Archive for the '~Media Feeds' Category

Ten dental X-rays ‘raise cancer risk’

Terry on Jun 8th 2010

By FIONA MACRAE
Daily Mail, UK

8th June 2010

Dental X-rays given to millions of Britons every year may dramatically increase the risk of thyroid cancer, scientists warned last night.

Researchers found that patients who had been X-rayed by their dentist at least ten times were more likely to develop the disease.

They have now warned that X-rays should not be given at check-ups or when registering new patients – despite these practices being common in many dental surgeries.

Regular dental check-ups are important to maintain healthy gums and teeth, but scientists have found a link between dental x-rays and thyroid cancer

How the dental X-rays work when a patient visits the dentist for a check up
With rates of thyroid cancer more than doubling in 30 years, the scientists said that the potential dangers of dental X-rays were often overlooked.
Researcher Dr Anjum Memon, of Brighton and Sussex Medical School, said: ‘Our study highlights the concern that, like chest or other upper body Xrays, dental X-rays should be prescribed when the patient has a specific clinical need, and not as part of routine check-up or when registering with a dentist.’

Dental leaders recommended that patients protect their thyroid – a hormone-releasing gland at the base of the neck – by wearing lightweight lead collars or bibs when being X-rayed.

The researchers asked 313 thyroid cancer patients and a similar number of healthy volunteers how many dental Xrays they had undergone.

After factoring in any hospital X-rays participants had had, they found that men and women who had had up to four dental X-rays were more than twice as likely to have developed the disease than those who had never had any.

Between five and nine X-rays and their risk rose more than four-fold, the journal Acta Oncologica reports.

In most danger were those who had had ten or more X-rays – their risk was 5.4 times that of someone who had never been X-rayed in the dentist’s chair.

The researchers relied on patients’ recollections, rather than dental records, but said that despite this, the finding was significant.

Dr Memon added that the results were supported by previous reports of increased risk of thyroid cancer in dentists, dental assistants and X-ray workers, suggesting that multiple low-dose exposures may be harmful.
Dr Memon, who carried out the research with experts from Cambridge and Kuwait universities, said: ‘It is important that our study is repeated with information from dental records including frequency of X-rays, age and dose at exposure.

‘If the results are confirmed, then the use of X-rays as a necessary part of evaluation for new patients, and routine periodic dental radiography, at six to 12 months interval, particularly for children and adolescents, will need to be reconsidered, as will a greater use of lead collar protection.’

But British dentists pointed out that the study was carried out in Kuwait, where rates of thyroid cancer are much higher than in the UK, and said the researchers did not know what sort of X-ray equipment had been used.
Dr Nigel Carter, chief executive of the British Dental Health Foundation, said: ‘The number of X-rays being taken in dental practice in the UK has greatly reduced in recent years and the dosages from modern equipment are extremely low.

‘Dental X-rays have a valuable role in the diagnosis of dental disease.’

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WHO predicts 21 million annual cancer cases by 2030

Terry on Jun 2nd 2010

Incidence of lung cancer worldwide, with green indicating low levels and red showing high levels.

By Elizabeth Landau
CNN.com Health Writer/Producer

By 2030, there will be more than 13 million deaths from cancer around the world and nearly 21 million diagnosed cases annually, according to a new report from the World Health Organization.

About 12.7 million new cancer cases and 7.6 million cancer deaths occurred in 2008, says GLOBOCAN 2008, the World Health Organization’s new online resource for cancer globally. The map above, from the Web site, shows the incidence of lung cancer worldwide, with green indicating low levels and red showing high levels.

Less developed regions of the world have higher cancer incidence and mortality, the WHO said. Lung cancer is the most commonly diagnosed type of cancer, with 1.61 million cases in 2008. Breast cancer, with 1.38 million cases, and colorectal cancers, with 1.23 million cases, are the second and third most common.

Lung cancer is also the most common cause of cancer death, with 1.38 million reported. Stomach cancer, with 0.74 million, and live cancers with 0.69 million, follow.

WHO noted that cancer is not exclusive to high-resource countries, and it is not rare anywhere in the world. But there are regional patterns – in developing regions, cervix and liver cancers are more common; developed regions have a higher burden of prostate and colorectal cancers.

You can view more maps of various kinds of cancer worldwide here.

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Media coverage of the President’s Cancer Panel Report

Terry on May 18th 2010

The President’s Cancer Panel Report:
“Reducing Environmental Cancer Risk: What We Can Do Now”

Compiled by the Collaborative on Health and the Environment

Media coverage and other responses to the PCP Report:

Organizational responses

Lung Cancer Alliance responds to President's Cancer Panel report
May 6, 2010

Reproductive Health Advocates Commend the President’s Cancer Panel
May 6, 2010

Media coverage

Journal of the National Cancer Institute, President's Cancer Panel Stirs Up Environmental Health Community
July 28, 2010

Science and Environmental Health Network: Networker newsletter, Reflections on the President's Cancer Panel Report (including commentary by Ted Schettler, MD, MPH)
June/July 2010 issue

JAMA,
New Report Argues Environmental Factors Are Underappreciated as Cancer Risks
June 22, 2010


Huffington Post,
A Bridge to Somewhere – Responding to the President's Cancer Panel Report (Part 1)
June 7, 2010

WTIC radio, CT: Greener Living Radio, Dr. Richard Clapp is featured in the first hour of the program speaking to cancer and environment and the PCP report
Greener Living Radio website
June 5, 2010

Los Angeles Times, Environmental Cancer Risks May Be More Dangerous Than You Think
May 24, 2010

The Lancet, Preventable Cancer in the US
May 15, 2010

Time, Cancer, Cancer Everywhere
May 14, 2010

NPR On Point,
Environmental Cancer Risk: The President's Cancer Panel sounds the alarm on environmental cancer risks
May 12, 2010

WBAI radio, NYC, Green Street Radio, Dr. Richard Clapp discusses the PCP
May 11, 2010

Huffington Post, Memo to the American Cancer Society: Every Cancer Counts
May 11, 2010

Reuters,
Environmental Cancers Still a Wild Card
May 10, 2010

The Brian Lehrer Show, Cancer and the Environment
May 10, 2010

Effect Measure, Environmental Cancer: because it's there
May 8, 2010

Boston Globe, Cancer Panel Sounds Alarm on Exposure to Chemicals
May 7, 2010

New York Times op-ed column by Nicholas Kristoff, New Alarm Bells About Chemicals and Cancer
May 6, 2010

Huffington Post,
blog post by Jeanne Rizzo, President and CEO of the Breast Cancer Fund, co-facilitator of CHE's Breast Cancer Working Group, Will the War on Cancer Evolve to Take on Environmental Risks?
May 6, 2010

Washington Post, "Cancer Panel: 'Grievous Harm' Posed by Unchecked Chemicals in US"
May 6, 2010

Environmental Health News, "President's Cancer Panel: Environmentally Caused Cancers Are 'Grossly Underestimated" and 'Needlessly Devastate American Lives"
May 6, 2010

On the Ground
, Nicholas Kristoff's blog, "Cancer Panels and Journalistic Panels"
May 5, 2010

