Quizzes & Puzzles7 mins ago
Pink's disease
22 Answers
When my uncle (now 65) was a baby, he was very ill with Pink's disease, which I've since found out is to do with mercury poisoning.
He came from a lower working class family and this was in the late 1940s, so how might he have come into contact with enough mercury to make him so ill he nearly died?
He came from a lower working class family and this was in the late 1940s, so how might he have come into contact with enough mercury to make him so ill he nearly died?
Answers
Interesting topic....... Pink disease is now extinct and was mainly due to parents giving their babies teething powders which contained mercury. This was suspected by the medical profession as early as the early 1940´s but was difficult to prove. Chemists isolated mercury in the urine of these children and the association of mercury in the teething...
05:02 Sun 06th Mar 2011
I'm not certain of the manufacturers notafish but I understand that undercover investigations have indicated that some of the teething powders have been traced back to the UK.
Mercurial teething powders remain exceptionally cheap to manufacture and I have little doubt that they are sold with a huge mark-up at their final destination. Nevertheless, exposure and processing of mercury salts such as calomel remains an extremely hazardous occupation with strict operational guidelines from the HSE that have to be observed. As a result I remain of the opinion that these working conditions would hinder a major manufacturing company from marketing the product. It just wouldn't be financially viable.
I'm therefore inclined to think that the majority of the samples traceable to the UK remain a product of back-street laboratories.
Mercurial teething powders remain exceptionally cheap to manufacture and I have little doubt that they are sold with a huge mark-up at their final destination. Nevertheless, exposure and processing of mercury salts such as calomel remains an extremely hazardous occupation with strict operational guidelines from the HSE that have to be observed. As a result I remain of the opinion that these working conditions would hinder a major manufacturing company from marketing the product. It just wouldn't be financially viable.
I'm therefore inclined to think that the majority of the samples traceable to the UK remain a product of back-street laboratories.