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What we know about how 'forever chemicals' affect health

Elisabetta Donadello, member of the "No Pfas Mothers Association" checks the well water tap contaminated by PFAS in her garden in Vicenza, on February 7, 2025. Donadello, 50, is one of thousands of mothers in the region who discovered they had ingested so-called "forever chemicals" and transmitted them to their babies in the womb and through breastfeeding. [AFP]

Invisible, omnipresent "forever chemicals" have been linked to a wide range of serious effects on human health, prompting growing calls for them to be banned.

While there is firm evidence that at least one of the more than 4,000 human-made chemicals called PFAS causes cancer, researchers are still attempting to fully understand their broader health impacts.

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