.
So the idea was, we're going to take this tampon that we know it exists.
Sorry, I don't mean to cast dispersions on the Be Now guy.
He may well have done this.
I don't know.
Yeah.
But anyway, he made the tampon inside a cardboard applicator.
The tampon is kind of what you'd think of cotton with a string, like what you'd think of as a tampon.
And it was because he'd been inspired by a friend
who said she used a sponge.
And he was like, well, instead of sponge,
why don't we use a tampon?
And I made an applicator for it.
And that's cool.
And why would he have made an applicator
and why would this have mattered?
It was still very improper at the time
for a person to touch their own vagina or to admit that they may do so. And a tampon without an
applicator necessitates that you use your finger to insert it. So just the buying of it would be
an admission that you are going to touch your own genitals.
The applicator was a way of allowing people
to purchase a product without having to publicly sort of,
it's not like it's a confession, but by buying it,
you're confessing that I'm going to go home
and touch my genitals.
Can I ask sort of a dumb question
for all us wiener folks over here?
Is the applicator like a necessary or a convenience or is it just like pointless or what's the
stance on applicators now that we don't necessarily have that same hang up?
So they are convenient.
They're definitely a convenience.
They're not necessary.
You can insert a tampon just fine without an applicator.
Comfort level has a lot to do with it.
And then there are regional preferences.
You find inside the US, applicator use is much more common.
Outside the US, you'll find a lot more people who use applicator-less tampons.
So part of it's regional.
And again, part of it is just the comfort level of knowing like, I mean, there are still
great swaths of the population where because of cultural religious ideology,
they may feel very uncomfortable inserting their finger
into their own vagina, which is what you have to do
to place a tampon without an applicator.
And if that is something that does create
a lot of discomfort for you, you just don't wanna do,
or if you're nervous or unsure,
the applicator makes it easier.
Okay, thank you. The tampon though, what's interesting is Earl Haas made it or unsure, the applicator makes it easier. Okay.
The tampon though, what's interesting is Earl Haas made it and made the, he made kind of what we think of today
as a tampon and he made the applicator.
And then he sold his patent almost immediately.
Like he made it in 31 and then by 33,
he has sold it to a woman named Gertrude Tendrick
who said, I want to do this.
I'm going to take this product
and everybody's gonna love it.
I don't know why Earl Haas had no interest in it
other than, I mean, he just didn't wanna be the tampon guy,
but he sold it to Gertrude Tendrick and she made tampax.
Wow, okay.
Yeah.
It's from the word tampon and vaginal packs,
which vaginal packs were what you often would call anything that you put inside the vagina at the time to stop menstruation.
So tampax.
Oh, and packing.
Even despite the fact that there were a lot of people who were initially, you know, sort of, oh my goodness, no, clutching their pearls at the invention of the tampon, tampons.
Pearls actually wouldn't be invented for many years later.
That's not true. What? Oh, you mean the tampon, tampons. Pearls actually wouldn't be invented for many years later. That's not true.
What?
Oh, you mean the tampon pearl, Tampax Pearls.
Yeah, it's good that you know a brand
or a line of tampons there.
I buy your tampons.
What are you talking about?
Those are painting into a quarter,
like I'm some Neanderthal, like I buy tampons.
Everybody.
I had to apply them myself.
So in the first seven years of Tampax's this time in the market, their use increased fivefold.
Their factories were used to produce dressings and bandages during World War II.
That didn't stop people from using tampons and even more so because during World War
II, so many people who used tampons were suddenly needed in the workforce that it became really
beneficial to have something that you didn't have to change as frequently. needed in the workforce that it became really beneficial
to have something that you didn't have to change
as frequently.
And then sometimes people in the wars
are using the tampons to stop at bullet holes.
So you tell me it's a virtuous cycle.
I think everybody's loving these things.
There was another tampon, the non applicator kind
was invented by the German gynecologist, Judith Esser Mittag.
And these are often called OB tampons.
Do you know why they're called OB tampons?
This is how I was always, by the way,
I only ever knew them as OB.
They were applicator tampons and OB.
I would assume, I mean,
the only connection in my head is obstetrics.
Nope.
It's the German, which I don't speak German,
it's onbend, which means no pad, like OB.
That's why they're called that in case you're curious.
Anyway, and so they start, and then they sold that to,
she sold that to Johnson & Johnson,
and so OB Tampon is another huge name.
And like in a lot of regions where you mainly use
applicator tampons, you may not be as familiar with it.
You may be more of like Tampax, Playtex,
like you know those sorts of names.
