Guest guest Posted November 2, 2007 Report Share Posted November 2, 2007 At 10:29 AM 11/2/07, you wrote: >Peter Montague <peter >Rachel's #931: Opportunity Amid the Problems >rachel > > >Having trouble viewing this email? You can read it as a web page. >. >^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ >Rachel's Democracy & Health News #931 > " Environment, health, jobs and justice--Who gets to decide? " >Thursday, November 1, 2007..............Printer-friendly version >www.rachel.org -- To make a secure donation, >^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ > >Featured stories in this issue... > >Problems Create Opportunities > A new report from the United Nations offers a wake-up call. It's > time to turn things around. By making major investments in solar > power, green chemistry, and clean production, the U.S. could create > whole new industries and large numbers of new jobs. Most importantly, > we could reclaim our standing as a beneficent giant, a global leader > in ideas, research, and manufacturing. What are we waiting for? >Tests Reveal High Chemical Levels in Kids' Bodies > " [Rowan's] been on this planet for 18 months, and he's loaded with > a chemical I've never heard of, " Holland said. " He had two to three > times the level of flame retardants in his body that's been known to > cause thyroid dysfunction in lab rats. " >Exposed: The Poisons Around Us > " In one industry after another, a new double standard is emerging: > that between the protection offered Europe's citizens, and those > afforded to Americans. " It is now fair to ask: " Is America itself > becoming a new dumping ground for products forbidden because of their > toxic effects in other countries? " Outmoded thinking has endangered > not only America's health but also its economic future. >Parents Raising Concerns Over Synthetic Turf > Dr. Philip J. Landrigan, a professor of pediatrics, agreed that > there should be a moratorium on new playing fields made from synthetic > turf. He said the turf poses other dangers to children besides just > exposure to chemicals. >Global Warming May Hit Kids Harder, Pediatrics Group Says > Global warming is likely to disproportionately harm the health of > children, and politicians should launch " aggressive policies " to curb > climate change, the American Academy of Pediatrics now says. >Troubling Meaty 'Estrogen' > High temperature cooking can imbue meats with a chemical that acts > like a hormone. But cooks can take steps to alleviate the danger. > >:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::\ ::::::::: > >Rachel's Democracy & Health News #931, Nov. 1, 2007 >[Printer-friendly version] > >PROBLEMS CREATE OPPORTUNITIES > >The new GEO-4 Report from the United Nations describes a world in >decline, but it doesn't have to be this way. > >By Peter Montague > >The United Nations published its long-awaited GEO-4 report last >week. > >Five years in production, the 570-page report offers a catalog of >human impacts on the natural environment and warns that national >governments must make the natural environment central to their policy >focus. The report was written by 390 experts and peer-reviewed by 1000 >more. > >The report says humans are now requiring 22 hectares (54 acres) per >person for all the activities that sustain human life. However, there >are only 16 hectares (39 acres) per person available world-wide. As a >result, farm land is being degraded, ocean fisheries are being >depleted, and fresh water is becoming scarcer. Furthermore, the human >population is expected to grow 50% in the next 50 years. > > " About half of the footprint is accounted for by the areas that are >required to absorb our greenhouse gas emissions, " says Neville Ash of >the UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre. " The other half is the >land which produces our food, the forests which produce our timber, >the oceans and rivers which produce our fish. " > >Clearly, all is not lost if we recognize that the GEO-4 report is a >wake-up call. Major investments by nations like the U.S., which affect >the world all out of proportion to their population size, could create >a new world of possibilities. (The U.S. is 4% of world population but >produces 25% of all global warming gases.) > >A major push to develop solar power, so we could leave all remaining >fossil fuels in the ground -- stop mining them as soon as humanly >possible -- would drastically reduce the human footprint on the >planet. It would also create whole new industries and large numbers of >new jobs, and would revive America's standing as a beneficent giant of >positive ideas, applied research, and high-quality products. > >We have a detailed road map that shows us the direction we need to >go. Our military leaders have told us that our national security >depends upon ending our addiction to fossil fuels. We know we need the >jobs and the revival of national spirit that such a crash program >would bring. What are we waiting for? > >Now here are four published summaries of the new United Nations GEO-4 >report -- facts you can use to persuade friends, family, and elected >representatives that a new beginning for America is necessary and is >possible: > >========================================================= > >Source: Scientific American October 26, 2007 > >Headline: The World Is Not Enough for Humans > >URL: http://www.precaution.org/lib/07/world_not_en >ough_for_humans.071030.htm > >Humanity's environmental impact has reached an unprecedented scope, >and it's getting worse > >Since 1987 annual emissions of carbon dioxide -- the leading >greenhouse gas warming the globe -- have risen by a third, global >fishing yields have declined by 10.6 million metric tons and the >amount of land required to sustain humanity has swelled to more than >54 acres (22 hectares) per person. Yet, Earth can provide only roughly >39 acres (15 hectares) for every person living today, according to the >United Nation's Environmental Program's (UNEP) Global Environment >Outlook, released this week. " There are no major issues, " the >report's authors write of the period since their first report in 1987, > " for which the foreseeable trends are favorable. " > >Despite some successes -- such as the Montreal Protocol's 95 percent >reduction in chemicals that damage the