The most common question related to pregnancy and paint exposure has to do with moms who want to paint their new baby's nursery or finish decorating the house before the baby arrives. Unfortunately, there are no factual studies that document the effects of household painting on pregnancy and the developing baby.
Currently, the assumption is that household painting involves very low levels of exposure. The recommendation is still to minimize or avoid painting altogether, if possible. Ideally, you should get someone else to do the job for you.
Lead based paint was commonly used prior to the 1970s, so you should avoid getting involved with removing old paint because of the risk of lead exposure. According to the FDA, exposure to lead paint increases the likelihood of lead poisoning and mental retardation. Scraping and sanding old paint should be completely avoided. This puts higher concentrations of solvents and chemicals in the air to be inhaled. The recommendation is to have someone else do this part of the job and ideally remove yourself from the location until the project is complete.
If you are just too excited and you must paint the nursery, make sure you follow these guidelines to decrease the likelihood of paint exposure:
*Protect your skin by wearing protective clothing that includes long pants, long-sleeved shirts and gloves.
*Be certain that the room and house are well ventilated; open the windows and turn on fans.
*Limit the time you spend on the project; take breaks and move into the fresh air frequently.
*Keep your food and drinks away from the area so that solvents and chemicals will not accidentally be consumed.
*Avoiding paints and solvents is the safest course of action.
*Talk to your physician before taking on painting projects.
*Paint exposures that involve household painting are likely to have less exposure than occupational settings.
*Avoid latex paints that contain solvents such as ethylene glycol ethers and biocides.
*In general, water colors, acrylic, and tempura paints are recommended over oil paints.
*Limit duration, and frequency of your painting.
2006-11-17 13:14:18
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Honestly, i would say, to stay away from all types of paint,except finger paints of course but the smell of wall paint would probably be most uninviting, i think some paints contain lead,which could be harmfull.
If you want to paint a room,have someone else do it, possibly hire someone, and stay over at a friend or relatives house until it has had at least 48 hours to dry.
2006-11-17 13:09:55
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answer #2
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answered by Two Peas 7
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Well, simple acrylics for painting a picture are fine. Painting a room is a different story. You can get paints that produce low fumes and combine that with a respirator and you should be able to paint pretty much anything.
2006-11-17 13:07:21
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answer #3
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answered by iampatsajak 7
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mom painted my new apartment back in September and the guy at the paint shop said pregnant women should not use paint so i made my mom do it,. i checked in on her to see how she was doing i was there ten minutes and nearly passed out. don't risk it it is not worth it any way no fumes are good during pregnancy
2006-11-17 13:22:51
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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seek for the further environmentally pleasant ones. they many times comprise fewer volatile chemical substances. this style of is a formula said as milk paint, that is equipped in a bag and also you blend it your self with water. It contains little more effective than pigment. It replaced into used before formerly such "state-of-the-artwork" and dangerous factors were extra to paint. you may relax guaranteed that paint doesn't comprise lead anymore. Latex over oil in a good number of cases, through fumes and solvents that accompany oil depending paint. Use a mask and save the realm ventilated, take time-honored breaks. formerly doing any portray i might want to make sure if a chum can help you they could paint for you or with you. if you're operating mutually you receives done swifter, get you decrease back to brisker air faster, to boot because the chum being there in case you get in any variety of difficulty. i do not recognize how far alongside you're, besides the undeniable fact that that is going to likely be major to make confident the room is freed of any variety of fumes formerly your new little occupant strikes in. that is yet another excuse to settle on on the further environmentally pleasant paint to boot. to attempt this, make confident after portray is done, wash over the walls some days later with Murphy's Oil cleansing soap and heat water, to boot as ventilating the room nicely, lengthy formerly the toddler comes.
2016-11-29 05:54:02
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answer #5
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answered by ? 4
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Pregnant women should avoid all chemicals that have fumes or unpleasant smells, but latex paints are safer than others.
2006-11-17 13:50:00
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answer #6
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answered by gspmommy 3
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I think aerosol or any kind you spray is the worst.Paints like water paints,finger paints and ceramic paints,are fine I think.
2006-11-17 13:14:13
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answer #7
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answered by Mother of 2 girls 3
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My doctor told me it was okay to paint a bedroom as long as it was latex paint and I had a window open for circulation.
2006-11-17 13:10:21
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answer #8
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answered by Sheila T 2
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the most dangerous paint is lead based paint for anybody, especially pregnant women
2006-11-17 13:13:27
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answer #9
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answered by joseph s 2
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not all pain is bad pain a lot of pains are just associated with pregnancy in general. My doctor told me that if your not bleeding then its not that bad but if oyur terribly uncomfortable and in a lot of pain go see your doctor cause only they can tell you if its something to worry about.
2006-11-17 13:09:09
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answer #10
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answered by smurfette1430 2
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