OB is a huge tampon brand all of its own.
But it was hard because it took time to get society
to accept the use of a tampon.
There was still this sort of stigma against like,
well, but are you touching yourself?
Pads common at this time?
Pads.
Pads were the murder.
Yeah, and we've talked about,
and this is in the other episode,
that pads back then didn't have adhesive on them often.
So you would wear a little belt to keep your pad in place.
Yeah.
But the advantage of this is that it was easier
than a pad with a belt.
It was easier than a pad with a belt.
You would have more control over your life
if you use these, but there was still this sort of stigma.
But like, it was back and forth.
You sound like the spokesperson
for when they were initially invented.
Like, hey everybody, so I just wanna tell you about these.
It's a lot easier than a pad with a belt.
And it will stop the bleeding.
So here's the point.
Tampons are becoming more popular
and we're kind of in the US focused right now.
They made these scented tampons for a while
and these were irritating and could cause.
They're irritating and they're irritating.
They're irritating.
I just think, I am somebody who has trouble
with like allergic reaction to scents.
Just thinking about a scented tampon makes everything hurt.
We try to get rid of everything scented in the house
and I've tried to be really diligent about it.
You don't realize how much stuff is scented
because every once in a while you'll get like a replacement
or something from Instacart or something like that.
It's like, whoa, like, cause we try really hard
to be diligent about it.
Cause it's trouble with smell.
I do, I do.
And I could not, so that, so in the 70s, because of all this,
Congress said we need to regulate tampons.
And we're the perfect people to do that?
We're gonna make them medical devices.
So they are no longer, they were no longer at that point
regulated as cosmetics, which they had been before,
but then they fell under the medical device regulations.
So they have to undergo more extensive testing.
However, they did not have to disclose
a list of ingredients now, which cosmetics did.
Isn't that interesting?
They, and that's like, that's different than like,
your shampoo has to have its ingredients in it.
Tampons don't, because it's a medical device.
So were the metals on there before?
Well, so here's the thing,
the metals have probably always been in there, honey.
We weren't testing, even as we started doing this
more rigorous testing of them,
because they were medical devices.
And by the way, one product sort of fell through
the gaps there, there was a tampon called Rely
that was super absorbent and so
you could leave it inside much longer was the idea.
This is where a lot of the fear from toxic shock syndrome comes from.
So if you leave a tampon inside your vagina for too long, the thought is that it creates
a perfect breeding ground for a certain kind of bacteria and then you can get a shock reaction
that can be fatal, which is why they
tell you don't leave your tampon in for longer than
eight hours. This RELI brand is really where that
fear sort of got kicked off because they didn't do
all the testing on it because it was approved right
before this new act was passed. And so a lot of
people started using these longer acting tampons
and we saw over 100
cases of menstruation related toxic shock syndrome.
And 38 of those were fatal.
So like very serious.
So after that, they did start to look at tampons a little more closely because of the toxic
shock.
So they started to look at like specifically ingredients like polyester, polyacrylate, rayon.
They started looking at like synthetic fibers versus like cotton.
And so they did do some research in the 80s on what we should make tampons out of
and what would prevent toxic shock syndrome.
But that really still had nothing to do with what else is in there.
Nobody was looking to see are there metals in there.
Nobody was checking that out.
So they did a lot of focus on like how long can you wear
absorbency, that sort of stuff.
Ways that amplify bacterial growth and ways where we can
reduce bacterial growth inside a tampon.
There was a concern in the 90s about dioxin, which is a carcinogen. growth and ways where we can reduce bacterial growth inside a tampon.
There was a concern in the 90s about dioxin, which is a carcinogen.
And that had to do with like a chlorine bleaching method that was used in the processing of
the tampons.
And so like a lot of companies started switching away from that to reduce the amount of dioxin
that is in tampons.
So we looked at this before as well.
So like my point is we have looked at other things in tampons through the years.
It wasn't until the authors of this study sat down and said, you know, a lot of plants
contain metals.
And the reason is that they're leaching it from the soil that they're growing in. Well, if we make tampons out of plant fibers,
do tampons contain metal?
Oh, look at that.
This is where this idea came from.
You answered my question.
Yes.
The prestige.
And so they sat down and looked to see
are there metals in tampons and there are.
And it turns out folks,
there are a wild amount, so much.
Well, and so where is the metal coming from?
Probably some of it is from the plant fibers themselves,
from the soil, because our soils have these things in them,
and so then the plants get them too, then the tampons do.
