Environmental Contaminants and Learning Problems - Kids at Risk
Chemicals in the environment come under scrutiny as the number of childhood learning problems soars
[ Pesticide Poisoning and Kids ] * [ Symptoms of Pesticide Poisoning ]
[ MEMORIAL TO VICTIMS ]
Subject: Environmental Contaminants and Learning Problems------
Date: Wed, 14 Jun 2000 15:53:19 -0400
From: Stephen Tvedten <steve@getipm.com>
Organization: Get Set Inc. (www.getipm.com)
To: Lyndon Hawkins <hawkins@empm.cdpr.ca.gov>
Senior Research
Scientist
State of California,
Department of Pesticide Regulation - Integrated Pest Management
Dear Lyndon, I thought you might be interested in the 6/19/00 U.S. News and World Report Cover Story entitled: Kids at Risk. You can click below for the story: U.S. News: Environment scrutinized as learning problems rise (6/19/00 or simply read below:
Kids at Risk - Chemicals in the environment come under scrutiny as the number of childhood learning problems soars By Sheila Kaplan and Jim Morris
For more than
40 years, the family shared the big house and two trailers a mile from the
Monsanto chemical plant, on the west side of Anniston, Ala. In time, the 18 of
them learned to put up with the rotten-cabbage odor that wafted through town.
The plant, after all, is what stood between many residents and poverty. Besides,
there were family troubles: Jeanette Champion, 44, is nearly blind and has what
she calls a "thinking problem." Her 45-year-old brother, David
Russell, can't read or write. Her 18-year-old daughter, Misty Pate, has suffered
seizures and bouts of rage. Misty's 15-year-old cousin, Shane Russell, reads at
a second-grade level.
The Monsanto plant has made industrial and pharmaceutical
chemicals since the 1930s. But for decades it also saturated west Anniston with
polychlorinated biphenyls. PCBs have long been linked to cancer. More recently,
however, researchers have discovered evidence tying the compounds to lack of
coordination, diminished IQ, and poor memory among children. So when the extent
of the PCB contamination in Anniston finally became clear a few years ago, a
hazy picture came into focus. Perhaps the multigenerational problems of some
families were not the result of poverty or bad genes. Perhaps they were caused
by the chemicals in the ground.
More than 20 years ago, when Champion was still threading
looms in the cotton mill, toxicologist Deborah Rice was conducting studies on
young monkeys for Health Canada. The studies strongly suggested that substances
like PCBs and mercury didn't just cause cancer or birth defects–the only
problems for which they were tested in the United States. They also suggested
that even at extremely low levels, these substances could affect the developing
human brain. When given doses comparable to what a child would receive, the
monkeys became impulsive and distracted and couldn't learn.
Many scientists were slow to see the significance of such
research. Why worry about the loss of a few IQ points, they argued, when the
real threat of chemical exposure was life-threatening disease? Today, however, a
dramatic increase in learning disabilities has forced Environmental Protection
Agency officials to acknowledge that they have ignored a much broader problem.
One of every six children in America suffers from problems such as autism,
aggression, dyslexia, and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. In
California, reported cases of autism rose 210 percent, from 3,864 to 11,995,
between 1987 and 1998. In New York, the number of children with learning
disabilities jumped 55 percent, from 132,000 to 204,000, between 1983 and 1996.
It was in the midst of reports like these that the EPA last week essentially
banned the popular pesticide Dursban as an unacceptable risk to children.
Experts have advanced a variety of theories for the
increase in disorders, including better diagnostic methods. But a growing body
of evidence suggests that compounds called neurotoxicants may be contributing
significantly to the problem. Neurotoxicants are found in substances as common
as tuna, lawn sprays, vaccines, and head-lice shampoo. Fetuses and infants
exposed to these chemicals during critical windows of development, researchers
now believe, may be at far higher risk for childhood learning problems than once
thought. A new study from the National Academy of Sciences suggests that a
combination of neurotoxicants and genes may account for nearly 25 percent of
developmental problems. Chemicals alone may account for only 3 percent of cases,
the study shows, but they can trigger many more. "Think of the genes as the
country road," says John Harris of the California Birth Defects Monitoring
Program. "And the neurotoxicants as driving 90 miles per hour in the
rain."
