One way to reduce PFAS in you is to regularly give blood.
Of course, this means someone else gets your PFAS.
Taken in context, one must first recognize that it must have been BAD NEWS to finally prompt FDA to move to ban PFAS in food packaging.
I suspect that this study was the catalyst
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/09603123.2024.2338269
or perhaps it masks a more serious, unacknowledged health risk, serious enough for the FDA to actually ACT.
We may not know for years or decades the true degree of damage wrought by this material which should NEVER have been permitted into the consumer materials market (ScotchGuard et al) let alone food packaging.
The FDA action this year is a glaring red flag for anyone with a high risk factor.
The overarching question is whether the feds granted the manufacturer(s) immunity...