New Delhi: The fact that plastic contains harmful chemicals and cancer-causing properties that not only cause damage to the environment, but also our health is not unknown.


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Doctors and environmentalists increasingly encourage the world against the use of plastic bags and containers.


Many studies have shown how plastics can affect our health in more ways than one. Now, further negating their safety and putting the danger stamp on plastics, Australian researchers on Thursday linked the harmful chemicals in everyday plastic to the prevalence of chronic diseases in men.


Scientists from the University of Adelaide and the South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute tested more than 1,500 men for the presence of potentially chemicals known as phthalates, which have been linked to cardiovascular disease, high blood pressure and type-2 diabetes, reports Xinhua news agency.


Of the men tested, phthalates were detected in urine samples of nearly every (99.6 percent) of those aged 35 years and older, which according to associate professor Zumin Shi from the University of Adelaide was due to consuming foods contained in plastics.


"We found that the prevalence of cardiovascular disease, type-2 diabetes and high blood pressure increased among those men with higher total phthalate levels," Shi said in a statement on Thursday.


"While we still don't understand the exact reasons why phthalates are independently linked to disease, we do know the chemicals impact on the human endocrine system, which controls hormone release that regulate the body's growth, metabolism, and sexual development and function."


Shi said that it was typical that Westerners had higher levels of phthalates because many foods are now packaged in plastic.


He said previous studies had shown that those who drank soft drinks and ate pre-packaged foods had significantly higher phthalate levels in their urine compared to those who ate healthier.


(With IANS inputs)