You’ve probably seen the headlines: microplastics found in blood, lungs, placentas, and even brain tissue. It’s enough to make anyone want to throw out every plastic item in their home and move to a remote cabin. And while the research is still catching up to the headlines, what we do know points to some clear, practical steps worth taking.

The goal isn’t to eliminate every trace of plastic from your life; instead, it’s to focus your energy on the changes that actually move the needle.

I still remember the day I learned that microplastics had been found in human blood. I was standing in my kitchen, making a smoothie in my well-loved plastic blender cup, reheating leftovers in a plastic container, and sipping from a “BPA-free” water bottle.

I had built a career around helping women reduce inflammation, balance hormones, and heal their gut, and yet there were invisible exposures surrounding me I had barely questioned.

At first, I did what most health-conscious women do. I almost spiraled.

Should I throw everything away? Replace every container? Get rid of the kids’ lunch boxes? Was this another hidden toxin quietly working against our energy, hormones, and long-term health?

But after digging into the research and taking a breath, I realized something important. Not all swaps matter equally. Some changes meaningfully reduce exposure. Others drain your time, money, and mental bandwidth without moving the needle.

That moment shifted my approach, both in my own home and with my clients.

Instead of fear-based overhauls, we focus on high-impact shifts. The ones that reduce daily exposure without creating overwhelm. Because real health is not built on perfection. It is built on clarity, consistency, and knowing where your effort actually counts.

That is exactly what this article is about.

Understanding Your Actual Risk

Microplastics are tiny plastic fragments under 5mm, and nanoplastics are even smaller particles that can cross biological barriers in the body. Research confirms we’re exposed to them daily through food, water, air, and even the products we use.

A 2019 study in Environmental Science & Technology estimated that Americans consume between 39,000 and 52,000 microplastic particles per year from diet alone, rising to 74,000–121,000 per year when inhalation is included (Cox et al., 2019).

What’s less settled is what this means for human health long-term. Animal studies have shown inflammatory responses, hormonal disruption, and gut microbiome shifts in high-dose or controlled experimental settings. And while that’s certainly concerning, human clinical data is still limited.

A 2023 study published in The New England Journal of Medicine found microplastics and nanoplastics in carotid artery plaque and associated their presence with higher cardiovascular risk, making it the most compelling (though observational) human-health study to date (Marfella et al., 2024).

This is worth paying attention to, but it’s also worth keeping in perspective: we’re exposed to countless environmental compounds daily, and dose, duration, and individual factors all matter.

Where Exposure Is Highest and What to Swap

Food and Storage

Heating food in plastic containers is one of the highest-impact exposure sources to address. Heat accelerates the breakdown and leaching of plastic compounds, including microplastics and endocrine-disrupting chemicals. Switching to glass, stainless steel, or ceramic for food storage and reheating is one of the simplest, highest-return changes you can make.

Heavily processed and packaged foods also carry higher microplastic loads, particularly when in extensive contact with plastic packaging or processing equipment. A 2018 review in Marine Pollution Bulletin highlighted that seafood, particularly shellfish, can contain microplastics and raised concerns about food safety and human health (Barboza et al., 2018).

Choosing whole, minimally packaged foods where possible compounds your benefit.

Water and Air

Tap water and bottled water both contain microplastics but bottled water can contain significantly more, partly due to the plastic bottle itself. A study published in PNAS found that bottled water contained multiple times more nanoplastic particles than tap water (Qian et al., 2024).

A quality home filtration system—specifically reverse osmosis—removes the majority of microplastics from drinking water and is one of the highest-value investments for daily exposure reduction.

For indoor air, synthetic carpets, upholstered furniture, and certain textiles shed plastic fibers continuously. A HEPA air purifier meaningfully reduces airborne microplastic load, particularly in bedrooms where you spend significant hours.

Changes You Can Skip

Not every swap delivers a meaningful return. Switching to sea salt over table salt, for example, has been widely discussed in this context, but the actual microplastic content in either is negligible relative to other sources (Smith et al., 2018). Similarly, stressing over the plastic lining in your coffee cup lid once a week is a lower-priority concern compared to daily plastic food storage habits.

Practical Lifestyle Strategies

Beyond swaps, supporting your body’s natural detoxification pathways is a reasonable companion strategy. A fiber-rich diet supports gut transit and may help move ingested particles through the body more efficiently.

Research on the gut microbiome increasingly suggests that a diverse, plant-rich diet supports intestinal barrier integrity, which may matter as we learn more about how nanoplastics interact with gut tissue (Barboza et al., 2018).

Adequate hydration, regular movement, and minimizing overall toxic load through clean personal care products all contribute to a more resilient internal environment.

The Bottom Line

Microplastics are real, they’re pervasive, and paying attention to your exposure is reasonable. But this is a space where targeted action beats overwhelm every time. Prioritize filtered water, stop heating food in plastic, move toward whole foods with minimal packaging, and consider a HEPA purifier for your home.

These four changes alone address your highest-impact exposure sources.

If you want a personalized plan for reducing your toxic load and supporting your body’s natural detoxification systems, book a call with me. I’ll help you cut through the noise and focus on what actually moves the needle for your health.

Warmly,
Vanessa Harris, MNT