small plastic particles rest on a finger

Microplastics are in our bodies. How much do they harm us?

The science is unsettled, but researchers say there is cause for concern.

Tiny plastic particles like these—called microplastics—are added to some exfoliating skincare gels and can get into the environment from there. Microplastics have been found in human blood and lungs, but it's not yet clear what that means for our health.
Photograph by Alexander Stein, JOKER/ullstein bild/Getty Images

As plastic waste proliferates around the world, an essential question remains unanswered: What harm, if any, does it cause to human health?

A few years ago, as microplastics began turning up in the guts of fish and shellfish, the concern was focused on the safety of seafood. Shellfish were a particular worry, because in their case, unlike fish, we eat the entire animal—stomach, microplastics and all. In 2017, Belgian scientists announced that seafood lovers could consume up to 11,000 plastic particles a year by eating mussels, a favorite dish in that country.

By then, however, scientists already understood that plastics continuously fragment in the environment, shredding over time into fibers even smaller than a strand of human hair —particles so small they

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