Daily Kos, Vindicated…by President's Cancer Panel, no less
May 6, 2010

Breitbart, President's Cancer Panel Report Finds True Burden of Environmentally Induced Cancer Greatly Underestimated
May 6, 2010

Business Week, US Must Do More to Cut Cases of Environmental Cancers
May 6, 2010

USA Today, "Toxins Causing 'Grievous Harm', Cancer Panel Says"
May 6, 2010

MedPage Today, "Cancer Panel Says Environment May Contribute to Cancer Risk"
May 6, 2010

Plastic News, Obama's cancer panel pushes for more regulation of chemicals
May 6, 2010

Advancing Green Chemistry, President's Cancer Panel Report links environmental toxics to cancer; strongly endorses Green Chemistry
May 6, 2010

Los Angeles Times, "Cancer Risk of Chemicals in the Environment Uncertain"
May 5, 2010

NPR's Health Blog, "Everyday Chemicals Threaten Our Health, But Exact Risks Are Unknown"
May 6, 2010

Reuters, "American's 'Bombarded' With Cancer Causes: Government Panel"
May 6, 2010

CHE website

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Cancers from Environment ‘Grossly Underestimated’

Terry on May 6th 2010

Daily Exposures Cause Far More Cancers Than Once Thought, a Presidential Panel Says

By EMILY WALKER
ABC News MedPage Today Staff Writer
May 6, 2010

Environmental carcinogens are responsible for a far greater number of cancers than previously believed — a fact that suggests eradicating these environmental threats should be a priority for President Obama — according to the report of a presidential advisory panel.

“The Panel was particularly concerned to find that the true burden of environmentally induced cancer has been grossly underestimated,” wrote the authors of the report, “Reducing Environmental Cancer Risk: What We Can Do Now.”

“The panel urges you most strongly to use the power of your office to remove the carcinogens and other toxins from our food, water, and air that needlessly increase health care costs, cripple our Nation’s productivity, and devastate American lives,” the report’s authors wrote in a letter to President Obama.
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The President’s Cancer Panel was established by the National Cancer Act of 1971, when then President Richard Nixon declared war on cancer. The panel is required to submit an annual report to the president describing the status of the “war” and identifying both progress and barriers to continued advances.

The singling out of environmental causes for cancer in this year’s report is considered a major — and some said welcome — departure from previous reports, according to a number cancer specialists contacted by ABC News and MedPage Today.

“For the past 30 years … there has been systematic effort to minimize the importance of environmental factors in carcinogenesis,” said Dr. Philip Landrigan, director of the Children’s Environmental Health Center at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York City.

“There has been disproportionate emphasis on lifestyle factors and insufficient attention paid to discovering and controlling environmental exposures,” he said. “This report marks a sea change.”

Dr. Jennifer Lowry, a medical toxicologist at Children’s Mercy Hospitals and Clinics in Kansas City, Mo., said the report finally lends a “voice that could be heard that the environment does play an important role in the health of all people of every age.”

The report is actually a synthesis of testimony from more than two dozen experts in cancer, chemicals and environmental toxins.

Based on that testimony and research compiled over the last two years, report authors Dr. LaSalle Leffall, Jr., of Howard University and Vivian Smith, professor emerita at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, concluded that the government has failed to prevent unnecessary exposures to carcinogens. The challenge for the Obama administration, they wrote, is to intensify research efforts into environmental toxins.

“With the growing body of evidence linking environmental exposures to cancer, the public is becoming increasingly aware of the unacceptable burden of cancer resulting from environmental and occupational exposures that could have been prevented through appropriate national action,” Leffal and Smith wrote in the letter to the president.

Among the potential exposures cited in the report were pesticides, fertilizers, pharmaceutical byproducts in the water supply, household chemicals and tanning beds. Emissions from cars, trucks and planes add to the toxic mix, the authors wrote.

But the authors said there was no evidence connecting the use of cell phones to increased cancer risk.

While Americans are exposed to thousands of chemicals each year, only several hundred of those chemicals have been safety tested, Leffal and Smith said.

The study of environmental factors and their effect on cancer has been giving short shrift compared to studying lifestyle factors and genetic and molecular causes of cancer, the authors claimed.

But paging through the lengthy report, it was difficult to find solid science to back that strong statement.

“At this time, we do not know how much environmental exposures influence cancer risk and related immune and endocrine dysfunction,” Leffal and Smith wrote.

In an interview, Leffal said he hoped the report, if nothing else, would raise awareness that chemicals and other environmental toxins may be causing cancer and that more studies are needed.

“We think based on what we know, when you look at all the data, it just appears to us that there are areas where its been greatly under-reported,” Lefall said. “We don’t know 100 percent, but that’s why we believe we need to do more research.”

The National Toxicology Program, part of the Department of Health and Human Services, does list some chemicals such as benzene and formaldehyde and some substances including tobacco as carcinogenic, but environmental factors, such air pollutants and naturally-occurring chemicals, are less well-understood.
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Public awareness about some compounds, such as bisphenol A (BPA), has increased in the past year as a handful of studies and report linked the ubiquitous chemical — widely used in plastics such as baby bottles and other drink containers — to metabolic disorders, heart disease and male sexual dysfunction.

Also, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration recently announced it would review safety data on another common chemical, triclosan, which is used in antibacterial soaps and washes, toothpastes and cosmetics, after lab tests on animals were concerning.

In the report, Leffal and Smith recommended that physicians routinely ask about their current workplace and living environment as a routine part of collecting patient history.

They also recommended:

Conducting a thorough assessment of workplace exposures and cancer risks;

Creating a more coordinated and transparent system for enforcing environmental health standards;

Increasing funding for federal research into occupational and environmental epidemiologic cancer research;

The Environmental Protection Agency should lower its current maximum standard for radon exposure, and the public should be better informed about the risks of radon;

Providing better care to military personal who were exposed to nuclear fallout.

Radiation exposure has long been recognized as a cancer risk, but this latest report from the President’s Cancer Panel claims that patients and healthcare professionals are not completely aware of radiation exposure from imaging techniques such as computed tomograpy (CT) scans — a radiation exposure that might be increasing with the use of whole body scans and virtual colonoscopy.

And while the report issued a call for increased emphasis on dialing down the radiation exposure with CT, the government may actually be out in front on this issue; the FDA recently proposed new safety requirements for manufacturers of CT scanners and fluoroscopic devices. Those new requirements are designed to reduce unnecessary radiation from medical imaging.

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The Other Oil Disaster: Cancer and Canada’s Tar Sands

Terry on May 4th 2010

Gina Solomon
Senior Scientist, NRDC

Today I was privileged to be an invited guest of the community of Fort Chipewyan, Canada. I can’t blame you if you’ve never heard of “Ft. Chip” – after all, there are only 1000 residents, and it’s only accessible by plane or boat. But you should hear about it, because what happens there will affect all of us.

The town has been suffering for more than ten years from surprisingly high rates of cancer. A local doctor sounded the alarm, and eventually the government did an investigation. The government’s press release at the time the cancer study was released made it sound like there was no problem: “A study of the cancer incidence in Fort Chipewyan finds levels of the rare cancer cholangiocarcinoma are not higher than expected.”

