
Well, I've used non-stick pans for years...even with canaries and budgies in the house as far back as the 70s. Oh, and one obnoxious, awful cockatiel named MortimerSnerdtheCockatielBird in the early 80s, and there were times when I would have quite gladly......but I digress. Again.
I raised my first batch of chicks in this same house for 5.5 weeks, and in an 10X80 mobile home they would have been exposed to any and all fumes no matter where their brooder was. All subsequent batches of chicks started out in the house for the first few days before they went outside to live as well. The only place I had for the brooder, after the first batch, was against the half-wall between the kitchen and the living room, so they were just several feet away from our cooking activities.
Not once in all that time did I lose a bird to toxicity. Did I get lucky? Maybe. But before everyone rushes to dump all their pots and pans, might I suggest finding out what the non-stick substance is on the pans? That could be the difference, I don't know. I'm winging it here! I do use my cast iron and one or two stainless too, and love them, but there are times when I want to use my non-stick and I guess I'll keep using them. Apparently whatever is on them isn't toxic, or I'm sure I would have had issues before now.
I am not downplaying the warnings about Teflon coatings. Far from it - this thread contains critical information and needs desperately to be heeded. In fact, I've already referred others back to this thread just to share the excellent information that has been posted here. I guess all I am saying is that just because a product is non-stick doesn't automatically make it lethal. Caution and total panic are two entirely different things. I don't want anyone to go through what
@AaronandAlice have been through this week, but I also don't want anyone to go through the expense and hassle of replacing cookware
if it's not necessary. If it makes you more comfortable to do it, and you can do it, then by all means do it! Otherwise, a little common sense can go a long way.