atmosphere's ozone layer and a >rise in protected reserves of habitat to cover 12 percent of the >planet -- humanity's impact continues to grow. For example: > >Biodiversity -- The planet is in the grips of the sixth great >extinction in its 4.5-billion-year history, this one largely man- >made. Species are becoming extinct 100 times faster than the average >rate in the fossil record. More than 30 percent of amphibians, 12 >percent of birds and 23 percent of our own class, mammals, are >threatened. > >Climate -- Average temperatures have climbed 1.4 degrees Fahrenheit >(0.76 degree Celsius) over the past century and could increase as much >as 8.1 degrees F (4.5 degrees C) over the next unless " drastic " steps >are taken to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from, primarily, burning >fossil fuels. Developed countries will need to reduce this globe- >warming pollution by 60 to 80 percent by mid-century to stave off dire >consequences, the report warns. " Fundamental changes in social and >economic structures, including lifestyle changes, are crucial if rapid >progress is to be achieved. " > >Food -- The amount of food grown per acre has reached one metric >ton, but such increasing intensity is also driving rapid >desertification of formerly arable land as well as reliance on >chemical pesticides and fertilizers. In fact, four billion out of the >world's 6.5 billion people could not get enough food to eat without >such fertilization. Continuing population growth paired with a shift >toward eating more meat leads the UNEP to predict that food demand may >more than triple. > >Water -- One in 10 of the world's major rivers, including the Colorado >and the Rio Grande in the U.S., fail to reach the sea for at least >part of the year, due to demand for water. And that demand is >rising; by 2025, the report predicts, demand for fresh water will rise >by 50 percent in the developing world and 18 percent in industrialized >countries. At the same time, human activity is polluting existing >fresh waters with everything from fertilizer runoff to pharmaceuticals >and climate change is shrinking the glaciers that provide drinking >water for nearly one third of humanity. " The escalating burden of >water demand, " the report says, " will become intolerable in water- >scarce countries. " > >The authors -- 388 scientists reviewed by roughly 1,000 of their peers >-- view the report as " an urgent call for action " and decry the > " woefully inadequate " global response to problems such as climate >change. " The amount of resources needed to sustain [humanity] exceeds >what is available, " the report declares. > > " The systematic destruction of the earth's natural and nature-based >resources has reached a point where the economic viability of >economies is being challenged, " Achim Steiner, UNEP's executive >director, said in a statement. " The bill we hand our children may >prove impossible to pay. " > >========================================================= > >Source: New Scientist October 25, 2007 > >Headline: Unsustainable Development 'Puts Humanity at Risk' > >URL: http://www.precaution.org/lib/07/humanity_at_risk.071025.htm > >By Catherine Brahic > >Humans are completely living beyond their ecological means, says a >major report published by the UN Environment Programme on Thursday. > >The 550-page document finds the human ecological footprint is on >average 21.9 hectares per person. Given the global population, >however, the Earth's biological capacity is just 15.7 hectares per >person. > >The report is UNEP's latest on the state of the planet's health, >taking five years in the making. It was put together by about 390 >experts and peer-reviewed by an additional 1000. > >It reviews the state of Earth's natural resources, from the atmosphere >and water, to land surfaces and biodiversity. It concludes that >instead of being used and maintained as a tool for the sustainable >development of human populations, the environment is being sucked dry >by unsustainable development. > >Examples of how humans are over-exploiting natural resources to their >own detriment include: > >** Water -- by 2025, 1.6 billion people will live in countries with >absolute water scarcity; 440 million school days are already missed >every year because of diarrhoeal diseases. > >** Land use -- modern agriculture exploits land more intensively than >it has in the past. In 1987, a hectare of cropland yielded on average >1.8 tonnes of crops, today the same hectare produces 2.5 tonnes. This >increased productivity comes at a cost -- overexploited land is >degraded and becomes less productive. > >** Fish -- 2.6 billion people rely on fish for more than 20% of their >animal protein intake, yet as the intensity of fishing increases, the >biodiversity of the ocean and the ocean's capacity to produce more >fish decreases. > >** Air -- more than 2 million people die each year because of indoor >and outdoor pollution. > >Unsustainable consumption > >The individual average footprint of 21.9 hectares per person estimated >by UNEP, includes the areas required to produce the resources we use, >as well as the areas needed to process our waste. > > " About half of the footprint is accounted for by the areas that are >required to absorb our greenhouse gas emissions, " says Neville Ash of >the UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre, underlying the scale of >the climate change problem. " The other half is the land which produces >our food, the forests which produce our timber, the oceans and rivers >which produce our fish. " > >The inflated size of the footprint, says Ash, is partially the result >of the growth of the human population. The population is currently >estimated at 6.7 billion people, and is expected to reach 8 to 10 >billion by 2050. > >But for Ash, the main driver of the size of our footprint is our >unsustainable consumption. " There is no doubt that we could sustain >the current and projected population if we lived sustainably, " he told >New Scientist. > >'Inexorable decline' > >According to the report authors, energy efficiency is key to >sustainability. Johan Kuylenstierna of the Stockholm Environment >Institute says that the growth of greenhouse gas emissions in >developing nations could be halved by 2020 simply by using existing >technologies