The results of the cancer study were never presented to the community, and the government claimed there was no problem. That’s where I came in. One of my colleagues asked me to peer review the Alberta Health Services cancer investigation. To my surprise, the actual report did not align with the headlines:

* Overall, the report found a 30% increase in cancers in Ft. Chip compared with expected over the last 12 years;
* Leukemias and lymphomas were increased by 3-fold;
* Bile duct cancers were increased by 7-fold;
* Other cancers, such as soft tissue sarcomas, and lung cancers in women, were also elevated.

I’m not sure who wrote the press release for the government, but it sure weren’t the scientists who actually did the investigation.

It wasn’t just the elevated cancer rates that got my attention, however. It was also the types of cancers seen. Leukemias and lymphomas have been linked in the scientific literature to petroleum products, including VOCs (volatile components of petroleum), dioxin-like chemicals, and other hydrocarbons. Biliary cancers have been linked to petroleum and to PAHs (chemicals in tar and soot). Soft tissue sarcomas are very rare and lethal cancers that have also been linked to dioxin-like chemicals and hydrocarbons. It’s an interesting pattern — almost all of the cancer types that were elevated have been linked scientifically to chemicals in oil or tar.

It’s especially interesting because little Ft. Chip is located downstream from the largest tar sands mining and oil production operation in the world. Other scientists who also presented their findings to the community today revealed significant increases in toxic metals, PAHs, and related chemicals in the water and sediments of the river downstream from the tar sands.

About 200 community members filled the hall where the scientists and physicians presented their findings. Then the community members spoke. Elders from the Mikisew Cree Nation and the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation decried the lack of action by the government and industry. Other community members talked about their own cancer diagnoses, or about the problems they were seeing in the fish, ducks, and wildlife they hunt for food. One man brought a deformed fish to the researchers, asking that it be tested for contaminants. The meeting was long, intense, and important. These people are concerned about their livelihood, and their lives. They are also concerned about the state of their rivers, the lake, and the wildlife.

Afterward, as I flew back to Edmonton on the tiny plane, I looked down on miles of pristine boreal forest dotted with lakes and entwined by rivers. Then the tar sands operations came into view – vast scars on the land, massive sulfur piles, smokestacks creating huge plumes into the sky, and enormous tailings ponds next to the river glimmering with an oily sheen; tailings ponds that are almost certainly leaching contaminants into the Athabasca River, which carries them down toward Ft. Chip.

As I prepare to head down to the Gulf Coast, I wonder what will happen here in Canada. Will the newfound distaste for offshore oil drilling be a boon to the tar sands, thereby worsening the ecological and health situation up here? Or will the public realize that petroleum comes with a price that is too high to pay, and move toward a safer energy future?

This post originally appeared on NRDC’s Switchboard blog.

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Cancer sufferer puts human face on study of nuclear plant safety

Terry on May 3rd 2010

By Grace Schneider
Louisville KT Courier-Journal

As research scientists and federal regulators gathered in Washington, D.C., last month to discuss a new study of cancer rates near nuclear power plants, Sarah Sauer of Corydon, Ind., asked them for a favor.

Don’t forget the people behind the numbers, said Sarah, 16, a sophomore at Presentation Academy in Louisville.

Moments earlier, as she spoke to the National Academy of Sciences panel, the teen brought some in the room to tears, standing on a step-stool to reach the microphone as her high-pitched and strained voice told as much about her cancer battle as her words.

Linda Modica, a Sierra Club member from Tennessee who attended the panel meeting, said Sarah was a brave girl.

“It came off in a very poignant and powerful way,” said Modica.

It was a moment for which Sarah and her family had waited years — a chance to put a face on a study that will examine whether youngsters and adults who have lived near nuclear power plants suffer from higher rates of cancer.

“I got sick and I don’t want everybody else to have to go through the whole thing I did,” Sarah said in an interview last week after her return from Washington.

Her father, obstetrician Joseph Sauer, moved the family from Illinois to Southern Indiana in 2004, hoping to escape exposure from the Braidwood generating station in Braceville, Ill., about five miles from their last home. Doctors told Sarah’s parents they suspect her rare form of brain cancer was caused by environmental contamination from Braidwood, although her parents concede they can’t say for certain.

Before moving, however, the Sauers joined a chorus of environmental activists and others who clamored for more updated scientific analysis of cancer risks linked to nuclear facilities and enrichment plants. Most oppose President Barack Obama’s support for a nuclear renaissance because they contend that past problems associated with atomic-powered generating plants haven’t been adequately examined.

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission recently asked the National Academy of Sciences to conduct a study on cancer in populations surrounding nuclear generating stations. A 1990 report by the National Cancer Institute ruled out a link, but critics have insisted that study was flawed because it considered only children who died of cancer, not children like Sarah who were sickened but survived. It also examined populations by county, not groups living closest to the power plants, critics said.

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Appeals Court Upholds Environmental Justice in Richmond

Terry on Apr 28th 2010

Environmental Impact Report for refinery expansion ruled inadequate

Richmond, April 26, 2010 — In an unprecedented victory for the community, the California State Court of Appeals has upheld the majority of findings in a lower court decision that the Environmental Impact Report (EIR) for the expansion of the Chevron Corporation’s refinery in Richmond California violated state environmental law. The Community members have been campaigning to fight the proposed switch to refining dirtier, heavier oil for several years.

“This decision is a significant victory for environmental justice in the city of Richmond and beyond,” said Dr. Henry Clark, executive director of West County Toxics Coalition. ?African American, Latino and Asian communities near the refinery have borne a disproportionate burden of exposure to pollution from the refinery for decades. And the community has been fighting back for decades – this victory is huge.?

“The court agrees that the people of Richmond have a right to know just how dirty the crude oil processed in this refinery will be,” said Earthjustice attorney Will Rostov. “The court pointed out the legal deficiencies in Chevron’s refinery expansion plan and tells Chevron the simple steps it needs to expand their refinery in a legal way that won’t harm the neighbors.”

Environmental justice groups Communities for a Better Environment (CBE), Asian Pacific Environmental Network (APEN), and West County Toxics Coalition (WCTC), represented by Earthjustice, had sued the City of Richmond over its approval of the refinery expansion in 2008, on the basis that the inadequacies in the EIR rendered approval illegal under the California Environmental Quality Act. Last year, a California Superior Court in Contra Costa County agreed, tossing out that EIR and issuing an injunction preventing further work on the refinery expansion.

?In this difficult economic climate, Chevron has used jobs to hold our communities hostage,? said James Walker, member of Service Employees International Union Local 1021 and local city equipment services worker. ?As a Richmond resident and union worker, I shouldn’t have to choose between jobs and my family’s health. Times are tough. We’re all struggling to pay bills and put food on the table. It’s time for Chevron to come to the table and negotiate an agreement that protects community health and gets people back to work.?

The appellate court found today that the EIR should have addressed changes in the grade of crude oil the refinery would process after the expansion. The expansion project would increase the refinery’s ability to process dirtier grades of crude oil according to experts hired by the community, the State Attorney General’s office and the trade unions, all of whom independently reviewed Chevron’s proposed plans.

