28 answers

What to Do About Bottles That Contain BPA

I am not sure what to do and would love to hear from other moms that know about BPA in baby bottles and have good morals. With all the new studies out there about BPA and it being in baby bottles we learned that the baby bottle we were using were on the bad list. We have obviously decided to not use them anymore and will not be saving them for the next baby. I am not sure what to do with them. Do I sell them.... which I don't feel morally right doing or do we throw them away to rot in a landfill? My husbad had a good point that people will buy them and use them because they don't beleive that BPA is bad or they just don't know about it, but I still wouldn't feel right... would I? What should I do!!!!!

1 mom found this helpful

What can I do next?

So What Happened?™

Thank you for all the responses. I guess I had already made my decision about what to do with them, I just really wanted to hear from others. I cant bring myself to throw them away yet, that wouldn't be very green, so I will hold onto them and maybe use them for nuts and bolts in the garage or for the garden(not for fruit or veg.)! I definetly will not be using them for our next baby nor will I be selling them. Please do continue to post your thoughts or links to info and safe products and maybe someone who didn't know much will learn more about BPA. Thank you again! E.

Featured Answers

You could always use them to hold paintbrushes for the kids later.... could even cut them down and use for crayon holders.....?? At least then they would have second life.
Let us know what you do with them!

1 mom found this helpful

I would not feel right selling them either. Can they be recycled? If not, is there a place that accepts baby stuff for mothers who are less fortunate and don't have any? This is a tough call because of the safety issues. However, I think there are some moms who maybe can't afford bottles or they would buy whatever was affordable even given the bpa deal...... Hope this helps.

I chose to throw out my bottles and sippies. I thought about different applications for them, like planting seedlings, but I thought about the BPA maybe leeching into the plants (I'm trying to start a vegetable garden, so I was afraid of the BPA leeching into the soil and thus into my veggies). I didn't feel right selling them or donating them to a shelter, and since you can't recycle that type of plastic, they are in a landfill. I still feel guilty about it. But, I think it's better than poisoning another baby.

More Answers

You could always use them to hold paintbrushes for the kids later.... could even cut them down and use for crayon holders.....?? At least then they would have second life.
Let us know what you do with them!

1 mom found this helpful

What my doctor told me is that its when the bottle starts to break down that you have to worry about the BPA. So she says to use them now with the baby and toss them when you are done. The bottles I have can be put in the recycling center, so that is what I am going to do with mine. I hope that helps some. Talk to your doctor if you need more info on it! Good Luck!

Hi there! This website may help dispense quite a few myths that are going around right now about BPA. There are many independent researches that have been conducted that you may find interesting. I try not to have a knee-jerk reaction when I hear something reported knowing that our media sources are not credible. Do your own research on this subject! Here is the website: http://www.bisphenol-a.org/

Being an environmentalist, I struggled with this, too. However, I did not feel right selling them to someone else for their baby to use. I chucked them and haven't looked back. I've saved our bigger nalgene bottles with the idea that I may fill them with something inedible sometime, but, I imagine, I'll end up throwing those out after they sit around for awhile.
Good luck!

E.-

I have read several magazine articles, online articles and news articles to know that BPA is a scary thing.

As a family, we too decided that we did not want to chance our child's
health and purchased the BPA free sippy cups (my son nurses).

If the bottles are recyclable, I suggest you recycle them.

Hope this helps!
A.
Find out what's really in your child's care products at www.mygreenhealth.com

Well I personally feel if you wouldn't give them to your own children because of something that is wrong, well isn't it just as wrong to turn around and sell them to someone who is either disadvantaged so they buy them, or someone who is cheap and could care less if their child has them.

You wouldn't give it to your child. How could you in good conscience give them to another child.

I would suggest recycling them. If I couldn't find a place to recycle them at. I would pry hold on to them until someone does. This year our city recycling center added two additional plastic numbers to their recycling allowed list. So check yours. Otherwise the landfill is MUCH better in my humble opinion than some child having them.

You could sell them and just put in your posting that they are bottles that contain BPA. Like another poster said, the BPA does not leech into the liquid in the bottle unless the plastic starts to break down. This occurs from heating to a high temp (boiling) or scratches on the bottles. Either use them creatively like other posters have said (bath toys, toothbrush holder, etc.), sell them (say they're BPA) or try to recycle them. Like you said there are people that don't worry about BPA and would buy your bottles and if they don't buy them from you they'll just go to the store and buy brand new ones.

I would dispose of the bottles rather than potentially exposing another child (who is unable to make decisions for him or herself) to a potential danger (regardless of what the parents of that child might think).

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