The lead factor. Although inconclusive, the studies on
neurotoxicants are intriguing. Researchers at the State University of New
York-Oswego, in a federally funded study, showed that babies who had significant
amounts of PCBs in their umbilical cords performed more poorly than unexposed
babies in tests assessing visual recognition of faces, ability to shut out
distractions, and overall intelligence. Herbert Needleman, of the University of
Pittsburgh, examined 216 youths convicted in the juvenile court of Allegheny
County, Pa., and 201 nondelinquent youths. In a study released last month,
Needleman found that the delinquents had significantly higher bone-lead levels.
In March, Frederica Perera, of Columbia University's Joseph L. Mailman School of
Public Health, reported that air-sampling "backpacks" worn by 72
pregnant women in New York City picked up high concentrations of three
neurotoxic pesticides that could cause disorders in their fetuses.
Chemical manufacturers–as well as some researchers and
regulators–are not convinced by such findings. "There is no reason to
believe we have an epidemic [of chemical-related illness] on our hands,"
says Robert MacPhail, chief of the EPA's Neurobehavioral Toxicology Branch.
"There are still a jillion tests that have to be carried out." Robert
Kaley, director of environmental affairs for Solutia, a 1997 spinoff of
Monsanto's chemical operations, says that "everybody's jumping to
conclusions. These kinds of links are premature at best and speculative at
worst.
But the new findings, coming on the heels of more than two
dozen earlier studies, have prompted the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services to dig deeper into the issue. The agency is expected to ask Congress
for $1 billion to track up to 100,000 children from the womb through high school
to assess the effects of chemical exposure on childhood development. U.S.
Surgeon General David Satcher, who grew up in Anniston, finds the existing
evidence compelling enough. "How long do you wait," he asks,
"before you take the necessary action to protect children?"
The answer, in the case of the EPA, appears to be a long
time. More than a dozen high-ranking current and former EPA officials say the
agency has failed to exert its authority to obtain data on chemical exposure
from manufacturers and to restrict the use of neurotoxicants that may be harmful
to kids. The EPA's enforcement record with the chemical industry is hardly an
activist one. Between 1989 and 1998, it managed to get neurotoxicity data on
only nine pesticides and three industrial chemicals.
The chemical industry, meanwhile, has effectively rebuffed
the few efforts the EPA has made to address the issue. In 1998, the agency tried
to force makers of some of the most common chemicals to test their products for
hazards to children. But the EPA backed down under election-year pressure from
both political parties and decided on a voluntary system. The agency and
industry are still arguing about what tests will be required. Chemical companies
are among the best-connected businesses in Washington. Since January 1999,
chemical manufacturers have given nearly $4.2 million to presidential
candidates, congressional campaigns, and national political parties. The
revolving door is nothing new in the nation's capital, but it seems to spin to
particularly good effect for the Chemical Manufacturers Association. This year,
the CMA retained a former top White House environmental aide who helped Al Gore
develop a plan to address what the vice president called "the special
impact industrial chemicals may have on children." Today, the aide, Beth
Viola, is working to make the plan more industry friendly, thus contributing to
delays.
Potentially hazardous chemicals should be judged
"guilty until proven innocent," says EPA adviser and Yale University
Prof. John Wargo. But the EPA doesn't work that way. The agency requires
chemical manufacturers to prove that their products do not cause cancer or birth
defects, but it does not require them to provide data on neurological
effects–even though the technology for such testing now exists. The EPA is
caught in a bind: It can't require a company to submit data without proof that a
product is harmful. But it can't prove harm without the data. "We're in the
dark," says Ward Penberthy, an EPA deputy director.
Children are particularly vulnerable to toxic chemicals.
Normal brain development begins in the uterus and continues through adolescence.
It requires a series of complex processes to occur in a carefully timed
sequence: Cells proliferate and move to the correct spot, synapses form, neural
circuits are refined, and neurotransmitters and their receptors grow.
Neurotoxicants may slow, accelerate, or otherwise modify any of these processes.
Says Philip Landrigan of New York's Mt. Sinai School of Medicine: "You end
up with gaps in the wiring."
The idea that substances in the environment can harm the
human brain is not new. In ancient Rome, miners were felled by what the medical
literature of the time called "lead colic." The Mad Hatter in Lewis
Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland comes from the 19th-century
expression "mad as a hatter," a reference to mercury's effects on
felt-hat makers. Over the past 70 years, adults and children around the world
have been poisoned–and, in some cases, killed–by mercury in fish, PCBs in
rice oil, a fungicide in seed grain, and a rat-killing agent in tortillas. After
hearings in 1985, the House Committee on Science and Technology reported that
there were 850 known neurotoxicants, any of which "may result in
devastating neurological or psychiatric disorders that impair the quality of
life, cripple and potentially reduce the highest intellect to a vegetative
state." The report prompted virtually no action.