The groups charge that the refinery would likely emit significantly more toxic pollution if

it begins refining dirtier crude. This pollution would include chemicals linked to cancer and respiratory ailments, according to the groups’ expert. The EPA reported nearly 100,000 pounds of toxic waste from the site in 2007, including more than 4,000 pounds of benzene (a known human carcinogen) and 455,000 pounds of ammonia, repeated exposure to which can cause an asthma-like illness and lead to lung damage.

“This is a good decision,” said Socorro Garcia, a ten-year Richmond resident and neighbor of the refinery. “There are people like me living very close to the refinery. The refinery has damaged our health and our community. Our health is our future.”

In a precedent-setting decision on one issue, the Court also found fault with the EIR for failing to include specific and proven plans to mitigate a projected increase in greenhouse gas emissions from the expansion and for allowing Chevron itself (not the City) to come up with a mitigation plan later, outside the publicly involved CEQA process. The Chevron Richmond refinery is the single largest source of greenhouse gas pollution in the state, according to data released by the California Air Resources Board in 2009. The EIR indicated that the expansion could generate almost 900,000 tons of additional greenhouse gases.

?It’s a double whammy,” said Sandy Saeteurn, Lead Organizer with APEN and a Richmond resident. “Chevron is hurting Richmond residents like my family with its toxic pollution and hurting the planet with its greenhouse gases. I grew up in Richmond doing Chevron refinery accident drills instead of fire drills. I don’t want my 9-yr old son Nicky to keep doing the same. Accurate public information about the proposed refinery expansion will allow better decisions for protecting our environmental and economic health.?

Chevron’s plan to expand the Richmond refinery — allowing the facility to refine heavier crude oil than it can now process — could significantly increase the facility’s greenhouse gas emissions, according to CBE scientist Greg Karras. “Refineries that have begun the switch to heavier, dirtier crude oil emit up to 58 percent more greenhouse gases per barrel refined as compared with the average U.S. refinery,” said Karras.

“Asthma rates in Richmond are already twice the national average,” said Richmond resident Kay Wallis, a health educator with the Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine at UCSF. “For decades, Richmond families have paid a steep price for living near Chevron’s refinery. Now there’s evidence that the impact of Chevron’s pollution extends well beyond our beleaguered local neighborhoods – the damage is worldwide.”

“Richmond doesn’t need dirtier crude,” said Greg Karras. “Now we can move onto the task of creating healthy, green jobs that put people to work weatherizing buildings, expanding public transit, and moving Richmond toward economic and climate sustainability. Chevron could be a leader in this change. It can’t continue with business as usual — not for long.”

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Residents of tiny town search for source of their cancers and other illnesses

Terry on Apr 25th 2010

Through the Web, people from Resthaven area in Will County say they have discovered a troubling pattern of diseases they can’t easily explain.

By Joel Hood, Chicago Tribune reporter

Like millions of old friends and classmates reconnecting through Facebook after decades apart, former residents of tiny Resthaven had stories to share.

Their rural hometown in southern Will County had seemed an idyllic place to grow up in the 1970s, but now that they are in middle age, many are troubled by a pattern of serious diseases they can’t easily explain: breast cancers, colon cancers, leukemia, thyroid problems and various autoimmune and degenerative tissue problems.

“Knowing what I know now, I’m not going to sit still until I do right by the people I grew up with,” said Cathy Doolin, 51, a former Resthaven resident whose heavy metal count is so high that doctors once feared someone was trying to poison her. “This is about finding the truth.”
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So, what began as a way to reach out to long-lost friends has become an Erin Brockovich-style quest to find out what they may have been exposed to growing up and whether environmental contamination could explain why many have gotten sick.

No evidence links any of the illnesses to contamination in Resthaven, and health officials warn the cases are so complicated it be might be impossible to ever know for sure. It could simply be coincidence.

Residents in a rural area such as Resthaven are sometimes exposed to potentially harmful contaminants: pesticides from nearby farmland, discharge from power plants, landfill waste, radon gas, polluted well water and other hazardous chemicals that belie the natural beauty of the area.

Resthaven was the site of an illegal toxic waste dump throughout the 1970s, the extent of which was not well known or publicized at the time. Companies such as the former Mobil Oil, Kraft Foods and others dumped chemicals, plastics, oils, greases, solvents and other waste from several production plants stationed in the Chicago region, records show. EPA records indicate as many as 1,000 drums of potentially hazardous materials were buried at the site of an old septic cleaning service. The site was officially cleaned up in 1999, records show.

Soil samples collected at the site in the mid-1980s showed elevated levels of several known cancer-causing compounds, including chromium 6, benzene and styrene, as well as other harmful chemicals. But tests on numerous shallow backyard wells in and around Resthaven found no evidence that the toxins had leaked into drinking water.

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Emissions often underestimated, EPA standards old

Terry on Apr 23rd 2010

Subject: Hazardous emissions from refineries are not reported

By RAMIT PLUSHNICK-MASTI (AP) 4-23-10

HOUSTON — The nation’s oil and chemical plants are spewing a lot more pollution than they report to the Environmental Protection Agency — and the EPA knows it.

But the federal agency has yet to adopt more accurate, higher-tech measuring methods that have been available for years.

Significant changes will not be seen for at least two more years, even though an internal EPA watchdog called for improvements in 2006 and some of the more sophisticated measuring devices have been used in Europe since the 1990s.

Records, scientific studies and interviews by The Associated Press suggest pollution from petrochemical plants is at least 10 times greater than what is reported to the government and the public.

Some European countries employ lasers, solar technology and remote sensors to measure air pollution, while the U.S. relies to a large degree on estimates derived from readings taken by plant employees using hand-held “sniffer” devices that check for leaks in pumps and valves.

The failure to get a true assessment of industrial emissions hinders attempts to monitor and regulate public health and air quality. And the problem is seen as especially urgent in oil centers such as Houston, where plants line the city’s Ship Channel and nearby residents are ordered to stay inside many times each year for their own safety when the plants belch high levels of toxic substances such as benzene.

“Emissions, we do believe, have been underestimated in general,” a top EPA air quality official, Peter Tsirigotis, acknowledged recently. Asked why it has taken so long to modernize the measuring methods, he said: “That, I don’t know.”

Although U.S. oil and chemical companies have criticized some of the high-tech measuring devices, complaining they do not yield a full and accurate picture, industry representatives say they will embrace technologies that work and are affordable.

Under the federal Clean Air Act, plants must bear the cost of pollution-monitoring equipment. And the newer, high-tech devices could easily run a plant hundreds of thousands of dollars. Also, more accurate measuring devices could lead to bigger fines against industrial polluters and force them to pay for cleaner technology.

John Bosch, a chemical engineer who retired from the EPA last year, attributed the delays to the oil and gas industry’s lobbying muscle and resistance to change inside the EPA.

“They have to update the way they do this, but there are many forces against that, political and economic,” he said.

The EPA has known for at least a decade that its pollution measuring methods are suspect. In 2000, government-funded studies in Houston showed true emissions from plants were higher than reported.

And in 2006, the EPA inspector general, an independent oversight office, concluded that the scientific formulas used to calculate plant emissions were outdated, resulting in “significantly underestimated” pollution in the petroleum industry, wood products and ethanol production.