for energy efficiency. > >According to Jo Alcamo, at the University of Kassel in Germany, who >led the group which looked at future development for the report, open >borders and free trade could also be important. In models of the >future where trade between countries is made simpler, technologies >that improve the sustainable use of resources are adopted more >quickly. > > " Much of the 'natural' capital upon which so much of the human >wellbeing and economic activity depends -- water, land, the air and >atmosphere, biodiversity and marine resources -- continue their >seemingly inexorable decline, " warns Achim Steiner, UNEP executive >director. > > " The cost of inaction and the price humanity will eventually pay is >likely to dwarf the cost of swift and decisive action now. " > >========================================================= > >Source: New York Times October 26, 2007 > >Headline: U.N. Warns of Rapid Decay of Environment > >URL: http://www.precaution.org/lib/07/u.n._warns_on_enviro >nment.071026.htm > >By James Kanter > >PARIS, Oct. 25 -- The human population is living far beyond its means >and inflicting damage to the environment that could pass points of no >return, according to a major report issued Thursday by the United >Nations. > >Climate change, the rate of extinction of species, and the challenge >of feeding a growing population are putting humanity at risk, the >United Nations Environment Program said in its fourth Global >Environmental Outlook since 1997. > > " The human population is now so large that the amount of resources >needed to sustain it exceeds what is available at current consumption >patterns, " Achim Steiner, the executive director of the Environment >Program, said in a telephone interview. > >Many biologists and climate scientists have concluded that human >activities have become a dominant influence on the Earth's climate and >ecosystems. But there is still a range of views on whether the changes >could have catastrophic impacts, as the human population heads toward >nine billion by midcentury, or more manageable results. > >Over the last two decades, the world population increased by almost 34 >percent, to 6.7 billion, from 5 billion. But the land available to >each person is shrinking, from 19.5 acres in 1900 to 5 acres by 2005, >the report said. > >Population growth combined with unsustainable consumption has resulted >in an increasingly stressed planet where natural disasters and >environmental degradation endanger people, plants and animal species. > >Persistent problems include a rapid rise of " dead zones, " where marine >life no longer can be supported because pollutants like runoff >fertilizers deplete oxygen. > >But Mr. Steiner, of the Environment Program, did note that Western >European governments had taken effective measures to reduce air >pollutants and that Brazil had made efforts to roll back some >deforestation. He said an international treaty to tackle the hole in >the earth's ozone layer had led to the phasing out of 95 percent of >ozone-damaging chemicals. > > " Life would be easier if we didn't have the kind of population growth >rates that we have at the moment, " Mr. Steiner said. " But to force >people to stop having children would be a simplistic answer. The more >realistic, ethical and practical issue is to accelerate human well- >being and make more rational use of the resources we have on this >planet. " > >Mr. Steiner said parts of Africa could reach an environmental tipping >point if changing rainfall patterns turned semi-arid zones into arid >zones and made agriculture much harder. He said another tipping point >could occur in India and China if Himalayan glaciers shrank so much >that they no longer supplied adequate amounts of water. > >He also warned of a global collapse of all species being fished by >2050, if fishing around the world continued at its current pace. The >report said that two and a half times more fish were being caught than >the oceans could produce in a sustainable manner, and that the level >of fish stocks classed as collapsed had roughly doubled over the past >20 years, to 30 percent. > >In the spirit of the United Nations report, President Nicolas Sarkozy >of France outlined plans on Thursday to fight climate change. > >He said he would make 1 billion euros, or $1.4 billion, available over >four years to develop energy sources and maintain biodiversity. He >said each euro spent on nuclear research would be matched by one spent >on research into clean technologies and environmental protection. > >========================================================= > >Source: Agence France Presse (AFP) October 26, 2007 > >Headline: Save the planet? It's now or never, warns landmark UN report > >URL: http://www.precaution.org/lib/07/its_now_or_never_for_earth. >071026.htm > >NAIROBI (AFP) -- Humanity is changing Earth's climate so fast and >devouring resources so voraciously that it is poised to bequeath a >ravaged planet to future generations, the UN warned Thursday in its >most comprehensive survey of the environment. > >The fourth Global Environment Outlook (GEO-4), published by the United >Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), is compiled by 390 experts from >observations, studies and data garnered over two decades. > >The 570-page report -- which caps a year that saw climate change >dominate the news -- says world leaders must propel the environment > " to the core of decision-making " to tackle a daily worsening crisis > > " The need couldn't be more urgent and the time couldn't be more >opportune, with our enhanced understanding of the challenges we face, >to act now to safeguard our own survival and that of future >generations, " GEO-4 said. > >The UNEP report offers the broadest and most detailed tableau of >environmental change since the Brundtland Report, " Our Common Future, " >was issued in 1987 and put the environment on the world political map. > > " There have been enough wake-up calls since Brundtland. I sincerely >hope GEO-4 is the final one, " said UNEP Executive Director Achim >Steiner. > > " The systematic destruction of the Earth's natural and nature-based >resources has reached a point where the economic viability of >economies is being challenged -- and where the bill we hand on to our >children may prove impossible