DIAPER DU-DEE DIAPER SERVICE
"Reusable diapers significantly reduce the amount of waste in our landfills (untreated human waste is of particular concern), are healthier for babies, and save money for both their families and the community as a whole. Additional benefits are earlier potty-training, better functionality, and (I believe) greater comfort for the babies who wear them. But the main reason I like to use cloth diapers is a little harder to explain. The best I can do is to say that it feels like a nicer way to live... the same reason we don't use paper plates everyday."
-Ellen Crain
Many parents are taking a hard look at the many health and developmental, environmental, and economic advantages cloth diapering has over single-use diapers. This section provides information which supports the position that cloth diapering is clearly superior to single-use diapering in each of these areas.
Healthy Babies
Cotton is soft and breathable on Baby's skin. Like its comfort, its natural absorbency is the polar opposite of the combination of paper pulp, plastics, and "super absorbent" chemicals in disposables.
No harmful chemicals near Baby
Children who are diapered in cloth generally potty train 12 months sooner than those in disposables. Potty training is important for a child’s confidence, sense of self and his developing independence.
In 1955 virtually every baby in the United States was diapered using cloth diapers, and 7% of babies had diaper rash. By 1991, approximately 90% of babies in the United States were diapered using disposables, and 78% of babies had diaper rash.
Disposables retain body heat, which causes babies to have a higher temperature around their genitals, aggravating rashes and potentially harming male fertility.
Disposable Diapers Linked to Infertility and Testicular Cancer
Parents who have used disposables testify to the beads of clear gel, used to wick moisture, that are occasionally found on their child’s genitals. These chemicals can cause severe irritation, allergic reactions and/or sensitivity.
Asthma rates are on a sharp incline in the US. Harsh perfumes and chemical emissions have long been known to induce asthma-like symptoms in children and adults. Now, researchers have found that disposable diapers might be a trigger for asthma. A study published in the October, 1999 issue of the Archives of Environmental Health found that laboratory mice exposed to various brands of disposable diapers suffered increased eye, nose, and throat irritation, including bronchoconstriction similar to that of an asthma attack.
An additional serious concern is the risk that dioxin, a by-product of the paper-bleaching process, may exist in single-use diapers. Dioxin in various forms has been shown to cause cancer, birth defects, liver damage, and skin diseases.
The chemical dryness of single-use has produced a great lowering of standards in baby care because parents are led to believe that as long as the diaper feels dry, it's all right to leave on. It isn't. Dry does not mean clean, and the urine absorbed by the chemicals used in single-use diapers stays right next to a baby's skin. (As do feces, which are a tremendous breeding ground for noxious bacteria.) Chemicals are not a substitute for the attention babies need, and "set-and-forget" diapering is not healthy.

Healthy Environment
In the United States alone single-use items consume nearly 100,000 tons of plastic and 800,000 tons of tree pulp.
An average child will use between 8,000 -10,000 disposable diapers before being potty trained.
We will pay an average of $350 million annually to deal with their disposal and, to top it off, these diapers will still be in the landfill 300 years from now.
Americans throw away 570 diapers per second. That's 49 million diapers per day.
Letting Diaper Du-Dee launder your cloth diapers uses less than ½ the energy and 75% less water than home laundering, due to more efficient equipment and load size.
The production of disposable diapers has a harmful effect on the environment due to the use of water, chemicals, plastics and other materials. It requires 5 times more energy, uses 8 times more non-renewable raw materials, consumes 90 times more renewable resources, and produces 2.3 times more waste water and 60 times more solid waste than reusable diapers
The feces that collects in landfills creates a public health hazard and can contaminate groundwater.
Contrary to popular belief, no disposable diaper -- not even biodegradable ones -- can break down in a landfill.
Not only do disposable diapers require more water in manufacturing, but also more trees, energy and fuel.

Healthy Mind
Many parents who use disposables think nothing of spending $15 or $20 on diapers when they shop for groceries, which quickly gets hidden in the total grocery bill. Taking the real cost along with the cost of additional diapering because of delayed potty training, it becomes immediately apparent that cloth diapering is far less costly than single-use diapers.
Cloth diapering has progressed since the folding and pinning of the 1950s. Modern cloth diapering now gives you the option of using diaper covers, which secure the diaper in place with Velcro fasteners: making pinning and extensive folding unnecessary.
As mentioned earlier, the average babies wearing cloth diapers are toilet trained at 24-30 months, while the average age for babies wearing single-use diapers is 36-42 months. This not only has obvious economic implications, but it is highly significant for your baby's development.
With a service, all you do with a used diaper is put it in the hamper provided for your use.
Essentially you rent the use of the diapers your baby needs, sized for the baby's age. Therefore, there is no large initial investment.
BEING GREEN HAS NEVER BEEN SO EASY! 
diaperdudee@hotmail.com
515.440.3690