A plastic bag of donated blood hanging with other bags full of liquid.
Credit: sudok1/BigStock Photo ID: 73860889

Opinion: Industrial chemicals are showing up in our blood, and no one’s stopping it

A growing body of research shows that donated blood is contaminated with industrial chemicals like PFAS, lead, mercury, and cadmium — and no one is regulating the risk.

Bruce Lanphear writes for Substack.


In short:

  • A study in Norway found that nearly all blood donors had PFAS levels above what’s considered safe, with a significant portion also carrying dangerous levels of lead, mercury, and cadmium.
  • Blood banks don’t screen for these chemicals because there’s no regulatory requirement, and doing so could threaten supply — leaving vulnerable recipients unknowingly exposed.
  • Unlike pharmaceuticals, industrial chemicals aren’t tested for safety before hitting the market, meaning exposure is widespread and involuntary.

Key quote:

“If a unit of blood is packed with PFAS, it belongs in hazardous waste—not in someone’s veins.”

— Bruce Lanphear, public health scientist and author

Why this matters:

This isn’t a niche issue. It’s a quietly unfolding public health crisis rooted in the regulatory blind spot that lets industrial chemicals flood the market without proving they’re safe. Once they’re out there — in stain-proof couches, nonstick pans, food packaging, car exhaust, agricultural sludge, drinking water — they end up in us. This isn’t exposure by choice. It’s a slow, steady intrusion, starting in the womb and lasting a lifetime.

Read more: What are PFAS?

About the author(s):

EHN Curators
EHN Curators
Articles curated and summarized by the Environmental Health News' curation team. Some AI-based tools helped produce this text, with human oversight, fact checking and editing.

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