to pay, " he added. > >Earth has experienced five mass extinctions in 450 million years, the >latest of which occurred 65 million years ago, says GEO-4. > > " A sixth major extinction is under way, this time caused by human >behaviour, " it says. > >Over the past two decades, growing prosperity has tremendously >strengthened the capacity to understand and confront the environmental >challenges ahead. > >Despite this, the global response has been " woefully inadequate, " the >report said. > >The report listed environmental issues by continent and by sector, >offering dizzying and often ominous statistics about the future. > >Climate is changing faster than at any time in the past 500,000 years. > >Global average temperatures rose by 0.74 degrees Celsius (1.33 >Fahrenheit) over the past century and are forecast to rise by 1.8 to >four C (3.24-7.2 F) by 2100, it said, citing estimates issued this >year by the 2007 Nobel Peace co-laureates, the Intergovernmental Panel >on Climate Change (IPCC). > >With more than six billion humans, Earth's population is now so big >that " the amount of resources needed to sustain it exceeds what is >available, " the report warned, adding that the global population is >expected to peak at between eight and 9.7 billion by 2050. > > " In Africa, land degradation and even desertification are threats; per >capita food production has declined by 12 percent since 1981, " it >said. > >The GEO-4 report went on to enumerate other strains on the planet's >resources and biodiversity. > >Fish consumption has more than tripled over the past 40 years but >catches have stagnated or declined for 20 years, it said. > > " Of the major vertebrate groups that have been assessed >comprehensively, over 30 percent of amphibians, 23 percent of mammals >and 12 percent of birds are threatened, " it added. > >Stressing it was not seeking to present a " dark and gloomy scenario " , >UNEP took heart in the successes from efforts to combat ozone loss and >chemical air pollution. > >But it also stressed that failure to address persistent problems could >undo years of hard grind. > >And it noted: " Some of the progress achieved in reducing pollution in >developed countries has been at the expense of the developing world, >where industrial production and its impacts are now being exported. " > >GEO-4 -- the fourth in a series dating back to 1997 -- also looks at >how the current trends may unfold and outlines four scenarios to the >year 2050: " Markets First " , " Policy First " , " Security First " , > " Sustainability First " . > >After a year that saw the UN General Assembly devote unprecedented >attention to climate change and the Nobel Peace Prize awarded to the >IPCC and former US vice president Al Gore for raising awareness on the >same issue, the report's authors called for radical change. > > " For some of the persistent problems, the damage may already be >irreversible, " they warned. > > " The only way to address these harder problems requires moving the >environment from the periphery to the core of decision-making: >environment for development, not development to the detriment of >environment. " > >Return to Table of Contents > >:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::\ ::::::::: > >CNN.com, Oct. 22, 2007 >[Printer-friendly version] > >TESTS REVEAL HIGH CHEMICAL LEVELS IN KIDS' BODIES > >So-called " body burden " testing reveals industrial chemicals in >humans; many of these chemicals harm rats, but studies on humans are >preliminary > >One scientist warns modern-day humans are living an " unnatural >experiment " > >By Jordana Miller, CNN > >NEW YORK (CNN) -- Michelle Hammond and Jeremiah Holland were intrigued >when a friend at the Oakland Tribune asked them and their two young >children to take part in a cutting-edge study to measure the >industrial chemicals in their bodies. > > " In the beginning, I wasn't worried at all; I was fascinated, " >Hammond, 37, recalled. > >But that fascination soon changed to fear, as tests revealed that >their children -- Rowan, then 18 months, and Mikaela, then 5 -- had >chemical exposure levels up to seven times those of their parents. > > " [Rowan's] been on this planet for 18 months, and he's loaded with a >chemical I've never heard of, " Holland, 37, said. " He had two to three >times the level of flame retardants in his body that's been known to >cause thyroid dysfunction in lab rats. " > >The technology to test for these flame retardants -- known as >polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) -- and other industrial >chemicals is less than 10 years old. Environmentalists call it " body >burden " testing, an allusion to the chemical " burden, " or legacy of >toxins, running through our bloodstream. Scientists refer to this >testing as " biomonitoring. " > >Most Americans haven't heard of body burden testing, but it's a hot >topic among environmentalists and public health experts who warn that >the industrial chemicals we come into contact with every day are >accumulating in our bodies and endangering our health in ways we have >yet to understand. > > " We are the humans in a dangerous and unnatural experiment in the >United States, and I think it's unconscionable, " said Dr. Leo >Trasande, assistant director of the Center for Children's Health and >the Environment at the Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York City. >Trasande says that industrial toxins could be leading to more >childhood disease and disorders. > > " We are in an epidemic of environmentally mediated disease among >American children today, " he said. " Rates of asthma, childhood >cancers, birth defects and developmental disorders have exponentially >increased, and it can't be explained by changes in the human genome. >So what has changed? All the chemicals we're being exposed to. " > >Elizabeth Whelan, president of the American Council on Science and >Health, a public health advocacy group, disagrees. > > " My concern about this trend about measuring chemicals in the blood is >it's leading people to believe that the mere ability to detect >chemicals is the same as proving a hazard, that if you have this >chemical, you are at risk of a disease, and that is false, " she said. >Whelan contends that trace levels of industrial chemicals in our >bodies do not necessarily pose