The wooden matches market may be a small market, but it is a market that could flare up at any moment!
(Sorry, couldn't resist that line)

Yes it is a surprise somebody got through to the bean counters that being cheap was costing them market share.
It was likely somebody from marketing and accounting working together to over ride the cut costs at all costs mantra.
You can bet it wasn't charity driving the decision.

Yes it is red phosphorus they use not white.
They are both forms of phosphorus, just the atoms are arranged different in the crystal. White is far more toxic while red is not absorbed by the body as much.

Here is an excerpt about why they quit using white Phosphorus in matches.
Quote:
Phossy jaw
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Phossy jaw, formally phosphorus necrosis of the jaw is a deadly occupational hazard for those who work with white phosphorus without proper safeguards. It was most commonly seen in workers in the match industry in the 19th and early 20th century. Modern occupational hygiene practices have eliminated the conditions which lead to this affliction.

Chronic exposure to the vapour of yellow and white phosphorus, the active ingredient of most matches from the 1840s to the 1910s, caused a deposition of phosphorus in the jaw bones. It also caused serious brain damage. Workers afflicted would begin suffering painful toothaches and swelling of the gums. Over time, the jaw bone would begin to abscess, a process which was both extremely painful and disfiguring to the patient, and repellent to others, since drainage from the dying bone tissue was exceedingly foul-smelling. The jawbones would gradually rot away and would actually glow a greenish-white color in the dark. Surgical removal of the afflicted jaw bones might save the sufferers' life at this point—otherwise, death from organ failure would invariably follow.

The Salvation Army was instrumental in bringing about changes in match manufacturing which eliminated the disease.[1] In some nations, legislative action was required to force these changes on a reluctant industry.[2] The use of white and yellow phosphorus was prohibited by the Berne Convention, a treaty established in Berne in 1906.

A related condition, osteonecrosis of the jaw, has been described as a side-effect of bisphosphonates, a class of phosphorus-based drugs that inhibit bone resorption, and are used widely for treating osteoporosis, bone disease in cancer and some other conditions.[3]


The numbers in brackets are for the footnotes at the bottom of the full article page.


Edited by scafool (01/27/09 11:11 AM)
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May set off to explore without any sense of direction or how to return.