health & development

Diapers Cloth vs. Disposable

Are cloth diapers better for the environment than disposable? by The Babble Staff

November 27, 2006

Diapers: Cloth vs. Disposable

PRO-CLOTH

PRO-DISPOSABLE

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NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF DIAPER SERVICES
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MOTHERING
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WIRED
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CARE2.COM
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MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY

THE BABBLE TAKE

Sylvia Plath spent the last years of her life in a charmingly bohemian flat in London, sans modern plumbing, schlepping bags of dirty diapers to the laundromat. Perhaps things would have turned out differently had she had access to a cloth-diaper service or disposables. However much of the diaper debate is centered on environmental factors — washable cloth diapers are better for the environment because they produce less solid waste, right? Proctor and Gamble, for one, would like you to consider all the water needed to grow cotton for and wash cloth diapers. So what kind of diaper is better for the environment? As evident from the various articles on the subject, you could drive yourself crazy trying to tally the environmental impact using data that vary widely and often come from less than impartial sources. Those in favor of cotton diapers like to point out that cotton is far less toxic to your baby, is cheaper, keeps you more honest about when your baby needs to be changed and, perhaps most importantly, tends to get your child toilet trained at a far earlier age. But, you might ask yourself, isn't it easier and cleaner just to chuck the whole thing when it's soiled. So which is it, washable or disposable?

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    PRO CLOTH: National Association of Diaper Services "Reduce, Reuse, Recycle"

    We think that if you see things from your baby's standpoint, and apply the same standards of comfort and health that you would for your own body, cotton is the obvious choice.

    It's a matter of comfort and health. The comfort is something you know about from your own clothing. It stems both from cotton's soft touch on sensitive skin and from its breathability — which ventilates the skin and helps evaporate the potentially irritating ammonia that starts to form as soon as a baby wets. As for cotton's health for babies, it has thousands of years of history behind it. Cotton is the fabric of choice for use directly on the skin. Like its comfort, its natural absorbency is the polar opposite of the combination of paper pulp, plastics, and "superabsorbent" chemicals in disposables. We can provide A to Z testimonials from moms whose babies experienced irritation with disposables that went away immediately with cotton. ...read the full article

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    PRO CLOTH: Mothering Magazine "The Joy of Cloth Diapers"

    Ultimately, instead of getting bogged down in each side's scientific data, the most commonsense approach is to use common sense. Weigh the impact of manufacturing and disposing of 8,000 paper-and-plastic diapers over the average diapering period of a child versus that of a few dozen cotton diapers, and decide for yourself which is better for the environment.

    Babies in disposable diapers may experience more diaper rash; because the diapers feel dry, parents tend to change them as infrequently as every four to five hours. But though the outer layer may appear dry, bacteria from the urine is still present in the baby's diaper, and still comes in contact with the baby's skin. Furthermore, plastic does not "breathe" to let out the ammonia formed in the bacterial breakdown of urine, while a cotton diaper and nylon or wool wrap are breathable, allowing air to circulate to the baby's skin, keeping it healthy.

    Of more serious concern are the toxic chemicals present in disposable diapers. Dioxin, which in various forms has been shown to cause cancer, birth defects, liver damage and skin diseases, is a by-product of the paper-bleaching process used in manufacturing disposable diapers, and trace quantities may exist in the diapers themselves. ...read the full article

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    MIDDLE GROUND: Wired "The Poop on Eco-Friendly Diapers"

    The biodegradable disposable diapers [...] aren't much better for the environment or the health of [a] baby than the Huggies and Pampers piled up in landfills.

    "These diapers all contain super-absorbent gelling materials," or AGM, said the latest newsletter from cloth diaper service Tiny Tots. "AGM is linked to an increase in childhood asthma and a decrease in sperm count among boys. Environmentally, these diapers require as much water, energy and fuel to produce as any other single-use diaper. The bottom line is they offer no environmental or health benefits.

    While it is true that the waste water from washing cloth diapers is benign compared with the sludge of dioxins, solvents and heavy metals in waste water from manufacturing disposable diapers, there is no evidence that sufficient traces of the chemicals remain on the diapers to harm babies. As for the primary feature that gives disposable diapers their appeal — their ability to absorb a large volume of liquid — no studies indicate that sodium polyacrylate, the gel-like absorbent substance used in disposables, harms babies wearing the diapers. ...read the full article

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    PRO DISPOSABLE: care2.com "Cloth or Disposable Diapers? A Moot Point?"

    Since 95 percent of parents put their children in plastic diapers, it seems a bit of a moot point to analyze which choice is better or worse for the environment.

    It is unlikely that people will revert to hand washing diapers, no matter what the answer. The convenience of disposables, combined with busy lives, is too good of a help to pass up, especially because it is hard to keep a child over the age of one dry in cloth diapers. What isn't a moot point, however, is which brand of disposable diaper you choose, for the health of your baby, and the health of the planet in which your baby will grow. If you choose disposable diapers, here is our recommendation:

    Seventh Generation's chlorine-free disposable diapers are made with materials that have not been bleached with chlorine, and therefore do not contribute to dioxin in the environment. They also are free of TBT, fragrance, and latex, a common sensitizer.

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    PRO DISPOSABLE: Michigan State University Extension "Disposable Diaper Dilemma"

    The specific health, environmental, and economic advantages of disposable diaper products appear to outweigh the more limited advantages of the reusable diaper products. Products with short life spans have recently come under scrutiny because of their solid waste disposal. As a result of analysis, disposable diapers offer distinguishable health and economic advantages over their reusable counterparts. In particular, they offer better protection against diaper dermatitis (diaper rash), while also decreasing the potential spread of infection in day care settings. These benefits are achieved at a lower weekly cost compared to cloth diapers. In terms of environmental considerations, neither disposable nor reusable diapers is clearly superior. ...read the full article

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