ASEQ-EHAQ

L'Association pour la santé environnementale du Québec / Environmental Health Association of Quebec

May 2026: Multiple Chemical Sensitivity (MCS) Awareness Month

May 12 – Multiple Chemical Sensitivity Awareness Day

May is internationally recognized as Multiple Chemical Sensitivity Awareness Month, with May 12 recognized globally as Multiple Chemical Sensitivity Awareness Day.
This observance is specific to MCS and reflects long-standing international efforts to advance recognition, accommodation, and inclusion for people living with this disability.

This is the time for municipalities to include multiple chemical sensitivity (MCS) in accessibility and inclusion efforts. MCS is already recognized as a disability and health condition under Canadian human-rights law. Municipal action is now required to align with the Accessible Canada Act (2019) and Canada’s obligations under the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UN CRPD), including through the implementation of fragrance-free and low-emission environments as essential accessibility measures.

What Is Multiple Chemical Sensitivity (MCS)?

Multiple chemical sensitivity (MCS) is a recognized disability in Canada that can substantially limit major life activities, including breathing, mobility, access to housing, employment, healthcare, education, and public services.

People living with MCS experience adverse health effects when exposed to volatile organic compounds (VOCs) found in perfumes, fragranced products, cleaning agents, pesticides, building materials, and other chemical emissions commonly present in indoor and outdoor environments.

Accommodation for MCS is well established and includes:

Accommodation for this disability is well established and includes the implementation of fragrance-free policies; the use of lowest-VOC-emission, least-toxic products for all uses and purposes; and preventive, non-chemical approaches to building and land management that reduce the need for chemical interventions.

These measures support accessibility, dignity, and equality.

Why May and May 12 Matter

Statistics Canada has collected population-level data on MCS since 2000. Over a 20-year period, prevalence more than doubled to over 1.13 million Canadians (1 in 34) diagnosed with MCS, confirming its public-health significance.

Recognition of MCS Awareness Month and Day is not symbolic. It helps ensure that public spaces, services, and programs are accessible and inclusive for people whose health and participation depend on reduced chemical exposures.

Accessibility, Inclusion, and Fragrance-Free Environments

Scent-free and low-emission environments are widely recognized as essential accommodation measures for people living with MCS.

  • The Canadian Human Rights Commission recognizes MCS as a disability and affirms scent-free and low-toxicity environments as required accommodations.
  • The American Medical Association recognizes fragrance sensitivity including MCS as a condition that may limit major life activities and supports fragrance-free policies, ingredient transparency, and clinical awareness.
  • Under the United Nations Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, Canada has been directed to eliminate discrimination against persons with MCS and ensure equality and inclusion across all levels of government.
  • Statistics Canada has collected national data on MCS since 2000, with current analyses indicating that over 1.13 million Canadians (1 in 34) have been diagnosed with MCS, confirming its prevalence and public-health significance.
  • The Accessible Canada Act (2019) establishes a proactive duty to identify, remove, and prevent barriers to accessibility for all persons with disabilities. Including multiple chemical sensitivity (MCS) within municipal accessibility and inclusion initiatives aligns local action with this federal framework and supports inclusive environments for people with diverse disability-related access needs.

Fragrance-free policies are therefore, accessibility measures, not preferences.

The Municipal Role

Municipal recognition of Multiple Chemical Sensitivity Awareness Month (May) and Awareness Day (May 12) supports:

  • accessibility and inclusion
  • alignment with human-rights obligations
  • healthier public environments
  • informed policy and public awareness

Please align your municipality with existing law, evidence, and international recognition by supporting MCS-specific awareness and accommodation measures.

How Members Can Help

To ensure clear, accurate, and consistent messaging, we are coordinating outreach centrally.

🔹 What we are asking from members

  • Share the name of your municipality and mayor’s office
  • Let us know if your city has previously issued proclamations or lit landmarks
  • Identify any existing municipal accessibility or fragrance-free initiatives

[Link: Municipal Information Survey Form]

This information allows us to engage municipalities directly using evidence-based language and established legal frameworks, helping prevent confusion or dilution of the MCS message.

🔹 Please note

To ensure clear, accurate, and consistent messaging, we ask members not to contact municipalities independently regarding proclamations or landmark lighting for Multiple Chemical Sensitivity (MCS) Awareness Month and Day. Central coordination helps ensure:

  • accuracy
  • consistency
  • alignment with MCS-specific evidence and policy
  • protection against conflation with unrelated conditions

If you have personal or professional contacts within a municipality or mayor’s office, we welcome your support. Please send a brief personal introduction or referral to office@aseq-ehaq.ca, and our team will follow up directly.

Learn More: Why MCS, Why May

📄 [Download: Why Multiple Chemical Sensitivity and May Matter]
📚 [View References and Evidence Base]

These documents outline the scientific, legal, and human-rights foundations for recognizing MCS and adopting fragrance-free, low-emission environments.

Join Us in Lighting Up Canada for MCS

May 2026 is an opportunity to make accessibility visible. Together, we can advance recognition, inclusion, and healthier environments for people living with multiple chemical sensitivity.

A joint initiative of the Environmental Health Association of Canada (EHAC-ASEC) and the Environmental Health Association of Québec (ASEQ-EHAQ).