Today, however, the federal government is under increasing
pressure from pediatricians, academics, and its own scientists, all clamoring
for more testing of neurotoxicants. Agency officials are focusing on the
following areas:
Pesticides. Organophosphate pesticides are domesticated
versions of wartime nerve agents. The best known, Dursban and Diazinon, have
been on the market since 1965 and 1956, respectively. The active ingredient of
Dursban, chlorpyrifos, is found in some popular Raid sprays and Black Flag roach
and ant killer. After re-examining the toxicity of chlorpyrifos, however, the
EPA announced last week that it will ban nearly all household uses of it and
restrict its use on tomatoes, apples, and grapes. The EPA found that Dursban
could damage the brain. It also determined that children could receive up to 100
times the safe dose in some cases.
Diazinon, one of 37 other organophosphates under review,
could be next. A preliminary EPA analysis recently found that a child could
inhale up to 250 times the safe amount after a basic "crack and
crevice" treatment by an exterminator. Linda Meyer, a toxicologist with
Novartis, which makes Diazinon, says that the EPA extrapolated from a worst-case
Novartis study–in which rats were placed in a chamber pumped full of the
pesticide in aerosol form. As a result, Meyer says, "the risk for children
is grossly overestimated." Novartis also notes that the EPA, in its draft
analysis, states that animal studies of Diazinon have revealed "no evidence
of abnormalities in the development of the nervous system."
The chemical industry prefers to police itself, when given
a choice. But this approach seldom works, as evidenced by the EPA's failed
attempt to restrict a pesticide known as chromated copper arsenic, or CCA. The
compound is applied to pressure-treated wood and commonly found on decks and
playground equipment. Since the late 1970s, EPA researchers have reported that
CCA poses a special threat to pregnant women and children because it combines
three neurotoxic compounds. People can be exposed to CCA by breathing fumes from
unfinished wood during home repair or construction. As a structure ages, the
compound may leach out into the dirt. In lower doses, according to numerous
studies, CCA can impair intelligence and memory.
The EPA tried to restrict CCA in 1984, but homebuilders'
and wood preservers' groups lobbied Congress so hard that the EPA retreated,
asking only that retailers distribute advisories that the compound could
endanger children. A decade later, the effort had gone nowhere. "We checked
retailers," said John McCauley of the Kentucky Department of Agriculture,
"and they had no clue what a consumer information sheet was." The EPA
promised to decide on new restrictions by 1998, but officials now say the agency
won't act until at least next year.
Mercury. When toxicologist David Brown helped prepare a
mercury study for eight Northeastern states and three Canadian provinces in
1997, he knew that fish in the region's lakes would contain mercury; he just
didn't know how much. As it turns out, the numbers were considerably higher than
he expected. "The most pristine lakes," he says, "had the highest
levels." Brown, formerly with the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease
Registry, did the math and concluded that a pregnant woman who ate a single fish
from one of these lakes could, in theory, consume enough mercury to harm her
unborn child.
But the Food and Drug Administration has no enforceable
limit for mercury in fish–only a guideline of 1 part per million, which the
National Academy of Sciences deems "inadequate to protect the developing
fetus." Mike Bolger, chief of the FDA's Division of Risk Assessment, says
the agency hasn't set a limit primarily because "the science has to be
sorted out."
That shouldn't be surprising. For years, operators of the
coal-fired power plants and trash incinerators responsible for most mercury
pollution have been working to quash attempts to further regulate mercury. When
the EPA concluded in 1996, for example, that more than 1.6 million Americans
were at risk of mercury poisoning, industry lobbyists persuaded the agency not
to make the report public for more than a year. It was released only after a
group of senators complained. Lawmakers in states with substantial fishing and
utility interests responded to the report by calling for yet another study, this
time by the NAS. The new report, to be released next month, is expected to agree
that current mercury levels are unsafe. But advocates for tight-er regulations
aren't expecting any quick changes in policy. "The reason," says
Democratic Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont, "is that mercury has a
constituency in Washington."