Some of it may come from the processing,
and that was one thing that the,
it's really interesting if you read the whole study,
the amount of zinc that they found made them wonder
if processing is part of it.
Because it seemed like it was more than you would expect
from just like leaching from the soil.
And so the thought is that maybe there's something
in the processing that is putting more zinc in the tampons.
It is more zinc or it is below the threshold
that we allow for textiles.
But then the fear is again, you wear a shirt on your arms,
you don't put it inside your vagina,
and the vagina is different.
That's a really helpful tip for everybody there.
So don't freak out, we don't know what this means.
We don't have, I mean the next step is-
Don't freak out, we don't know what this means.
The next step is, if there's metal in the tampon,
is it getting from the tampon to the inside of your body? We don't know, we means. The next step is if there's metal in the tampon, is it getting from the tampon to the inside of your body?
We don't know.
We're gonna have to find models, probably in animals,
where we can see in a standard tampon with this much metal,
how much of it gets absorbed from the tampon
into the lining of your vagina.
We don't know.
And then are those levels enough to cause
any of the detrimental health effects of these chemicals?
We don't know.
Nobody tested anybody wearing a tampon
to see if they have a higher lead level, right?
Nobody did that yet.
But those would be the next steps to figure out,
is this something that worries you?
Just to be clear, is there, so is there,
cause I think a lot, even people who aren't tampon users
are aware of toxic shock syndrome.
Is there no connection between this
and toxic shock syndrome?
Or the two completely separate things?
No, this has nothing to do with that.
This would be a whole other issue if it is indeed an issue,
it's a whole separate issue.
I would say that if you look at like in the 90s,
the dioxin issue, or even if you look at like
some of the substances that they removed in response
to the toxic shock concern.
A lot of this, I mean, there was the toxic shock syndrome
that spurred that in the 80s.
In the 90s, they didn't necessarily see cases of cancer
and then say, oh, it's from dioxin
and tampons remove the dioxin.
They said, this is a potential danger,
let's just get it out of there.
So I would say that there is a question I would ask,
which is, even if this is just possible,
even if this hasn't caused any harm whatsoever,
but it is a potential harm,
can we make efforts to get the metal out of the tampons?
Can we just get the metal out of the tampons?
Could we get the metal out of the tampons?
I mean, like that would be my first question.
What if we could skip the research
onto what the effect of the metal is on vaginas
and vagina havers, maybe we just don't anymore
do the metal in the tampons.
But this is, like a lot of things that have to do
with people with vaginas and people who menstruate,
the freedom to move about in the world
for those of us who do, has been limited throughout
history in various ways, more severely for different groups.
And so to just blanket, say, stop using tampons, would be a really dangerous, reckless statement
to make, right, without more evidence.
Because they do provide a freedom of movement that previous menstrual products had not.
Now, a lot of people I know right now
are screaming about the menstrual cup.
And I will say that the menstrual cup has existed,
it predates the tampon, it's a small, usually silicone
or some other sort of similar material
that you can insert into your vagina
and it collects the menstrual blood that way
and does not, as far as I know, contain metal.
It's silicone.
I did not study it though for metal.
I'm going to run it through the metallizer, the metalizer 3000, just to double check.
So there are alternatives that are long lasting and limit some of the other risks as well.
But that's not for everyone.
And so right now, no one is saying, nobody who understands this is saying, throw your tampons away.
But I would pay attention to this.
More studies are coming.
I am certain, and we'll know more.
And I think to advocate that we regulate companies to not put metals in our tampons is an absolutely
fair thing to advocate for.
Absolutely.
Hey folks, thank you so much for listening.
You wanna come see us?
You can, if you want.
We're gonna be doing some shows.
It's a rarity to get sawbones out on the road,
but we're gonna be there July 18th in Detroit
before I remember my brother and me,
and July 20th in Cleveland, Ohio.
You can get tickets at bit.ly forward slash McElroy Tours.
And we hope to see you there.
Thanks to taxpayers for using their song, Medicines.
It's the intro and outro of our program.
And thanks to you for listening.
Really appreciate it.
And hey, if you came out to see Escape to Margaritaville.
Thank you.
Thank you, we saw it, meant a lot of folks. Thank you, really appreciate it. That's gonna if you came out to see Escape to Margaritaville Thank you. past couple weekends, thank you. We saw it meant a lot of folks.
Thank you.
Really appreciate it.
That's gonna do it for us for this week.
Until next time, my name is Justin McRoy.
I'm Sydney McRoy.
And as always, don't drill a hole in your head. All right!
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