Her Campus Logo Her Campus Logo
placeholder article
placeholder article

Glossed Over: Nail Salon Issues

This article is written by a student writer from the Her Campus at Amherst chapter.


What girl doesn’t love pampering herself with a mani/pedi?
You enter the salon, choose the service you want and your polish color, and its smooth sailing from then on!  Sit back in that massage chair, relax and escape for a couple of hours into a world of luxurious pampering.
 
Let me tell you it is definitely not smooth sailing from here. Mentioned in the Campaign for Safe Cosmetics’ ‘Story of Cosmetics’, the government under regulates cosmetic products and nail salon products today. Nail salon products consist of hazardous chemicals and release harmful fumes into the air.
 
Are you going to the salon to get your nails done once a week, once a month, or once every 3 months? You are still at risk because your body builds up these chemicals over time with each visit to the salon.
 
Nail technicians have it even worse —they are inhaling and being exposed to chemicals every day. A study in the American Journal of Public Health shows that women in contact with these chemicals have heightened health risks (Thu Quach, 2011).  The study reports that “one-third of the women reported health problems like headaches, irritations, nausea, and breathing problems since they started working at a nail salon. Nose, throat, lungs, skin, eye irritations were the most common complaints by the participants reported by 25.6 percent of them.” In the Boston area, most nail technicians are Vietnamese women of childbearing age. In addition to reproductive and general health concerns, this minority community is at increased risk of developing Type II diabetes and respiratory problems.
 
Twelve Brandeis University students recently conducteda studyon measuring the air quality and ventilation of nails salon throughout Boston. Conclusions include carbon dioxide (CO2) levels in 15 of 21 salons exceeded 800 parts per million (ppm) and higher total volatile organic compounds (TVOCs) (potential toxins) and Particulate Matter 2.5 (PM2.5) (linked to respiratory problems) in salons indicating poor ventilation. TVOCS, PM2.5, and excessive CO2 levels that remain in the air can be harmful to a nail technician’s health, especially during childbearing years.
 
 
There are no chemical replacements for many of the products used in salons, such as ethyl methacrylate used in artificial nails.  However, some nail polish companies have voluntarily eliminated the ‘toxic trio’ of, phthalates, toluene and formaldehyde., Thus, the Boston Public Health Commissionhas set up the Safe Nail Salon Projectto assist nail technicians in doing their jobs safely.  The Safe Salon Project created new nail salon health and safety regulationsthat went into effect on July 13, 2011 to protect consumers from obtaining infections and diseases from salons. Some of these regulations include:

  • Keep chemicals out of the air by storing them in closed and labeled containers and requiring lidded waste baskets at each manicuring station.
  • Develop a ventilation plan to create a system that draws fresh air from the outside into the salon and exhausts dirty air to the outside.
  • Ensure that multi-use (non-porous) tools are properly disinfected between each customer for customer safety.
  • Ensure that single-use items (pumice stones / toe separators / flip-flops / etc.) are NEVER re-used on a customer.
  • Ensure that foot spas are disinfectedbetween each customer. 

 
The Safe Salon project has also developed a funcootie catcherfull of tips for you:

  • Don’t shave or wax your legs within 24 hours of getting a pedicure.
  • Ask for clean single use tools (pumice stones / flip flops / toe separators) that haven’t been used on anyone else.
  • Make sure that reusable (metal / non-porous) tools have been disinfected before they are used on you.
  • Avoid polishes that contain the ‘Toxic Trio’ of formaldehyde, toluene, and dibutyl phthalate.
  • Find out what is in your favorite brands of nail polish with the SkinDeep cosmetics database.
  • Report concerns about Boston nail salons to the Boston Public Health Commissionat 617-534-5965.
  • Help protect the Vietnamese community who run these salons in the Boston Area. Recommend that your salon participate in free Safe Nail Salon trainings(offered only in Boston)
  • Support the Safe Cosmetics Act by sending your state representative a lettervia online. (It takes 2 seconds, I swear!)

 
 
Ladies, let this information marinate in your minds! I don’t want to discourage you from getting your nails done, but make sure that you are conscious when walking into a nail salon as to what you can do as a consumer. Stay Beautiful!   

Evelyn is the Editor-in-Chief of the Amherst branch of Her Campus. She was a features intern at Seventeen Magazine during the summer of 2011 and a features intern at Glamour Magazine during the summer of 2013. She is a French and English major in the class of 2014 at Amherst College. She is also on Amherst's varsity squash team. She is an aspiring travel writer/novelist, and loves running, ice cream, and Jane Austen.