health risks. > >In 2004, the Hollands became the first intact nuclear family in the >United States to undergo body burden testing. Rowan, at just 1.5 years >old, became the youngest child in the U.S. to be tested for chemical >exposure with this method. > >Rowan's extraordinarily high levels of PBDEs frightened his parents >and left them with a looming question: If PBDEs are causing >neurological damage to lab rats, could they be doing the same thing to >Rowan? The answer is that no one knows for sure. In the three years >since he was tested, no developmental problems have been found in >Rowan's neurological system. > >Trasande said children up to six years old are most at risk because >their vital organs and immune system are still developing and because >they depend more heavily on their environments than adults do. > > " Pound for pound, they eat more food, they drink more water, they >breathe in more air, " he said. " And so [children] carry a higher body >burden. " > >Studies on the health effects of PBDEs are only just beginning, but >many countries have heeded the warning signs they see in animal >studies. Sweden banned PBDEs in 1998. The European Union banned most >PBDEs in 2004. In the United States, the sole manufacturer of two >kinds of PBDEs voluntarily stopped making them in 2004. A third kind, >Deca, is still used in the U.S. in electrical equipment, construction >material, mattresses and textiles. > >Another class of chemicals that showed up in high levels in the >Holland children is known as phthalates. These are plasticizers, the >softening agents found in many plastic bottles, kitchenware, toys, >medical devices, personal care products and cosmetics. In lab animals, >phthalates have been associated with reproductive defects, obesity and >early puberty. But like PBDEs, little is known about what they do to >humans and specifically children. > >Russ Hauser, an associate professor of environmental and occupational >epidemiology at the Harvard School of Public Health, has done some of >the few human studies on low-level phthalate exposure. His preliminary >research shows that phthalates may contribute to infertility in men. A >study led by Shanna Swan of the University of Rochester in New York >shows that prenatal exposure to phthalates in males may be associated >with impaired testicular function and with a defect that shortens the >space between the genitals and anus. > >The Environmental Protection Agency does not require chemical >manufacturers to conduct human toxicity studies before approving their >chemicals for use in the market. A manufacturer simply has to submit >paperwork on a chemical, all the data that exists on that chemical to >date, and wait 90 days for approval. > >Jennifer Wood, an EPA spokeswoman, insists the agency has the tools to >ensure safe oversight. > > " If during the new-chemical review process, EPA determines that it may >have concerns regarding risk or exposure, the EPA has the authority to >require additional testing, " she said. EPA records show that of the >1,500 new chemicals submitted each year, the agency asks for >additional testing roughly 10 percent of the time. The EPA has set up >a voluntary testing program with the major chemical manufacturers to >retroactively test some of the 3,000 most widely used chemicals. > >Trasande believes that is too little, too late. > > " The problem with these tests is that they are really baseline tests >that don't measure for the kind of subtle health problems that we're >seeing, " Dr. Trasande said. > >In the three years since her family went through body burden testing, >Michelle Hammond has become an activist on the issue. She's testified >twice in the California legislature to support a statewide body burden >testing program, a bill that passed last year. Michelle also speaks to >various public health groups about her experience, taking Mikaela, now >8, and Rowan, now 5, with her. So far, her children show no health >problems associated with the industrial chemicals in their bodies. > > " I'm angry at my government for failing to regulate chemicals that are >in mass production and in consumer products. " Hammond says. " I don't >think it should have to be up to me to worry about what's in my >couch. " > >Return to Table of Contents > >:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::\ ::::::::: > >San Francisco Chronicle (pg. M1), Oct. 5, 2007 >[Printer-friendly version] > >EXPOSED: THE POISONS AROUND US > >http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/ > >By Steve Heilig > >Book Review of: Exposed -- The Toxic Chemistry of Everyday Products >and What's at Stake for American Power, by Mark Schapiro (Chelsea >Green, 219 pages, $22.95). > >Recently, many Californians have received dramatic mailings from a >group named Californians for Fire Safety warning that if legislation >banning some fire-retardant chemicals is passed, we would all be at >much greater risk of burning to death in fires. Among the omissions in >this literature are that the " Californians " are actually chemical- >industry lobbyists, that firefighters themselves support the proposed >legislation and that the chemicals in question have already been >banned elsewhere because of concerns about health problems such as >increased cancer, birth defects and reproductive problems. > >This last point, that we in the United States allow use of substances >deemed too toxic in other nations, especially European ones, is the >primary focus of San Francisco journalist Mark Schapiro's " Exposed. " >And while environmental science underlies the book's argument, it is >notable that Schapiro's perspective is more a business one than >otherwise. His startling message is that by lagging behind on >environmental innovation, American industries are jeopardizing their >financial future. And since money talks, he may have produced a book >with more eventual impact than a crate of dire environmental warnings. > >Public health researchers at UC Berkeley " estimate that forty-two >billion pounds of chemicals enter American commerce daily, enough >chemicals to fill up 623,000 tanker trucks, a string of trucks that >could straddle the globe three times, every day, " notes Schapiro. >Further, " fewer than five hundred of those substances have undergone >any substantive risk assessments. " At