There is also evidence that mercury found in some childhood
vaccines can hamper development. Will Redwood, for instance, a 6-year-old from
suburban Atlanta, seemed perfectly normal at birth. Within two years, he had
stopped interacting with his family. By age 5, he was diagnosed with a mild form
of autism. His mother, Lyn, a nurse practitioner, read that some childhood
vaccines contain the mercury-based preservative thimerosal, cumulative doses of
which could be harmful. She had a lock of Will's hair analyzed, and it was found
to be loaded with mercury. In his first round of vaccinations alone, given when
he was 2 months old, Will received 62.5 micrograms of mercury, or 125 times the
EPA's daily limit. No one can say whether the vaccines–which contained the
maximum amount of thimerosal–caused Will's autism. And experts say that
parents should not withhold inoculations. In a statement last year, a group of
manufacturers said that vaccines containing thimerosal "have been
administered to billions of children and adults worldwide, with no scientific or
medical data to suggest that it poses a public health risk." Still, the
American Academy of Pediatrics raised enough questions last year that vaccine
manufacturers have agreed to phase out thimerosal as soon as possible.
PCBs. The EPA banned the manufacture of polychlorinated
biphenyls in 1977, but the compounds continue to haunt chil- dren. PCBs are a
well-known cancer risk, but recent studies show that they can also impair
learning and memory. EPA adviser Joseph Jacobson and Sandra Jacobson of Wayne
State University reported in 1996 that children in Michigan with significant
prenatal exposures were three times as likely as unexposed children to have low
IQ scores and twice as likely to lag behind in reading comprehension.
Jeanette Champion says that her family's mental
difficulties now make sense. She and roughly 5,000 others are suing St.
Louis-based Solutia, which made PCBs in Anniston under the Monsanto name from
1935 to 1971, seeking compensation for what they claim are pollution-related
maladies and property devaluation. One of the plaintiffs is Karen McFarlane, who
lives near the plant with her husband and five children. McFarlane, 31, attended
special school and has failed four times to get her GED. Six-year-old Derrick
Hubbard has speech, vision, and memory problems. "If we go over his ABCs,
he forgets them right away," says his mother, Dessa. Gadsden, Ala.,
psychiatrist Judy Cook is astounded at how many local children have IQs in the
"borderline retarded" range and exhibit a penchant for violence.
"These kids are different," she says. "Their wiring's not
right."
In February, the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease
Registry reported that "PCBs in soil in parts of Anniston present a public
health hazard" and that some adults and children had elevated amounts of
the chemicals in their blood. Exposures, the agency speculated, "may still
be occurring at high levels." The EPA has identified 22 other sites in
Anniston that may contain dangerous amounts of PCBs, metals, and solvents.
Solutia's Kaley concedes there may have been "historical exposure."
But, he says, "We do not believe that people are currently being
exposed." Nevertheless, the company has spent more than $30 million to
clean up its Anniston site and surrounding land, bought out about 100
properties, and made a tentative settlement offer of $44 million to landowners
along downstream waterways.
That prospect aside, there are still many unanswered
questions about neurotoxicants and their effects on children. The dearth of data
will continue to stymie parents like Terry DeCosta, who believes that pollution
from the Tosco oil refinery in Clyde, Calif., contributed to the anger and
attention problems in both her children. According to the EPA, Tosco discharged
more than 1 million pounds of pollutants into the air in 1998, many of them
neurotoxicants. When the DeCostas sued the refinery, however, their case was
dismissed for lack of causation. Richard Jackson, of the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, says that the easy work is done. "We've been able
to find the things that are so toxic that they make people dizzy and fall
down," he says. Now comes the harder work of identifying and regulating
compounds that insidiously misarrange the brain. "I've heard people say we
still don't have a smoking gun," says Chris De Rosa of the Agency for Toxic
Substances and Disease Registry. "And then I've heard others say, 'Yes, but
there are bullets all over the floor.' "
©
U.S.News & World Report Inc. All rights reserved.
Well Lyndon, I have been severely poisoned by your "registered" POISONS and I can personally tell you that when someone is contaminated/intoxicated with your "registered" volatile POISONS - they suffer these and many other symptoms. Even after extensive detoxification - I still suffer with memory problems. When we remove your "registered" toxins from any learning environment - we find increased proficiency and less anger and less absenteeism. When will you learn that no contaminants should be added to a learning environment to "protect" people?
Respectfully, Stephen L. TvedtenArticle original published at: http://www.usnews.com/usnews/issue/000619/poison.htm
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