A Brief History Of The Disposable Diaper - Mother Jones
Maybe your like
- Share on Facebook
- Share on Twitter
- Share on Bluesky
- Comments
- Donate
- Subscribe
- Share on Facebook
- Share on Twitter
- Share on Bluesky
- Comments
1948: Johnson & Johnson introduces first mass-marketed disposable diaper in the U.S.
1961: Procter & Gamble unveils Pampers.
1970: American babies go through 350,000 tons of disposable diapers, making up 0.3% of U.S. municipal waste.
1980: American babies wear 1.93 million tons of disposables, 1.4% of municipal waste.
1981: Disposables start using super-absorbent polymers; size reduced 50%.
1984: Cabbage Patch Kids appear on the first “designer diaper.”
1990: Disposable diapers now constitute 1.6% of municipal waste. 7 in 10 Americans say they would support their ban.
1990-91: Dueling studies by Procter & Gamble and the National Association of Diaper Services assert the merits of disposables and cloth, respectively.
1999: Pampers-funded pediatrician T. Berry Brazelton tells parents not to rush toilet training.
2000: Diapers compose 2% of municipal waste.
2005: The ultimate low-impact trend for people without shag carpets: “elimination communication,” i.e. teaching your infant to go diaper free.
2006: American babies wear 3.6 million tons of disposables, constituting 2.1% of municipal waste.
2007: Julia Roberts touts flushable diapers, with one caveat: “If you don’t really break it all the way up, it doesn’t go all the way down.”
2007: Pampers introduces diapers for kids weighing more than 41 lbs (typical for age 5).
2500: Early 21st-century disposable diapers will finish biodegrading.
Sources
Related
-

The Tricky Science of Forecasting Extreme Winter Weather
Umair Irfan
-

A Year Later, We’re All Paying for Trump’s Assault on the “Green New Scam”
Sophie Hurwitz
-

Inside the Largest Effort Ever to Save the Great Barrier Reef
Benji Jones
-

In Helene’s Wake, Rural North Carolina Turns to Solar and Battery Hubs
Elizabeth Ouzts
We Recommend
-

Celebrating Black Military Service Is Not “DEI Shit.” It’s Essential to America’s Defense.
Matthew Delmont
-

ICE’s Theater of War
Inae Oh
-

Alex Pretti Was a Hero. To These Workers, He Was a Colleague, Too.
Anna Rogers
-

Sponsored Post
Patagonia’s Playbook for Environmental Activism
Patagonia
Latest
-

Who Takes Palantir’s Money? A New Tracker Finds Out.
Alex Nguyen
-

Trump and Congress Are Coming for Our Favorite National Monuments Again
Wyatt Myskow
-

Roaming the Streets of Minneapolis, Looking for ICE
Madison Swart
-

True Heroism and Bearing Witness: the Woman Who Documented the Killing of Alex Pretti
James West
Sign up for our free newsletter
Subscribe to the Mother Jones Daily to have our top stories delivered directly to your inbox.
Close Thank you for subscribing! G59DCBy signing up, you agree to our privacy policy and terms of use, and to receive messages from Mother Jones and our partners.
Get our award-winning magazine
Save big on a full year of investigations, ideas, and insights.
SubscribeSupport our journalism
Help Mother Jones' reporters dig deep with a tax-deductible donation.
DonateRHC membership for blog posts
view commentsMag Promo
Independent. In print. In your mailbox.
Inexpensive, too! Subscribe today and get a full year of Mother Jones for just $19.95.
Subscribe
February 2026
December 2025
October 2025
Bold. Brave. Beautiful.
Award-winning photojournalism. Stunning video. Fearless conversations.
Follow us on Instagram >Looking for news you can trust?
Subscribe to the Mother Jones Daily to have our top stories delivered directly to your inbox.
Close Thank you for subscribing! G59DCBy signing up, you agree to our privacy policy and terms of use, and to receive messages from Mother Jones and our partners.
We see you're using an ad blocker...
And we respect that! But maybe you’re of a mind to support our work directly instead? We have until December 31 to raise the last $400,000 we need to keep our nonprofit newsroom running at full strength into 2026. Will you make a gift today?
We noticed you have an ad blocker on. Can you pitch in a few bucks to help fund Mother Jones' investigative journalism?
Donate Not Now Billionaires own the media, but they don’t own us.At Mother Jones we know these aren’t conventional times, and they require unconventional coverage. That’s what deliver every day: fierce, independent journalism you can’t find elsewhere. Perhaps never in the history of our country has that been more necessary than now. But we can’t do it without reader support—your support. Please chip in today.
One-Time Monthly $ $ $ Other Amount Continue
Billionaires own the media, but they don’t own us. At Mother Jones we know these aren’t conventional times, and they require unconventional coverage. That’s what deliver every day: fierce, independent journalism you can’t find elsewhere. Perhaps never in the history of our country has that been more necessary than now. But we can’t do it without reader support—your support. Please chip in today.
One-Time Monthly $35 $50 $100 Other Amount Continue
Don't let an algorithm decide what news you see.
Sign up for the free Mother Jones Daily newsletter and follow the news that matters.
Close Thank you for subscribing! G59DCTag » When Did Disposable Diapers Come Out
-
Disposable Diapers Invented The 1950s
-
History Of Diapers: The FULL Timeline (2022)
-
Diaper - Wikipedia
-
When Were Disposable Diapers Invented - Parasol Co
-
[PDF] Disposable Diapers Story - Kimberly-Clark Corporation
-
The Woman Who Invented Disposable Diapers - The Atlantic
-
Pampers: The Birth Of P&G's First 10-Billion-Dollar Brand
-
The History Of Diapers - Lil' Baby Cakes
-
Pampers History : A Journey Of Love, Sleep & Play
-
Meet Marion Donovan, The Mother Who Invented A Precursor To The ...
-
A Brief History Of Diapers - Eco Pea Co. Canada
-
Pampers (diapers) - First Versions
-
[PDF] SEVEN DECADES OF DISPOSABLE DIAPERS - Edana
-
History Of The Diaper - Sanyhot