Sure.
Very unglamourously, I had to test my own stool and my own blood. Doing that on the big screen was not fun, I will tell you that, but I will say that I tested my own blood and I did have a microplastic burden there. I tested my own stool and found microplastics there. The microplastics were in my dust. The microplastics were coming out of my frying pan. The microplastics were just about everywhere.
That should not necessarily be too surprising. If you think about just drinking out of your average plastic water bottle, you'll be consuming a quarter-million microplastics every single time you do that, right? There are microplastics everywhere. They are leaching out of the plastics. Even something that looks solid, something that hasn't been shredded in the recycling process, can actually have a lot of microplastics. Your tea bags—those plastic tea bags—when you pour boiling water on them, release 11.6 billion microplastics into your system. That can be detected in blood tests.