What do you think is the modern day equivalent to asbestos in 1960?

https://lemmy.world/post/45033326

What do you think is the modern day equivalent to asbestos in 1960? - Lemmy.World

So people kind of knew asbestos was harmful wayyy before it mostly stopped being used in 1979 (USA). But, it was still used constantly in many industries and ended up everywhere. What do you think is an example of something we find out is DRASTICALLY harmful 10-50 years from now? My guess would be screen time.

PFAS?
Don’t know much about them.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PFAS

TL;DR - Teflon, plus other chemicals, but particularly Teflon

PFAS - Wikipedia

Isn’t Teflon itself fine though? My understanding was it was the chemicals used during manufacturing of Teflon that were the problem.

You can also get some ill effects if you exceed temp limits

This is about right. Teflon (PTFE) itself is mostly harmless to humans because you aren’t likely to consume large enough amounts or small enough particles of Teflon for it to enter your bloodstream.

Other PFAS like PFOA, PFOS, PFHXS, and PFNA, which are the kind you would find used to coat the inside of a popcorn bag to keep the butter off the bag, are commonly found in human blood and have been linked to negative health outcomes in humans.

It’s on all your outer wear and when it rains it goes straight into your local water system where you end up drinking it.

Also in fire suppressors.

Dark Waters - Democracy Now

m.youtube.com/watch?v=fZDmovshipc

newsinteractives.cbc.ca/…/pfas-canada-map/

www.ewg.org/interactive-maps/pfas_contamination/

“Dark Waters”: Meet the Lawyer Whose 20-Year Fight Against DuPont Inspired the New Film

YouTube