By Melissa Dunson
mdunson@joplinglobe.com
SENECA, Mo. — Taylor Gaines, 13, loves her baby brother, Jace, 2.
But she feared her family was inadvertently poisoning him.
Taylor, a Seneca eighth-grader, has been fascinated with science since she was 7 years old. Her mother, Shannon Sample, is a science research teacher at Seneca High School. Her uncle works for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).
“I was surrounded by science,” Taylor said. “People would think I was so educated because I would listen to my mom talk at dinner.”
So when she heard reports that bisphenol A (BPA), a chemical compound that is a building block used in some plastics, could be hazardous to humans, she was concerned. BPA is used in a variety of plastic products, including Jace’s baby bottles and most brands of water bottles. Questions about whether it is harmful to human health have been around for years.
With her middle-school science fair coming up, Taylor decided to forgo the traditional solar system or volcano project, and instead do some BPA research that could directly affect her family.
Taylor was disturbed by what she found, and although the Environmental Protection Agency is standing by its estimated safe level of BPA, several recent national studies show the eighth-grader may be on the right track.
In her experiment, Taylor exposed planarian worms to different concentrations of BPA, including half of the EPA’s recommended safe level, as well as four times, 40 times and 400 times the recommended level.
Taylor said her experiment showed six abnormalities at all of the concentration levels. Those abnormalities include missing body parts, regeneration of too many body parts, tumor-like growths, undeveloped body parts and delayed re-growth of body parts.
She believes her research suggests that even federally recommended levels of BPA could be harmful to humans.
Suzanne Ackerman, EPA press officer, applauded Taylor’s research, and said she was amazed that an eighth-grade student took on such a weighty experiment. But Ackerman said the EPA’s safe level of BPA of 0.05 parts per million is safe for humans, but not for something as small as a worm.
“An oral reference dose is an estimate of how much of a chemical a human being could intake daily over a lifetime without harmful effects,” Ackerman said. “Besides the size comparison, the human metabolism is very, very different.”
But a study just released last month by the National Toxicology Program, an inter-agency federal research program at the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, said that current human exposure to BPA is of “some concern” for its effects on the development of fetuses, infants and children.
The report is based on numerous laboratory-animal studies. National Toxicology Program officials are not sure the changes seen in the laboratory animals can be directly applied to humans, but conclude that the potential dangers cannot be dismissed.
The greatest concern identified in the study was that BPA exposure could affect development of the prostate gland and brain in fetuses, infants and children, or that it could cause behavioral changes in that group.
Last summer, the Food and Drug Administration released its “Draft Assessment of Bisphenol A for Use in Food Contact Applications.” The FDA recommendations in that 105-page document call for more testing to determine the effects BPA may be having on humans compared with laboratory animals.
An FDA advisory panel is scheduled to meet Friday to discuss the report. FDA officials did not return a phone call placed to them on Tuesday.
But Bloomberg.com reported Tuesday that Congress is criticizing the FDA for potential conflicts of interest in the preparation of that report. The concern is that one of the FDA’s advisers has financial ties to a major manufacturer of BPA. In the Bloomberg story, U.S. Rep. Rosa DeLauro, a Connecticut Democrat, is quoted as calling for Friday’s meeting to be canceled because of that connection.
Another recent study by the Center for Health, Environment & Justice, a national environmental organization, called “Baby’s Toxic Bottle: Bisphenol A Leaching from Popular Baby Bottles,” reports that several popular brands of baby bottles, including Avent, Disney/The First Years, Dr. Brown’s, Evenflo, Gerber and Playtex, leach bisphenol A when heated, and the amount leached into the liquid is within the range shown to cause harm in animal studies, according to 150 peer-reviewed journal articles on the chemical.
Taylor’s middle-school research project drew so much attention, she was invited as one of the 30 Top Young Scientists in the nation to Washington, D.C., last week to show judges and a host of science-museum tourists her findings. The Top Young Scientist competition is sponsored by Discovery Channel parent company Discovery Communications LLC, and research and development company 3M. In order to qualify for the competition, Taylor had to take top spots in science fairs at her middle school, the regional competition at Missouri Southern State University in Joplin and state competition.
Taylor did not win the Top Young Scientist title, but said she is still thrilled that she made it that far and that her project may have brought the conversation of BPA safety into more homes. She said she hopes to return to the competition next year.
Career interests
As to the future, Taylor Gaines says she wants to pursue a career in biotechnology or microbiology.
Home
<img src="http://www.joplinglobeonline.com/images/zope/extra.gif" border=0>Seneca girl’s study becomes part of scientific debate<font color="#ff0000"> w/ link to learn more about BPA </font>
- Top Stories
-
-
Family of service honored at Memorial Day ceremony
Lt. Col. Christopher Lambert salutes the Pittsburg State University ROTC Color Guard during a Memorial Day ceremony held Monday at the PSU Veterans Memorial.
