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PFAS (Forever Chemicals) In Your Sex Lube?

The Poison You Trust: K-Y Lube Accused of Hiding ‘Forever Chemicals’

A Century of Trust, Shattered

For over 100 years, the K-Y brand has been synonymous with sexual health and safety. It’s a product people reach for in their most intimate moments, trusting the promises printed on the box. Reckitt, the multinational corporation that owns K-Y, reinforces this trust with phrases like “body friendly formula” and “gentle formula – not made with sulphates, hormones, parabens, artificial colorants and fragrances.”

A lawsuit filed in the Eastern District of New York alleges this trust is a calculated deception. The complaint, brought by plaintiff Maurice Beckles on behalf of all purchasers, claims that K-Y lubricants are contaminated with PFAS: a class of toxic, synthetic “forever chemicals.” These chemicals are not listed anywhere on the packaging. Consumers, relying on the company’s marketing, are applying a product to the most sensitive and absorptive parts of their bodies with no knowledge of the potential risks.

The Non-Financial Ledger: A Betrayal of Intimacy

This isn’t just about a misleading label on a random consumer good. This is about the violation of a sacred space. People use these products to enhance connection and ensure comfort during moments of profound vulnerability. The complaint states Mr. Beckles purchased K-Y Jelly believing it was safe for himself and his partner based on its “body friendly” claims. The subsequent discovery of PFAS contamination represents a deep breach of that personal trust.

The lawsuit details how PFAS can enter the body through skin absorption, a risk amplified in genital tissues which are more delicate and prone to absorbing chemicals. The document notes that increased body temperature during sexual activity can further heighten the transfer of these toxins through the skin barrier. It also points out the risk of oral ingestion. The cost here is not just economic; it’s the poisoning of intimacy and the introduction of fear and anxiety into what should be a safe experience.

The Science of Contamination

The lawsuit doesn’t rely on speculation. It cites independent lab testing of the K-Y Jelly Mr. Beckles purchased. Those tests found organic fluorine, which the complaint establishes is a clear indicator of PFAS. PFAS, or per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, are man-made chemicals known for their persistence; they do not break down in the environment or in the human body, hence the name “forever chemicals.”

The legal filing explains that while testing for every single one of the thousands of PFAS variants is impossible, total organic fluorine (TOF) testing is the accepted scientific standard. As Dr. Scott Belcher of North Carolina State University is quoted in similar contexts, TOF analysis “does account for all PFAS contaminants” and “serves as a good β€˜spot-check’ of consumer products.” A positive result for organic fluorine means PFAS are present. It’s that simple.

Legal Receipts: The Case in Their Own Words

The court filing lays out the corporation’s alleged misconduct in plain terms. These are not our interpretations; they are direct claims from the legal complaint filed against Reckitt.

Societal Impact Mapping

Public Health Crisis

The health risks are not theoretical. The complaint cites the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, which link PFAS exposure to a terrifying list of ailments: liver damage, decreased fertility, increased risk of asthma, thyroid disorders, immunotoxic effects, and various cancers. Because these chemicals accumulate in the body over time, harm can occur even at very low levels of exposure. By allegedly including them in a personal lubricant, Reckitt is accused of exposing consumers to these risks directly and repeatedly.

Economic Deception

The lawsuit argues for economic injury. People paid a premium for a product they believed was safe and “body friendly.” Mr. Beckles and the proposed class of consumers were denied the ability to make an informed choice. They bought a product they would not have purchased, or would have paid significantly less for, had the presence of industrial chemicals been disclosed. This is a direct transfer of wealth from the public to a corporation, built on an omission of fact.

What Now?

This is not the end of the story; it is the beginning of a fight for accountability. You have the information. Here is who and what to watch.

  • Corporate Accountability: Reckitt Benckiser LLC and RB Health (US) LLC. These are the U.S. entities named as defendants, operating as subsidiaries of the global corporation Reckitt Benckiser Group PLC.
  • Regulatory Watchlist: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) & Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry. These agencies provide the official data on the harms of PFAS. Their research is the foundation for holding corporations liable.
  • The Resistance: Power is not in waiting for a verdict. It is in organizing. Support consumer protection groups. Demand transparent labeling laws. Talk to your friends and family. A corporation’s greatest fear is a public that is no longer silent. Build networks of mutual aid and share information that corporations want to keep hidden.

Many more corporations put PFAS (forever chemicals) in their everyday products.

Here are just a small handful:


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Aleeia
Aleeia

I'm Aleeia, the creator of this website.

I have 6+ years of experience as an independent researcher covering corporate misconduct, sourced from legal documents, regulatory filings, and professional legal databases.

My background includes a Supply Chain Management degree from Michigan State University's Eli Broad College of Business, and years working inside the industries I now cover.

Every post on this site was either written or personally reviewed and edited by me before publication.

Learn more about my research standards and editorial process by visiting my About page

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