Comment by iterateoften

19 hours ago

Just a question, but on these threads it’s nonstop talk about how dangerous the paper is like using it for one dnd game will give you cancer but we don’t blink twice at cashiers handling it 8hrs a day?

I think people here just assume they won't ever have to be a cashier and ignore that risk?

  • Wait until they find out that restaurant order tickets use the same types of printers and the tickets are frequently directly in contact with your food.

When I worked at a register in my teens we were given gloves to wear.

It’s pretty uncontroversial that the paper is hazardous. And when you’re sweating the BPA absorbs into the skin more readily. The issue is more about the dose curve; according to the FDA and other regulators, it’d be impossible to hit the upper limit on exposure by just handling receipts, while there’s plenty of evidence that there is no harmless threshold. Kinda like lead, albeit without a doubt BPA is less harmful than lead.