the same time as this massive >post-World War II production has taken place, research has >demonstrated health hazards even or even especially, in some cases, at >very low doses. And children, fetuses and pregnant women are >especially vulnerable. > >Schapiro's previous book, " Circle of Poison, " demonstrated a quarter >century ago that American chemical companies exported pesticides >banned here, causing health hazards in poorer nations. Now the flow of >risks is reversing. " In one industry after another, a new double >standard is emerging: that between the protection offered Europe's >citizens, and those afforded to Americans, " Schapiro writes. And >ironically, although we like to think of our nation as more advanced >in such arenas, it is now fair to ask: " Is America itself becoming a >new dumping ground for products forbidden because of their toxic >effects in other countries? " > >Consider cosmetics. A survey of common products " found hundreds of >varieties of skin and tanning lotions, nail polish and mascara and >other personal-care products that contain known or possible >carcinogens, mutagens, and reproductive toxins. " Contrary to common >assumption, most cosmetics are not effectively tested or regulated for >their health effects. European authorities, however, started to demand >toxicity information before multinational companies could continue to >market their products there, and this development did garner corporate >attention and action. Chemicals put on the European Union " negative >list " were removed from products without seeming to hurt the bottom >line. > >Back at home, however, such as when a Safe Cosmetic Act was proposed >for California just last year, chemical lobbyists convened en masse in >Sacramento to argue that there were no risks from the chemicals used. > " They (the cosmetic companies) are spending hundreds of thousands of >dollars to lobby against laws in the United States that they've >already agreed to in Europe, " says a representative of the Breast >Cancer Fund in San Francisco. Of course, the industry agreed only >under duress and when the regulatory writing was already on the wall. >But no bankruptcies of European cosmetic companies have occurred >because of such healthier standards, and as another advocate notes, " I >don't notice European women looking any less stunning than they'd >looked before. " > >The example of cosmetics can be seen as one of voluntary exposure, >although consumers would seem to have a right to know exactly what >they put onto or into their bodies. But Schapiro provides similar case >studies of other chemicals or categories of substances, such as >phthalates used in plastics, persistent organic pollutants including >pesticides, and genetically modified foods, where much of our >exposures occur even if we do not actively use a product. Meanwhile, >federal agencies we might expect to protect us, such as the >Environmental Protection Agency, have been " eviscerated from within " >by the current administration. > >The advent of the European Union has tilted balances of power in many >ways, including how " chemical politics " now take place. When the EU >developed far-reaching new regulations to reduce exposure to harmful >substances, American chemical lobbyists swarmed across the Atlantic to >fight them. But EU markets are now bigger than those in America, and >as one diplomat there states, " We are not going to ask the United >States for permission. " This is true even when the White House weighs >in on behalf of the chemical lobby, as was shown when a leaked memo >indicated that such lobbyists were drafting letters from our >ambassador to the EU, " an extraordinary glimpse into the routine >merging of U.S. governmental and private interests, " as Schapiro >notes. > > " U.S. environmental policies are not sparking innovation; they are >fighting it, " Schapiro holds. The EU economies are now growing faster >than that of the United States; our balance of trade in chemicals has >become negative for the first time. European experts calculate that >their new safer chemical policies will " be repaid many times over by >its benefits. " " Europe is looking at the future, " Schapiro concludes. > " This is not utopian; it's more like a realpolitik for the twenty- >first century. " > >How ironic then, that shortsighted, self-serving perspectives in what >was once the New World have become outmoded, and put Americans at risk >not only in terms of our health but also our economic future. So, yes, >as the " fire safety " advocates advise, we probably should call our >elected leaders. But read this book first. > >Steve Heilig is on the staffs of the Collaborative on Health and the >Environment and the San Francisco Medical Society. > >Return to Table of Contents > >:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::\ ::::::::: > >New York Times, Oct. 28, 2007 >[Printer-friendly version] > >PARENTS RAISING CONCERNS OVER SYNTHETIC TURF > >By Jeff Holtz > >Last school year, Patricia Taylor noticed something worrisome after >her son Liam, 12, would play soccer at the Bedford Middle School in >Westport, Conn., on a synthetic turf field made with rubber granules >from recycled tires. > >Mrs. Taylor said Liam would come home with the tiny particles in his >cleats, in his clothes and in his hair. > > " I just looked at him and said, 'What the heck is that?' " she said. > " Kids are tracking it back home, into washers and dryers, on the rugs >and in their tubs. It's not just staying on the field. It's >migrating. " > >The turf is the latest in artificial playing surfaces, and its use has >risen in the last decade at schools, colleges and sports stadiums >worldwide. Supporters say it is cheaper to maintain than natural grass >and softer, and therefore safer, than other artificial surfaces. But >concern is growing among some parents and health officials that the >rubber used in the turf can release chemicals that are potentially >harmful to the athletes who play on it. > >Such concerns on the part of Mrs. Taylor and other parents led to a >study this summer by the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station >in New Haven. It found that when the rubber granules were heated in a >laboratory at temperatures consistent to exposure to the sun, they >emitted four organic chemicals