The report said the problem “has hampered environmental decisions, resulting in more than one million tons of uncontrolled emissions spanning years, and an increased risk of adverse health effects.”

“The air might not be as clean as the agency claims,” the report concluded.

Top EPA administrators promised the agency would update the “inherently uncertain and imperfect” scientific formulas and employ better technology to measure emissions.

But four years later, the goal of overhauling the science is at least two years off, and officials cannot say when — or even if — higher-tech measuring systems will be made mandatory.

Every state has at least one chemical plant, and all but 15 states have oil refineries. States such as Texas, Louisiana and California have more than a dozen petrochemical plants each. The EPA, under the Clean Air Act, has required plants since the early 1970s to measure emissions.

But Neil Carman, a chemist with Sierra Club who spent years inspecting industrial plants for Texas’ environmental agency, likens the system to “a police officer or trooper showing up on a highway every three months for 10 seconds. It’s a joke.”

“The numbers are erroneous,” he said.

Two state- and federally funded studies obtained by the AP found vast discrepancies in 2006 between reported emissions and pollution measured with high-tech systems in the Houston area, the heart of the Gulf Coast region that refines one-third of the country’s gasoline.

In the refinery town of Texas City, the high-tech equipment detected levels of smog-causing ethene — an odorless, flammable hydrocarbon — that were 12 times higher than those recorded by EPA-approved methods. In the Houston Ship Channel and in Baytown, ethene levels were 12 1/2 times greater than reported to the EPA.

One of the mobile laser devices now in use in Europe costs about $500,000 on average; another model about half that.

EPA officials are uncertain whether the European technology will be adopted here. They share a concern expressed by industry groups that the equipment generally captures pollution over several weeks and cannot be used to fairly estimate annual pollution.

The solution, Tsirigotis said, may be to use a combination of measuring methods. “There’s no silver bullet here,” he said.

Karin Ritter, an air quality expert at the 400-member American Petroleum Institute, the oil industry’s chief lobbying group, said more research is needed.

“Let’s wait and see what technology is the one to rise to the top,” Ritter said.

Other experts say the technologies have proved their effectiveness and should be used by the EPA.

The industries are arguing “you were here on a bad day. So when is a good day? Tell me when, and I’ll come on a good day,” said Alex Cuclis, a scientist at the Houston Advanced Research Center.

One Houston company that uses high-tech measuring systems, Texas Petrochemicals, has managed to cut emissions of butadiene, a toxic chemical used in synthetic rubber, by at least 75 percent, said Marise Textor, director of regulatory affairs.

“We see things very quickly that we would not have seen historically,” she said.

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Bill would require NY to map cancer clusters

Terry on Apr 21st 2010

BY DOUG SCHNEIDER •DSCHNEID@GANNETT.COM • APRIL 21, 2010, 8:50 PM

New Yorkers in the future will have a new way to help them determine if certain types of cancer are prevalent in areas where they live and work.

RELATED
Read the cancer cluster legislation

State senators Wednesday approved a measure that would require health officials to create maps of cancer cases across the state and make those maps available on the Internet. Officials hope the mapping will help them identify connections between cancers in specific locations, and environmental factors such as pollution.

“This information will be very, very helpful to identify types of cancer” within a geographic area, said state Sen. Thomas W. Libous, R-Binghamton. He is one of two sponsors of the measure, which adds the mapping requirement to a law adopted in 2008.

The proposal now goes to Gov. David Paterson for signature. Once signed, it would require preliminary maps to be posted by mid-2012, and updated maps in mid-2013.

Doctors will be required to fill out detailed reports for each cancer patient and submit that information to the state health department. That information will be fed into a database — updated periodically — used to create the maps. Patients would not be publicly identified.

Cancer “hot spots” — neighborhoods where the same types of cancers occur more often than typically would be expected — have become an issue in recent years in some Southern Tier communities.

Near Binghamton, cancer hot spots have been identified in Endicott and Hillcrest. The Endicott issue prompted lawsuits, the installation of basement-ventilation systems in more than 400 homes, and the construction of monitoring wells after vapor from a suspected carcinogen called trichloroethylene was detected underground near a former IBM plant on North Street and elsewhere in the village.

In Hillcrest, TCE was found in soil and groundwater samples taken from around a former military depot off Nowlan Road. Six children from that neighborhood were diagnosed with cancer in the 1990s.

In Elmira, New York and Chemung County health officials investigated a suspected cancer cluster among Southside High School students and alumni diagnosed with testicular cancer. The school was built in 1979 on property contaminated by more than a century of heavy industry. The probe concluded that the site posed no health risks.

The mapping project would help establish environmental links behind preponderances of certain cancers in an area, Libous said.

Libous said the data could help lawmakers direct funding for health or environmental initiatives that would benefit communities that have cancer issues. The project, however, will not include data from cancer deaths that occurred in the past.

The bill duplicates one approved earlier by the state Assembly, which was co-sponsored by Endwell Democrat Donna Lupardo.

Assistant Managing Editor Al Vieira contributed to this report.

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Illinois Town Considers Best Use For Proceeds From $1.4 Million Cancer-Cluster Lawsuit Settlement

Terry on Apr 19th 2010

McCullom Lake, Illinois – (April 19, 2010) This upstate village of slightly more than 1,000 residents will soon have a decision to make: how best to use hundreds of thousands of dollars that could be remaining at the end of the month in a cancer cluster, medical-monitoring settlement fund.

Philadelphia attorney Aaron J. Freiwald, Esq., who negotiated the 2008 class-action settlement with nearby Modine Manufacturing, Inc. on behalf of the residents, has been actively involved in discussions to ensure that the local citizens derive the most benefit from the funds. “There is understandably a great deal of interest in how these funds are applied to the betterment of the McCullom Lake community and its residents,” explained Freiwald. “The Federal judge supervising the case has made it clear that she wants whatever funds remain after April 30 to go toward a deserving, non-profit organization.” After receiving additional feedback from residents, elected officials and community leaders regarding prospects, he will make a recommendation in a formal petition to the Court.

Freiwald, a partner in the firm of Layser & Freiwald, P.C., is encouraging anyone with suggestions to present them to the independent settlement fund administrator at www.mccullomlakesettlement.com. Ideas may also be submitted to Layser & Freiwald, P.C. via the firm’s website, www.layserfreiwald.com.

The original settlement fund has been used to provide numerous vouchers for pre-paid medical testing to past and present village residents to screen for brain cancer and brain tumors. In fact, two of the cases were detected through MRI scans performed for residents using the settlement medical vouchers.
The first of more than two dozen cancer cluster cases against the non-settling defendants, including Rohm & Haas, a subsidiary of Dow Chemical (DOW: NYSE) is scheduled to begin trial in Philadelphia in early June.

Freiwald emphasizes that there is still time for eligible village residents to be screened under the settlement agreement. “If you lived there between January 1, 1968 and December 31, 2002, you are likely still qualified to obtain a voucher to have medical screening. But you must act before the end of April.”
The settlement agreement with Modine provides that any funds left over after a Court-imposed deadline will be directed to a non-profit organization for the benefit of McCullom Lake Village.

