Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
Health & Fitness

Health Canada regulates UV, ozone-emitting devices

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Jun, 2021 03:01 PM
  • Health Canada regulates UV, ozone-emitting devices

Health Minister Patty Hajdu says most companies selling UV wands and lights promising to kill viruses will now have to apply to have their products approved by Health Canada and stop claiming they can destroy COVID-19.

Hajdu' signed an interim order Monday that will regulate the devices for the first time.

 "To date, Health Canada has not yet received sufficient evidence to demonstrate that they can be used safely or that they work as claimed," said a explanatory note released Tuesday when the order was publicized.

 UV light is well-known to kill anything that has DNA or RNA, including human cells, viruses, fungi and bacteria. It has been used in hospitals and commercial ventilation systems for years but products for consumer use are more recent.

 Since the COVID-19 pandemic began, the marketplace exploded with consumer devices claiming to kill viruses with UV light or ozone, prompting safety warnings from Health Canada and other international health bodies, including the World Health Organization.

 Health Canada said one retail site alone — which it didn't name — had more than 2,000 cellphone sanitizers and another 500 devices using UV light to clean toys.

 The devices have been linked to severe eye injuries, including burns to the cornea in the United States. Health Canada hasn't said if any injury reports have been made in Canada. The devices can also cause serious burns to skin and skin cancer without proper safety in place.

 Manufacturers are being given 30 days to apply to have their products authorized under the Pest Control Products Act or take them off the market. They will have to meet certain standards to be approved, and submit data that shows the device is safe and effective.

 

"

MORE Health & Fitness ARTICLES

Multiple Sclerosis: Canada’s Invisible Disease

Multiple Sclerosis: Canada’s Invisible Disease
Four months after completing the Vancouver Marathon, Linda McGowan, a Vancouver nurse and mother of two, was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis (MS) in 1983. She was barely 35 at the time. 

Multiple Sclerosis: Canada’s Invisible Disease

Living and Breathing With Asthma

Living and Breathing With Asthma
Asthma is a long-term lung disease marked by breathing difficulties that occur when airways become inflamed and subsequently narrowed or blocked.

Living and Breathing With Asthma

A Playground Workout For Your Inner Child

A Playground Workout For Your Inner Child

Breathe some fresh air into your fitness routine that’s not only free but fun as well &...

A Playground Workout For Your Inner Child

May is National Sunshine Month

May is National Sunshine Month
Research shows increases in sun exposure correlates with positive health outcomes

May is National Sunshine Month

Diabetes is leading cause of non-traumatic lower limb amputations

Diabetes is leading cause of non-traumatic lower limb amputations
Time to act to save limbs and improve lives.

Diabetes is leading cause of non-traumatic lower limb amputations

New study shows higher levels of vitamin D can lower risk of cancer

Published in the journal PLOS ONE and authored by a team from Creighton University, University of California, San Diego and GrassrootsHealth, the research found a 67% reduction in risk for all cancers in women with vitamin D levels > 100 nmol/L (40 ng/ml) compared to womenwith vitamin D levels < 50 nmol/L (20 ng/ml). 

New study shows higher levels of vitamin D can lower risk of cancer