Lt. Col. Robert Brock returned to his hometown Monday and told an audience of about 500 residents and veterans gathered at the Pittsburg State University Veterans Memorial that Memorial Day is a celebration of family — America’s family of service.
Continued ... - Master developer working on project possibilities
- Tornado victim’s recovery ‘miraculous’
- Joplin summer school starts next week
-
- Local and State News
-
-
Tornado victim’s recovery ‘miraculous’
Carolyn Mckinlay did not know much about baseball, but she knew it was important to watch the sixth game of last year’s World Series. It was important because her future husband, Mark Lindquist, had a ticket to see his beloved Cardinals take on the Texas Rangers in the seventh game at St. Louis.
- Family of service honored at Memorial Day ceremony
- Master developer working on project possibilities
- Webb City High School honored in rankings of national magazine
- Grant to fund animal isolation area at Carthage Humane Society shelter
-
Tornado victim’s recovery ‘miraculous’
- Sports
-
-
MIAA shows its strength at national meet
Led by Lincoln University’s eight national champions, the MIAA collected 58 All-America honors during the NCAA Division II Outdoor Track and Field Championships that ended Saturday night in Pueblo, Colo.
- Area athletes turn shine at state meet
- Nicole Green leads MSSU on final day of national meet
- Cleo Elbert steps down at Thomas Jefferson
- Frontenac wins first state baseball title
-
MIAA shows its strength at national meet
- Crime & Courts
-
-
Two witnesses’ accounts being scrutinized in McDonald County homicide
McDonald County sheriff’s deputies are trying to determine if a Texas man had any help disposing of the body of a man he allegedly shot and killed at a residence west of Goodman the night of May 17-18.
- Exemption cloaks Guard involvement in tornado looting
- Joplin police investigate possible abduction
- Two drivers hurt in traffic accident
- Man reports being assaulted, robbed
-
Two witnesses’ accounts being scrutinized in McDonald County homicide
- Death Notices
-
-
Dorothy M. Sandlin
JOPLIN, Mo. - Dorothy M. Sandlin, 84, passed away Friday, May 25, 2012. - Wade A. Lowrey
- Bobby L. Bible
- George E. Hankins
- John L. Gripe
-
Dorothy M. Sandlin
- Opinion
-
-
Our View: Victims should come first
Millions of dollars in donations have poured in from around the world since the May 22, 2011, tornado. Those donations represent money from lemonade stands, charity auctions, corporate gifts and celebrity checks, just to name a few. In fact, one year later donations continue to come to Joplin.
Continued ... - Beth Meeker, guest columnist: Same-sex marriage battle a quest for equal rights
- Sunday Forum: 2012 graduation speakers key on tornado, mall school and president’s visit
- Geoff Caldwell, guest columnist: Pack mentality takes truth as a casualty
- Your View: ‘Study’ can mean anything
-
Our View: Victims should come first
- Business
-
-
Stocks fall on Wall Street as Spanish bank teeters
Another flare-up in Europe’s debt crisis knocked U.S. markets lower Friday. This time, it was more trouble at a major Spanish bank.
Continued ... - 5 Spanish banks downgraded; Bankia seeks 19 billion euros in aid
- Europe debt crisis dragging world economies down
- US declines to label China a currency manipulator
- Facebook ads less than lucrative for many businesses
-
Stocks fall on Wall Street as Spanish bank teeters
- Lifestyles
-
-
Balloons become everything from giraffes to gateways in Joplin man's hands
Ronald Metz’s fingers fold pinched-off portions of a skinny, blue balloon, wrapping and squeezing them until the balloon ends up looking like a tail-wagging pooch.
- Frankie Meyer: Tornado stories should be recorded
- Cowboy church offers non-traditional Bible camp
- David Yount: Christians still await return of Jesus
- Dave Woods: Branson attractions welcome Memorial Day visitors
-
- National News
-
-
Senate committee cuts Pakistan aid over conviction
A Senate panel expressed its outrage Thursday over Pakistan’s conviction of a doctor who helped the United States track down Osama bin Laden, voting to cut aid to Islamabad by $33 million — $1 million for every year of the physician’s 33-year sentence for high treason.
- Jury in John Edwards trial wraps 5th day of talks
- Iran rejects West’s proposal on nuclear curbs
- Ohio teen to be tried as adult in school shooting
- Pakistan hands 33-year sentence to doctor who helped CIA track bin Laden
-
- Obituaries
-
-
Wade A. Lowrey
CLINTON, Ill. - Wade Allen Lowrey, 34, of Joplin, Mo., will be remembered as a dear friend to all. Wade passed away on Tuesday, May 22, 2012, at his residence at Ozark Christian College.
- Dorothy M. Sandlin
- Ray D. Simmons
- Harold D. Keatts
- Oma Jean Elsten
-


