The Great Diaper Debate
Way back when in the days of
Home Ec, one favorite class was 'how to diaper a baby'. Turning a flat piece of absorbent cotton into a
comfortable, well-fitting nappy was a trick that seemed to require the dexterity and legerdemain of a trained
magician. Worse, diapering the baby clumsily came with the very real fear of jabbing a squirming infant with a
diaper pin. Generations of mommies suffered pinpricked fingers rather than risk a scratch to baby's delicate
skin.
All that changed with the advent of disposable
diapers. Even the
unfitted, flat, uncomfortable first generation disposables were worlds above typical
cloth diapers for convenience and ease of use. Just unfold the back, pull the plastic up between the baby's legs
and smooth it against his belly, and tape the back to the front. Voila! Instant diaper. Even better - no need for
washing. No dirty diapers soaking in a pail of borax. No smell, no fuss, no laundry service - just un-tape, wrap
the diaper up and toss it in the trash.
For mothers of my generation, Pampers was the
dividing line between 'back then' and now. I can't count the number of mothers, grandmothers, aunts and older
female relatives who started off a tale with 'Of course, we never had Pampers, WE had to..."
The advantages were obvious: disposables were
cleaner, more sanitary, more convenient. They did away with hours and hours of laundering and drying, making time
for lots of other things. If you were the least bit conscious of disposal, you could completely eliminate the
dirty-diaper smell - just wrap it up tight in a plastic bag in put it in the OUTSIDE trash. And no more wrestling
with a squirming baby while you tried to pin his nappy closed, nor having the whole thing slip off his
adorable
little butt because you missed a layer of cloth when pinning.
The disadvantages were not so readily apparent, but
they were
nonetheless real. The major point against disposable diapers is a potent one:
disposable diapers may be great for mother, but they put an enormous strain on Mother Earth. Some
facts:
* Over 19 billion disposable diapers annually
end up in landfills - where they do not degrade.
* Disposable diaper makers use more than a million tons of wood pulp every
year.
* The manufacturing process creates waste that contains dioxins, heavy metals
and industrial solvents.
In a world with limited resources, disposable diapers
consume resources and create pollutants and hazardous chemicals. Is the convenience worth the damage to the
Earth?
On the face of it, the debate does seem to be one
more instance of man - in this case mommies - putting their own convenience above what's best for the
world.
But there's yet another side to the debate -
disposable diaper manufacturers have countered with arguments that cloth
diapers aren't all that kind to Mother Earth either. They cite the use of harsh chemicals in cleaning - bleach,
borax and other detergents, the consumption of water, and the energy (and fuels) needed to heat water to
temperatures that can disinfect diapers as being just as harmful to the Earth as disposables.
In the end, the choice to use disposables baby
diapers or cloth baby diapers is a judgment call. Which is better
for your newborn baby? Which is better for mom? Which is least harmful to our planet? The only real answer is
to read what you can, and make your own decision as to what works best for you - physically and
philosophically. Like I said before, The Great Baby Diaper Debate.
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