Survey: Americans Say Cleaning
Products Are Safe When Used as Directed
Monday March 13, 12:00 pm ET
* Respondents Say Products Are Very Safe (40%) or Somewhat
Safe (48%)
* Soap and Detergent Association (SDA) Reiterates Safety,
Storage Messages for National Poison Prevention Week, March 19-25, 2006
* SDA Offers Online "Home Safe Home" Accident
Prevention Tip Sheet
WASHINGTON, March 13 /PRNewswire/
-- Nearly nine out of ten Americans believe the cleaning products they buy are
safe when used as directed, according to a survey released by The Soap and
Detergent Association (SDA).
Among 946 adults (451 male,
495 female) questioned by International Communications Research for SDA, an
overwhelming majority found cleaning products to be "very safe" (40%)
or "somewhat safe" (48%) when properly used. Eight percent said these
products are "somewhat unsafe." Less than one
percent said cleaning products are "not safe at all" when used as
directed.
Proper and safe storage, use
and supervision of all household products can substantially reduce accidents in
the home, said Nancy Bock, SDA Vice President of Education, and Chair of the
National Poison Prevention Week Council (http://www.poisonprevention.org).
The 45th observance of National Poison Prevention Week takes place March 19-25,
2006.
"Take away the
opportunity and you've automatically made your home safer by reducing the
chance for an accidental poisoning when small children are around," said
Bock, who shared several common sense tips when using cleaning products around
the house:
* Schedule routine cleaning around the kids' routines, such as nap time or
when they aren't at home.
* Don't be distracted when you're cleaning. Keep your attention on the
tasks at hand and the children around you. Save activities like talking
on a cell phone, conversing with another adult in the room or
"listening" to the TV for another time.
* Don't leave children unattended around cleaning products. If you need
to answer the doorbell or the phone, take the child with you.
* Don't leave cleaning buckets containing liquid unattended. Besides the
obvious chance of spilling, slipping and sipping, there's the fact that
toddlers are "top heavy." If they topple into a bucket, even one with a
very small amount of liquid, they could drown because they can't pull
themselves up.
* DON'T mix cleaning products. Products which are safe when used alone
can sometimes become dangerous if mixed with other products.
* DON'T ever mix chlorine bleach or any product containing chlorine bleach
(like some tub and tile cleaners, mildew removers, all-purpose cleaners,
automatic dishwashing detergents) with: ammonia, or products which
contain ammonia or ammonia-containing compounds (some hand dishwashing
detergents and window cleaners) or acidic products (toilet bowl
cleaners, rust removers).
"Home Safe Home" Guide Now Available Online
Now available on SDA's website is our "Home Safe Home" tip sheet,
which features several common sense suggestions to help keep your family safe
around the home. You'll also find an emergency contact list that you can tear
off and post by every phone in the home.
For copies of "Home
Safe Home," visit SDA's website at http://www.cleaning101.com/health.
Poison Control Center Hotline
If families experience a
poison-related emergency, they should call the Poison Control
Center's hotline:
1-800-222-1222. Post this toll-free number, which operates 24 hours a day,
seven days a week, next to every phone in the house.
The Soap and Detergent
Association (http://www.cleaning101.com),
the Home of the U.S. Cleaning Products Industry(SM), is the non-profit trade
association representing manufacturers of household, industrial, and institutional
cleaning products; their ingredients and finished packaging; and oleochemical producers. SDA members produce more than 90
percent of the cleaning products marketed in the U.S. The SDA is located at 1500 K Street, NW, Suite 300, Washington, DC 20005.
About the Survey: The survey
cited was completed for The Soap and Detergent Association by International
Communications Research (ICR) in February 2006. The survey has a margin of
error of plus or minus 3.2 percent.
Source:
Soap and Detergent Association