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Highest-Rated Athlete's Foot Treatment | Reviews and Ingredients

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Best Athlete's Foot Treatment (Environmentally Friendly)

The mirrored cabinet may be a way to conceal medicine products in the bathroom, but you may still want to shine a light on the ingredients label before you pull them out. In particular, watch out for BHA, a preservative added to many anti-aging gels and hemorrhoid creams that’s an immune and organ system toxin. Creams and ointments also sometimes contain phenol, a neurotoxin and respiratory system toxin that’s banned in Canada and Japan. Both BHA and phenol accumulate in the environment and are toxic to wildlife as well. (more)

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Best Athlete's Foot Treatment (Environmentally Friendly)

Desenex Antifungal Athlete's Foot Spray Powder
Desenex Antifungal Athlete's Foot Spray Powder
  • $7.85
7.9
Desenex AntiFungal Athlete's Foot Spray Liquid
Desenex AntiFungal Athlete's Foot Spray Liquid
  • $7.85
7.9
Neosporin AF Antifungal Athletes Foot Spray Liquid
Neosporin AF Antifungal Athletes Foot Spray Liquid
7.8
Lamisil AT Antifungal Cream For Athletes Foot
Lamisil AT Antifungal Cream For Athletes Foot
  • $12.83
  • User Rating:
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7.8
Desenex Foot and Sneaker Deodorant Spray Powder
Desenex Foot and Sneaker Deodorant Spray Powder
  • $5.23
6.9
Desenex AntiFungal Athlete's Foot Powder
Desenex AntiFungal Athlete's Foot Powder
  • $8.44
  • User Rating:
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6.9
Neosporin AF Antifungal Cream, Jock Itch
Neosporin AF Antifungal Cream, Jock Itch
  • $8.44
6.1
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Although it’s more rare to find in medicine cabinet products than elsewhere in personal care, fragrance sometimes shows up on the ingredient list of ointments, itch-relief sprays, and pain-relief sprays. A catch-all term that hides the actual blend of chemical ingredients used to make it, fragrance can conceal the presence of possible carcinogens such as phthalates and often represents an allergy and immune system toxicity concern.

Some first-aid sprays contain triclosan as an active ingredient. Although it’s an effective anti-bacterial agent, Triclosan is a hormone-disrupting environmental toxin.

Medicine products with some type of moisturizing effect, such as sunburn gels, also sometimes contain triethanolamine, an immune system and skin toxicant used as a pH balancer.

Although there’s probably a wide variety of stuff in your medicine cabinet, a quick and easy way to do a background check on it is to scan through our health and safety data for medicines made by companies that have signed the Compact for Safe Cosmetics.