that could irritate the eyes, skin and >respiratory system. One of the chemicals is believed to be a >carcinogen. The study also detected other chemicals that could not be >identified without further testing. > >Mrs. Taylor and other parents said athletes should not be using the >fields until they have been proven safe. > >Nancy O. Alderman, the president of Environment and Human Health Inc. >in New Haven, a nonprofit group of doctors and public health officials >that researches health issues and funded the study, has called for a >moratorium on the installation of the fields until more studies are >done. " We know the rubber pellets out-gas these chemicals, " Ms. >Alderman said. " The one piece we do not know is how much of these >chemicals are going into people's bodies. " > >Gordon F. Joseloff, the first selectman in Westport, where there are >four synthetic turf playing surfaces at schools, agreed that more >testing needed to be done, but said that the state's Department of >Public Health, based on available information, saw no reason to stop >using the fields. > > " We're open to testing in real-time conditions, not in laboratory >conditions, because kids don't play in a laboratory, " he said. > >Brian Toal, an epidemiologist with the department's environmental and >occupational health assessment program, acknowledged that " the >information is somewhat sketchy, and some of the studies do indicate >that there are exposures. " > > " But our estimation is the exposures are below levels that would cause >a health effect, " he said. > >Similar health concerns have been raised in Massachusetts and on Long >Island. In Albany on Wednesday, State Assemblyman Steven C. >Englebright, a Democrat from Long Island, introduced legislation >calling for a moratorium on new fields. > >There are about a dozen companies that manufacture synthetic athletic >turf. Sportexe, based in Dallas, made the Westport fields. > >Phil M. Stricklen, a chemist who is the company's director of research >and development, said the fields were safe. > > " We see no reason for concern for the people playing on these fields, " >he said. > >Patricia J. Wood, the executive director of Grassroots Environmental >Education in Port Washington, N.Y., a nonprofit group that studies the >links between the environment and public health, said she had been >contacted by a number of parents worried about synthetic turf. > > " They want answers, " she said. " They want to know whether it's safe, >whether they should continue to allow their kids to play on it. " > >In Westchester, the county's Legacy Program, an open-space >preservation fund, has committed close to $25 million and built eight >turf and three natural grass fields, with several more planned. County >health officials said they had received only a couple of calls on the >fields' safety. > >Several parents in the county involved in the installations said the >only concerns they were aware of were financial -- whether the fields, >which cost $500,000 to $1 million each, were worth it. > >In White Plains, which has one field and is installing two more, Arne >M. Abramowitz, the city's parks commissioner, said he had not heard of >any health concerns. > >There are more than 50 synthetic turf fields in Connecticut, including >in Westport, Stamford and Greenwich. > >In Fairfield, where the Fairfield Country Day School, a private boys >school, plans to install a synthetic turf field, two neighborhood >groups -- Preserve Our District and Fairfielders Protecting Land and >Neighborhoods -- have filed notices to try to stop the town from >issuing a inland wetland permit, claiming that the chemicals from the >rubber pellets could harm the environment and potentially contaminate >groundwater, said Joel Z. Green, a lawyer for both groups. > >A lawyer for the school, John F. Fallon, defended the school's >actions, saying officials there had consulted with several experts on >the field's safety. > >Annette Jacobson, the conservation administrator for the Town of >Fairfield, said a report she prepared found no indication that the >turf would adversely affect wetlands or water sources. Another hearing >on the wetland permit was scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Monday at Osborne >Hill Elementary School. > >While saying there is no need for panic, the Connecticut attorney >general, Richard Blumenthal, is asking the state to spend $200,000 so >the state Agricultural Experiment Station can study the issue further. > " There are some serious unknowns, as far as potential heath risk, " he >said. " Certainly there is a need for more study and research. " > >Dr. Philip J. Landrigan, a professor of pediatrics and the chairman of >preventive medicine at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New York, >agreed that there should be a moratorium on new fields, and said that >tests should be done on the skin, urine and blood of children before >and after they play on them. He also said the turf poses other >dangers, besides the exposure to chemicals. > > " On hot summer days, temperatures as high as 130 and 140 degrees have >been recorded a couple of feet above the surface of these fields, " he >said. > >Several medical journals have reported that athletes who fall on >synthetic turf are more likely to sustain skin burns that put them at >risk of staph infections, Dr. Landrigan said. > >Liam Taylor and his mother are proceeding with caution. This year, he >is on the soccer team at the Hopkins School in New Haven, which does >not have a synthetic turf field, and his mother refuses to let him >play at any school that does have one. > > " My job is to protect my son, " she said. " Now that there is evidence >of out-gassing, he will not be exposed until the fields are proven >safe. " > >Copyright 2007 The New York Times Company > >Return to Table of Contents > >:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::\ ::::::::: > >USA Today, Oct. 29, 2007 >[Printer-friendly version] > >GLOBAL WARMING MAY HIT KIDS HARDER, PEDIATRICS GROUP SAYS > >By Marilyn Elias, USA TODAY > >Global warming is likely to disproportionately harm the health of >children, and politicians should launch " aggressive policies " to curb >climate change, the American Academy of Pediatrics said today. In the >first major report about the unique