About StainlessWaterBottles.com
StainlessWaterBottles.com was created out of necessity. There are numerous companies offering stainless water bottles; but which bottles are safe, effective, well-made, easy to clean? Which bottles are laboratory tested?

President & CEO
As a Washington State licensed physician specializing in Environmental Medicine, I created StainlessWaterBottles.com and StainlessWaterBottles.org to inform the public about toxins commonly found in water bottles. As a physician, parent, and a consumer myself, I am committed to carrying stainless steel products that are safe and healthy for people of all ages on StainlessWaterBottles.com.
I aim to help educate the public about harmful health effects from non-stainless steel water bottles, such as:- Plastic water bottles that leach toxins, namely Bisphenol A (BPA) which is linked to cancer, infertility, hormone disruption, miscarriage and others.
- Aluminum water bottles that may leach aluminum, which may be linked to Alzheimer’s and early-onset dementia.
- Lined aluminum water bottles that may leach Bisphenol A, aluminum or other unknown compounds.
Stainless steel water bottles are NOT all created equal in terms of safety for your health.
There is a list of procedures that are followed before any stainless steel water bottle is offered at StainlessWaterBottles.com.
- Analysis of the stainless steel which determines levels of nickel and other heavy metals
- Analysis of the paint which determines lead content
- Analysis of leaching which determines how much nickel or other metals leach into the water
- Evidence of linings which determines if BPA or other chemical lining is present
- No laboratory testing done
- Lead content > 10 mg/kg (most are < 1 mg/kg)
- Paint that falls off easily
- Difficulty cleaning which leads to bacteria, fungus and/or molds
- Evidence of metals, BPA or other chemicals leaching from the bottle or cap into the water.
- Companies which copy-cat other leading stainless water bottle manufacturers.
- Poor quality cap threads causing leakage, breakage or material to fall into the bottle
- Poor quality bottle construction causing the bottle to fall over or leak.
- High nickel content causing an elevated blood nickel level.
- Lead coming off of paint from the outside of the bottle causing elevated lead levels.
- Bisphenol A (BPA) leaching from the water bottle cap causing numerous health issues.
- Poor cap construction causing pieces of material falling into your beverage.
- Other heavy metals leeching into the water causing elevated blood levels of heavy metals.
What does that leave then in terms of safe, quality stainless water bottles?
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Wishing you continued health,

Dr Ben














