Q: Dear Umbra,
I need a new mattress and really want to buy
one that is not doused in chemicals -- in other words, an organic
mattress. I've searched a number of sites online and have been
horrified by the prices. They are really, really expensive! How bad is
it if I buy a regular old affordable mattress? And if it's really that
bad, where can I find an organic one that won't cost a small fortune?
Emily
Wynnewood, Pa.
A: Dearest Emily,
Hey, I just found a great resource for this kind of question.
Pollution in People
is a project of several well-respected Washington-state environmental
groups, and one aspect of the project is a guide to safer consumer
products. Check it out, people.
From what I've read, the current horrible thing to watch out for in
mattresses and other upholstered furniture is polybrominated diphenyl
ethers, or PBDEs. This is a group of chemicals usually applied as flame
retardants, and now recognized as highly bioaccumulative and
potentially quite dangerous.
It is thought that PBDEs drift out of furniture and into house air and
dust, which we then inhale. They have been linked to brain and thyroid
problems in rodents and
cats,
and are considered especially dangerous to children, particularly
because they accumulate in fatty tissue and are passed on in breast
milk. This year, Washington became the first state in the U.S. to
begin phasing out PBDEs, banning a common class of them known as decas. Hooray!
According to Pollution in People, both IKEA and
Serta make PBDE-free mattresses. If you find a mattress you
particularly like, it may be worth calling the manufacturer to find out
if they do use PBDEs or not. As for organic mattresses, I'm afraid I
don't have any inside line on a cheap one. You'll have to keep looking
for sales or secondhand beds.
I did, however, think of a third choice: make your own mattress, or improve your PBDE-free mattress. It's possible to buy
three-inch-thick latex and thick wool mattress covers. Just pile up these cozy items until you reach the comfort you desire.
Sleepily,
Umbra
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