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UK Council to pay out ‘millions’ to birth defect children

Terry on Apr 17th 2010

Children born with birth defects which resulted from the botched decontamination of a steelworks will receive compensation totalling millions of pounds after a council dropped its legal fight.

By Stephen Adams
Published: 9:00AM BST 17 Apr 2010

The hands of 10-year-old India Harrison, to whom Corby Borough Council has finally agreed to pay compensation, along with 18 other children and young people Photo: GETTY
Corby Borough Council agreed an out of court settlement almost a year after the High Court ruled it was negligent in the way it dismantled a steelworks and disposed of toxic waste.
That led to a “statistically significant” cluster of birth defects between 1989 and 1999, including clubbed feet, shortened arms and missing fingers, found Mr Justice Akenhead.

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Corby children win High Court birth defects claim
Corby: worst poisoning case since thalidomide
Ten-year struggle that echoes Erin Brockovich
Corby Borough Council ordered to pay £1.6m legal fees
Corby poisoning scandal: parents accuse council over compensation
Corby birth defect commentary: a very significant ruling
Lawyers had argued that the mothers of 16 children had been left exposed to “an atmospheric soup of toxic materials” while pregnant, because of the council’s mistakes. They included the loads of trucks carrying away contaminated waste not being fastened shut.
Despite the High Court decision, at the time the council said it would fight the ruling.
But yesterday it agreed to drop its challenge.
In a joint statement with the families’ solicitors, the council announced it had reached a final, binding agreement with 19 youngsters, included three not originally included. Negotiations had gone on for weeks.
The contract forbids disclosure of the financial arrangement.
However, other compensation lawyers have estimated that each affected youngster could be in line for £100,000 to £500,000, depending on how badly they were affected.
Sarah Pearson, whose 15-year-old Lewis Waterfield was born with significant deformities to both hands, said after the announcement: “We are just so relieved our fight is finally at an end.
“On behalf of all the Corby children and their families, I would like to thank all those who have supported us during our long campaign.”
She added: “We would also like to give credit to the council for including three other children in this agreement, despite the court’s ruling last year.”
Louise Carley, 35, whose 11-year-old daughter Ashleigh Custance has problems with her right hand and arm, said: “This is closure, it means we can move on with our lives. We know what happened and we know why and we can get on with our future.”
She said of the council: “It’s the first time they have said sorry. That means more than anything. It’s the fact it’s not my fault any more.”
Chris Mallender, chief executive of Corby Borough Council, said in the statement: “The council recognises that it made mistakes in its clean-up of the former British Steel site years ago and extends its deepest sympathy to the children and their families.”
Although he said the money “cannot properly compensate” the young people, he said the council “sincerely hopes” the agreement would mean they could put the legal battle behind them.
Des Collins, solicitor for the families involved, paid tribute to “the immense determination and spirit of the Corby children and their families have shown”.
He said: “Today’s agreement recognises the many years of emotional and physical suffering the 19 families have endured and will continue to endure.
“It marks the end of an arduous 11-year legal challenge and removes the prospect of further litigation.”
Although the council has decided not to pursue the case, it has not accepted liability.
There are also thought to be about 60 more families considering coming forward to pursue claims against the council.

The poisoning of Corby is widely regarded as Britain’s biggest child poisoning case since the thalidomide scandal, unearthed in the 1970s.

In the late 1950s and 1960s, more than 10,000 babies were born with deformities as a result of what was considered a “wonder drug” to lessen morning sickness in pregnant women.

Telegraph

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Were They Canaries? The Too Short Lives of Park Ji-Yeon and Yu-mi Hwang

Terry on Apr 14th 2010

Elizabeth Grossman
Author of ‘Chasing Molecules’ and ‘High Tech Trash’

The Huffington Post

This is what we know happened. On March 31, 2010, Park Ji-Yeon, who worked at Samsung’s On-Yang semiconductor plant in South Korea, died of leukemia at age 23. According to Korean news accounts, Park began working at the Samsung plant in 2004 and was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia in 2007.

And it was in 2007 that a 22 year-old woman named Yu-mi Hwang who had worked at Samsung’s Gijeung semiconductor plant since just before graduating from high school died – also of leukemia. A year later, another woman who worked in the same plant in South Korea and shared a work bay with Yu-mi died, also of leukemia, at age 30.

There are now accounts from Korean news media, from SHARPS – an organization advocating for South Korean electronics workers – and from an international coalition of occupational health, safety, and workers’ rights organizations – that there are now over 20 documented cases of Samsung workers at On-yang, Giheung, and other plants in South Korea suffering from leukemia, lymphoma, and other cancers. Nine have died of such diseases, including a 30 year-old man who died of leukemia in 2004.Additional Samsung workers are known to be suffering from skin disorders, neuropathy, fertility problems including miscarriages, and chronic nosebleeds.

At Samsung, Park inspected semiconductor circuits – a job that involved using chemicals, high heat, and an x-ray machine. Yu-mi and her colleague also worked in semiconductor production as have other stricken Samsung workers.

On April 2, family and friends held a funeral service to honor Park Ji-Yeon in Seoul where she had gone for medical treatment. Following the ceremony her supporters held a press conference at Samsung headquarters. As was captured on video, shortly after the press conference began it was broken up by police who arrested and jailed seven activists – including an occupational health physician. They were released two days later without charges.

Doris Lee, of the Asia Monitor Resource Center tells me that rules governing public assemblies in South Korea have become increasingly restrictive and complex. Previously, she says, “a press conference would not have been dispersed, but now they are frequently vulnerable to being dispersed as illegal assemblies. This has even happened with funeral processions.”

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Were They Canaries? The Too Short Lives of Park Ji-Yeon and Yu-mi Hwang

Terry on Apr 14th 2010

Elizabeth Grossman
Author of ‘Chasing Molecules’ and ‘High Tech Trash’

The Huffington Post

This is what we know happened. On March 31, 2010, Park Ji-Yeon, who worked at Samsung’s On-Yang semiconductor plant in South Korea, died of leukemia at age 23. According to Korean news accounts, Park began working at the Samsung plant in 2004 and was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia in 2007.

And it was in 2007 that a 22 year-old woman named Yu-mi Hwang who had worked at Samsung’s Gijeung semiconductor plant since just before graduating from high school died – also of leukemia. A year later, another woman who worked in the same plant in South Korea and shared a work bay with Yu-mi died, also of leukemia, at age 30.

There are now accounts from Korean news media, from SHARPS – an organization advocating for South Korean electronics workers – and from an international coalition of occupational health, safety, and workers’ rights organizations – that there are now over 20 documented cases of Samsung workers at On-yang, Giheung, and other plants in South Korea suffering from leukemia, lymphoma, and other cancers. Nine have died of such diseases, including a 30 year-old man who died of leukemia in 2004.Additional Samsung workers are known to be suffering from skin disorders, neuropathy, fertility problems including miscarriages, and chronic nosebleeds.

At Samsung, Park inspected semiconductor circuits – a job that involved using chemicals, high heat, and an x-ray machine. Yu-mi and her colleague also worked in semiconductor production as have other stricken Samsung workers.

