Consumption of chilled water stored in a PET bottle multiple times: are we quenching thirst or gulping phthalates?
Author(s) -
Mahesh Jayaweera,
H. A. Thushanthi Perera,
Gimhani Dhanushika,
Buddhika Gunawardane
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
bolgoda plains
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2815-0066
DOI - 10.31705/bprm.2021.8
Subject(s) - bottle , consumption (sociology) , politics , public health , doctrine , water bottle , political science , business , law , sociology , medicine , history , social science , nursing , archaeology
The statistics forecast that the production of polyethylene terephthalate (PET) bottles worldwide in 2016 was about 485 billion, and the same in 2021, has been approximately 583 billion. Although such productions in many countries have the ear of prominent political and social leaders, high production rates still reign the global market. In parallel, revered scientists globally conflate plausible and incontrovertible medical canons against the use of PET bottles for the protection of public health. Nevertheless, unwashed masses worldwide dislodge or disparage such public health doctrine but face a myriad of health hazards. For many years, mainly beneath the public’s ignorance, the solid collective rhetoric expressed by PET-bottle manufacturing companies has not let such medical dogma take hold in the society, instead purposefully manipulated the market with conflating pure baloneys or fallacies.
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