Episode 67 explains how reproductive toxicants are classified on Safety Data Sheets (SDSs) and why these classifications matter for protecting workers who may be planning a family, currently pregnant, or otherwise vulnerable to chemicals that affect fertility or fetal development. Dr. Ayers uses this episode to help safety leaders interpret SDS language accurately and communicate risks clearly.
Reproductive toxicants are chemicals that can harm:
Fertility (male or female)
Reproductive organs
Fetal development
Growth or development of offspring
These effects may occur from inhalation, skin absorption, or ingestion, and often at exposure levels lower than those causing other health effects.
The episode highlights the Globally Harmonized System (GHS) categories that appear on SDSs:
Category 1A — Known human reproductive toxicants
Category 1B — Presumed human reproductive toxicants (animal evidence)
Category 2 — Suspected reproductive toxicants
These classifications appear in Section 2 of the SDS under Hazard Identification and are supported by toxicological data in Section 11.
Reproductive toxicants often require stricter controls than general health hazards because:
Effects may occur at very low exposure levels.
Harm may not be immediately visible.
Risks extend to future children, not just the exposed worker.
Some chemicals cause irreversible reproductive damage.
Dr. Ayers emphasizes that safety leaders must understand these classifications to make informed decisions about controls, PPE, and worker communication.
The podcast explains how to interpret SDS statements such as:
“May damage fertility”
“Suspected of damaging the unborn child”
“May cause developmental effects”
These statements correspond directly to GHS categories and should trigger a review of exposure potential, ventilation, PPE, and substitution options.
Effective management of reproductive toxicants includes:
Reviewing SDSs for reproductive hazard classifications
Ensuring workers understand the meaning of these hazards
Implementing engineering controls and exposure monitoring
Evaluating substitution when feasible
Providing confidential avenues for workers to ask questions about reproductive risks
The episode stresses that clear communication and thoughtful risk management are essential because these hazards affect workers and their families.