The Brazilian Blowout Hoax, Epilogue: What It Means To All of Us
by Lawrence Meyers
Please read Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, and Part 4 [Editor: Please link to each]
Contrary to recent media reports, the Brazilian Blowout hair treatment is safe for use. Here is a review of all the studies done on Brazilian Blowout.
Oregon OSHA: Pass
Federal OSHA: Pass
Health Sciences Associates: Pass
Dr. James Haw – USC: Pass
FDA: Conducted no studies
ChemRisk: Too much product used = faulty study
Brazilian Blowout passed every single properly performed study for both state and federal short-term and long-term exposure limits, known as the Permissible Exposure Limit (PEL – an 8-hour time-weighted average) and Short-Term Exposure Limit (STEL – a 15 minute exposure measurement).
So why the witch hunt on Brazilian Blowout? The answers are simple:
1) Government Bias
As described in Part 1 [Editor: Please link], Oregon OSHA is guilty of :
- Equating methylene glycol with formaldehyde in contradiction of all accepted scientific nomenclature methods. Doing so allowed them to…
- Claim extremely high levels of formaldehyde in the product.
- Ideological bias, as at least one scientist who authored the study aligns himself with a hardcore Liberal Senator known as an environmental activist.
- Editorializing what should be a neutral scientific report, thus demonstrating its own bias.
- Deliberately taking samples longer than 15 minutes and applying those results to 15 minute periods.
- Issuing a false and misleading press release that did not report the product actually passed the PEL and STEL tests.







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