On April 2, family and friends held a funeral service to honor Park Ji-Yeon in Seoul where she had gone for medical treatment. Following the ceremony her supporters held a press conference at Samsung headquarters. As was captured on video, shortly after the press conference began it was broken up by police who arrested and jailed seven activists – including an occupational health physician. They were released two days later without charges.

Doris Lee, of the Asia Monitor Resource Center tells me that rules governing public assemblies in South Korea have become increasingly restrictive and complex. Previously, she says, “a press conference would not have been dispersed, but now they are frequently vulnerable to being dispersed as illegal assemblies. This has even happened with funeral processions.”

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Nuclear Powered Cancer Clusters

Terry on Apr 7th 2010

Energy Matters blog by
Roger Witherspoon

For the past 20 years, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission has used an epidemiologically invalid study to reassure the public that the continuous release of radioactive material from power plants into the surrounding regions did not contribute to increases in cancer.

To correct that unsubstantiated claim, the NRC has contracted with the National Academy of Sciences to conduct a two year study of both cancer incidence and mortality around former, current, and proposed nuclear reactor sites. The $5 million study, which is expected to take a year to design and two more years to complete, would be the first, comprehensive, government study of the health implications of the continuous release of radioactive into the air and water around nuclear facilities.

It would replace the 1990 study conducted for the NRC by the National Institutes of Health – National Cancer Institute titled “Cancer in Populations Living Near Nuclear Facilities.” That study concluded that the continuous release of radioactive gas, liquids, and particles – both intentionally and accidentally – did not contribute to the cancer mortality rates in the counties surrounding the 62 reactor sites housing 107 reactors. From an epidemiological standpoint, that study was flawed in its conception and implementation, and hampered by a dearth of data.

According to an NRC statement, the NIH-NCI study involved a review of more than 900,000 cancer deaths from 1950 – 1984 using mortality records from the counties surrounding nuclear sites. The study looked at just 16 types of cancers, evaluating changes on a county-wide basis. The problem with that methodology is that cancers triggered by long term exposure to radioactive particles takes years to develop – and the nation’s nuclear plants being studied came online in the late 1970s to 1982.

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VA ruling on former Marine’s illness may affect thousands

Terry on Mar 27th 2010

By Sandra Jontz, Stars and Stripes
European edition, Saturday, March 27, 2010

A government decision to give disability benefits to a former Marine sickened by toxins at Camp Lejeune, N.C., could have far-reaching effects for thousands of other families who lived and worked at the military base over the years.

Paul Buckley, who was diagnosed with multiple myeloma four years ago, received a letter from the Department of Veterans Affairs earlier this month stating that “all reasonable doubt has been resolved in your favor.” Buckley’s incurable bone marrow cancer “was directly related to military service,” the letter continued.

“This is not the type of cancer you get from smoking or eating French fries,” said Buckley, 46, who now lives in Hanover, Mass. “I was too young to get this illness and I didn’t have any of the risk factors.”

But in the 1980s, Buckley was assigned to Camp Lejeune, where scientists found the presence of the degreaser trichloroethylene, or TCE, the dry-cleaning solvent tetrachloroethylene, or PCE, and the carcinogen benzene in the drinking water.

His doctors believe exposure to those chemicals was the likely cause of his cancer ? a claim the U.S. government repeatedly denied until he received his letter from the VA on March 8.

For Buckley, the sudden reversal means that he can start collecting VA benefits, which will extend to his wife when he dies.

The VA’s ruling could have much broader ramifications: By some estimates, up to 1 million people lived or worked at the base between 1957 and 1987.

“I think this has enormous national implications and is truly a breakthrough,” said U.S. Rep. Bill Delahunt, D-Mass. “The government has acknowledged, at long last, that there is clearly a causal relationship between the contaminated water and the cancer that afflicts Mr. Buckley.”

The letter, Delahunt said, will establish a precedent.

“It’s highly significant,” for the thousands of others, according to Joseph Anderson, a Winston-Salem, N.C., lawyer representing a woman who lived at Camp Lejeune in the 1980s and suffers from non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. His client, Laura Jones, recently won a small battle in federal court when a judge ruled that her case against the Navy could go forward. The Navy had argued that the statute of limitations had expired.

“[The VA decision] can help us as we fight on behalf of families,” said Anderson, adding his office receives an average of 30 calls a day from military and civilians and families who once were stationed at Camp Lejeune.

Veterans Affairs spokeswoman Katie Roberts declined to address the department’s letter to Buckley or the reason for the reversal.

While not addressing the Camp Lejeune case specifically, Roberts stated that generally, the VA is working with the Defense Department on a number of exposure-related concerns, and the two departments have created a data-sharing agreement to let researchers cross-reference data and information.

She declined to speculate on whether the department’s decision would affect other veterans’ claims for benefits.

There are 2,044 pending legal claims by people who lived and worked at the Marine base, the Navy said Friday. In 2007, Stars and Stripes reported there were 853 claims pending.

For years, Marines have blamed their and their families’ ailments on the contaminated tap water.

The presence of TCE and PCE in the camp’s water sources was discovered in 1982. Yet some of the wells that supplied the water were not shut down until 1985. An environmental engineering company found benzene in a well near the base’s Hadnot Point Fuel Farm at levels of 380 parts per billion when water was sampled in July 1984; the EPA has established that levels more than 5 parts per billion in water is dangerous to human health.

As the health effects continue to be examined, the Marine Corps is trying to reach between 500,000 to 1 million people who lived and worked on the base during the three decades, according to Capt. Brian Block, a Corps spokesman. The Corps’ search for former base residents was spurred, in part, by health officials’ needs to conduct tests to determine whether exposure to the contaminated drinking water is causing ailments.

To date, 160,000 people have registered, which can be done online at https://clnr.hqi.usmc.mil/clwater or by calling (877) 261-9782.

Buckley hopes the letter he received will lead to help for more Marines and their families who lived at the base.

“I’m hoping the VA will loosen up, and maybe, just maybe, this means I can help a million people or so,” he said. “Giving hope to somebody is a wonderful thing.”

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Tungsten remains at center of cancer cluster probe

Terry on Mar 25th 2010

BY FRANK X. MULLEN JR. • Reno Gazette Journal

The metal tungsten remains an important clue in research related to the Fallon leukemia cluster, which sickened 17 children and killed three of them between 1997 and 2004, scientists said Thursday.

Presenters at the University of Nevada, Reno symposium described their research into cancer genetics, water contamination, electro-magnetic fields, mouse studies, and contaminants found in tree rings and on tree leaves. They are looking for possible environmental underpinnings of the cancer outbreak, whose odds of being random have been estimated at 1 in 232 million.

Researchers from the UNR; the University of Arizona and the University of California San Francisco presented final reports on three years work relating to the cluster. The research was funded by about $700,000 in federal grants obtained by Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., on behalf of the Fallon families affected by the outbreak.

The theory is that something in Fallon’s environment makes the area unique. For eight years, the metal tungsten, which is found in greater concentrations in the area’s water, air and people than in other parts of Nevada, has been an element of interest.

“We have been looking at linking environmental exposures unique to leukemia clusters to the development of leukemia,” said Cynthia D. Fastje, who exposed laboratory mice to tungsten and a virus at the University of Arizona.

Scientists have a two-hit theory of cancer cluster causes. The first “hit” is something from the environment that damages a child’s genes, perhaps while it is in the womb. The second “hit” could be an infection, a chemical or a virus that strikes the community but causes further damage to children’s genes already affected by the first hit.

In the experiments conducted by Fastje, Dr. Mark Witten and others, pregnant mice were given tungsten water at levels similar to those found in Fallon. The mouse pups were born and exposed to respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), which causes a common childhood illness.
Tungsten weakens immune response

Fastje said the tungsten appeared to weaken the animals’ immune response to the virus. About half the mice had enlarged spleens and 25 percent developed tumors in their jaws and necks. Some mice had symptoms consistent with leukemia.

She said more research into the effects of tungsten exposure is needed and noted that it’s a big leap between mice and humans.

Dr. Paul Sheppard of the University of Arizona said his research since 2002 has looked at tungsten and other metals as airborne contaminants in Fallon. His studies indicated spikes over time in the tungsten levels in tree rings and that tungsten found on tree leaves in 2008 was more concentrated on the trees closer to the center of Fallon, a finding consistent with previous studies of airborne metals.

Since the 1960s, the Fallon area has been home to a tungsten refinery and a tungsten plant in the center of town. That firm has consistently denied its operations can have anything to do with the cancer outbreak. It’s undetermined whether the tungsten found in the latest tree or leaf studies is the industrial or naturally-occurring form of the metal.

Dr. Joseph L. Wiemels, associate professor of cancer epidemiology, University of California, San Francisco, has looked at the genetic roots of cancer and studied leukemia cases in California and the Fallon cluster. He said because of Nevada privacy laws he was only able to look at the genetics of four of the 17 Fallon patients, but found nothing unusual in their DNA makeup.

Based on the disease registry information that has been made available, he said, “it appears to be clusters of other types of cancer in Churchill County at the time of the leukemia cluster.”
Overall, he said, children who have early exposure to viruses and thus develop immunities seem to be more protected against leukemia than those who have limited viral exposure, such as children without older siblings or those who don’t interact with other children at an early age.

A change in the environment
One question that scientists have been asking throughout their investigations: what sharply changed in Fallon’s environment in the mid-1990s that may account for the cancer outbreak between 1997 and 2004?

Dr. Chris Chris A. Pritsos, UNR professor of nutrition, and Dr, Ralph Seiler, a geologist, have been investigating Fallon’s groundwater. They looked at the concentrations of arsenic, tungsten, uranium and polonium-210 in the water and exposed lab mice to the Fallon water and water from other sources.
The studies indicated that exposure to groundwater high in tungsten, arsenic and polonium-210 induced “oxidative stress” in mice. Oxidative stress affects the body’s ability to repair itself at the cellular level and may be involved in the development of several diseases.

Although tungsten remains an element of interest, Sheppard cautioned that “we can’t link environmental findings to leukemia itself based on environmental data alone.” He noted that Nevada health authorities and the federal government have no interest in further probes of the Fallon cluster.
Future investigations are up to scientists outside the government labs, he said.

“We’ll keep on trying,” Sheppard said. “It’s important to carry on environmental monitoring in Fallon and I intend to do that.”

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EPA Releases Public Database on Risk Assessments

Terry on Mar 24th 2010

WASHINGTON – Today, EPA is releasing the Health and Environmental Research Online (HERO) database, a milestone in transparency. HERO provides access to the scientific studies used in making key regulatory decisions, including EPA’s periodic review of the National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) for six major pollutants.  It is part of the open government directive to conduct business with transparency, participation, and collaboration.

“The HERO database strengthens our science and our transparency — two pillars of our work at EPA. Giving the public easy access to the same information EPA uses will help open the lines of communication, increase knowledge and understanding, and open the doors of EPA,” said EPA Administrator Lisa P. Jackson. “Americans have a right to know the background of decisions that affect their lives and livelihoods. We’re taking a big step forward in opening government to the people.”

The publically accessible HERO database provides an easy way to review the scientific literature behind EPA science assessments, which are used to support agency decision-making.  The database includes more than 300,000 scientific articles including the authors, titles, dates, and abstracts.  In addition, through a simple keyword search, anyone can see information from the articles that were used to develop specific risk assessments.

HERO includes peer-reviewed literature used by EPA to develop its Integrated Science Assessments (ISA) that feed into the NAAQS review. It also includes references and data from the Integrated Risk Information System (IRIS), a database that supports critical agency policymaking for chemical regulation.

More information on HERO database: http://www.epa.gov/hero

More information on IRIS: http://www.epa.gov/iris

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Lights in dark corners: what the new science of epigenetics is revealing about cancer prevention

Terry on Mar 17th 2010

By Paul Whaley and Dr John Newby, PhD; cross-posted from Health & Environment

To understand the importance of the new science of epigenetics for health, we have to visit cell development and the cellular processes which, if they go wrong, lead to cancer. Understanding these processes could help us better anticipate and prevent possible health hazards from environmental chemicals, develop better models for risk assessment, and even lead to novel treatments for cancer.

Epigenetics and development
One single fertilised cell, in order to become a human, has to differentiate itself into about 200 cell types. Every single cell, however, contains the same complete set of around 25,000 genes. This means different genes have to be turned on and off at certain times in order for a cell to develop into and function as, for example, a skin cell rather than a liver cell.

This regulation of when genes are turned on and off is governed by epigenetic processes. Rather than mutations, which are changes to the genetic code, epigenetic changes affect genes themselves, like software in relation to DNA hardware.

During development, epigenetic regulation is one factor responsible for determining the course of development of a cell, setting it on the path to becoming a skin cell rather than a liver cell, or a brain cell instead of a muscle cell.

Sometimes, however, external influences can result in genes being silenced or activated at the wrong times. In effect, this can confuse the developmental instructions being acted on by a cell, subtly taking it away from its natural developmental pathway and down an altered route, with a range of potential knock-on effects.

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Number Of Paxil-Related Birth Defect Cases Soar

Terry on Mar 17th 2010

By Evelyn Pringle
The Public Record
Mar 7th, 2010

Since Paxil came on the market in 1992, there have been three separate types of failure to warn lawsuits filed against GlaxoSmithKline over Paxil; birth defects, suicide, and addiction.

Roughly 150 suicide cases were settled for an average of about $2 million, and about 300 cases involving suicide attempts were settled for an average of $300,000, according to a December 14, 2009 report by Bloomberg News. Glaxo paid an average of about $50,000 each to resolve about 3,200 cases linking Paxil to addiction problems. The drug giant has also paid about $400 million to end antitrust, fraud and design claims, Bloomberg reports.

All total, Glaxo has paid out close to $1 billion to resolve Paxil lawsuits since the drug came on the market in1992. The company’s provision for all legal matters and other non-tax disputes as of the end of 2008 was listed as $3.09 billion in its annual report.

The first birth defect trial, in over 600 cases filed, resulted in a verdict for the plaintiffs on October 13, 2009, and an award of of $2.5 million in compensatory damages for the the family of Lyam Kilker, who was born with three cardiac birth defects after his mother took Paxil while pregnant.

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