effects of global warming on >kids, U.S. pediatricians also were advised to " educate " elected >officials about the coming dangers. > >There's evidence that children are likely to suffer more than adults >from climate change, says the report's lead author, Katherine Shea, a >pediatrician and adjunct public health professor at the University of >North Carolina-Chapel Hill. > > " We already have change, and certain bad things are going to happen no >matter what we do, " Shea says. " But we can prevent things from getting >even worse. We don't have the luxury of waiting. " > >More greenhouse gases and a warming Earth will leave children >particularly vulnerable in several ways, the report says: > >** Air pollution does more damage to children's lungs, causing asthma >and respiratory ailments, because their lungs are still developing, >they breathe at a higher rate than adults and are outdoors more. > >** Waterborne infections, such as diarrhea and other gastrointestinal >problems, hit children especially hard. These infections rise sharply >with more rain, which is expected as the climate warms. > >** As mosquitoes are able to move to higher ground, the malaria zone >is expanding. Kids are especially vulnerable; 75% of malaria deaths >occur in children younger than 5. > >The report briefly mentions that mass migrations are expected as >regions become uninhabitable. " Children fare very poorly in these >major population shifts, " says Irwin Redlener, director of the >National Center for Disaster Preparedness at Columbia University and >president of the Children's Health Fund. " They're more fragile >medically and nutritionally, " says Redlener, who wasn't involved with >the report. " They're less resilient, less likely to survive. " > >No matter what the risks, the pediatrics academy shouldn't be sending >its members out to lobby, argues Janice Crouse, director of a think >tank affiliated with Concerned Women for America, a conservative >public policy group. " Let them issue a scientific report, and people >can judge whether it has validity. For a scientific group to use >children as a means of advancing a political agenda is beyond the >pale, " she says. > >Julie Gerberding, director of the federal Centers for Disease Control >and Prevention, briefed a Senate committee on the health risks of >global warming last week. She mentioned increasing asthma, malaria and >waterborne diseases but not children's vulnerability. > >The Associated Press reported that Gerberding's speech was > " eviscerated " by the White House, but CDC spokesman Tom Skinner denied >it, adding that Gerberding said everything she wanted to say without >constraint. > > " This is not a political issue, it's a public health issue, " Shea >says. " If we know the health of children and future children is >threatened, we have an obligation to act. " > >Return to Table of Contents > >:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::\ ::::::::: > >Science News, Oct. 20, 2007 >[Printer-friendly version] > >TROUBLING MEATY 'ESTROGEN' > >By Janet Raloff > >Women take note. Researchers find that a chemical that forms in >overcooked meat, especially charred portions, is a potent mimic of >estrogen, the primary female sex hormone. That's anything but >appetizing, since studies have linked a higher lifetime cumulative >exposure to estrogen in women with an elevated risk of breast cancer. > >Indeed, the new finding offers a " biologically plausible " explanation >for why diets rich in red meats might elevate breast-cancer risk, >notes Nigel J. Gooderham of Imperial College London. > >At the very high temperatures reached during frying and charbroiling, >natural constituents of meats can undergo chemical reactions that >generate carcinogens known as heterocyclic amines (see Carcinogens in >the Diet). Because these compounds all have very long, unwieldy >chemical monikers, most scientists refer to them by their >abbreviations, such as IQ, MeIQ, MeIQx, and PhIP. > >Of the nearly two dozen different heterocyclic amines that can form, >PhIP dominates. It sometimes accumulates in amounts 10 to 50 times >higher than that of any other member of this toxic chemical family, >Gooderham says. Moreover, he adds, although heterocyclic amines >normally cause liver tumors in exposed animals, PhIP is different: " It >causes breast cancer in female rats, prostate cancer in male rats, and >colon cancer in both. " These are the same cancers that in people are >associated with eating a lot of cooked meats. > >However, the means by which such foods might induce cancer has >remained somewhat elusive. So, building on his team's earlier work, >Gooderham decided to probe what the heterocyclic amine did in rat >pituitary cells. These cells make prolactin -- another female sex >hormone -- but only when triggered by the presence of estrogen. >Prolactin, like estrogen, fuels the growth of many breast cancers. > >In their new test-tube study, Gooderham and coauthor Saundra N. Lauber >show that upon exposure to PhIP, pituitary cells not only make >progesterone, but also secrete it. If these cells do the same thing >when they're part of the body, those secretions would circulate to >other organs -- including the breast. > >But " what was startling, " Gooderham told Science News Online, is that >it took just trace quantities of the heterocyclic amine to spur >prolactin production. " PhIP was incredibly potent, " he says, able to >trigger progesterone production at concentrations comparable to what >might be found circulating in the blood of people who had eaten a >couple of well-done burgers. > >The toxicologist cautions that there's a big gap between observing an >effect in isolated cells growing in a test-tube and showing that the >same holds true in people. > >However, even if PhIP does operate similarly in people, he says that's >no reason to give up grilled meat. Certain cooking techniques, such as >flipping hamburgers frequently, can limit the formation of >heterocyclic amines. Moreover, earlier work by the Imperial College >team showed that dining on certain members of the mustard family >appear to detoxify much of the PhIP that might have inadvertently been >consumed as part of a meal. > >The human link > >Three recent epidemiological studies support concerns about the >consumption of grilled meats. > >In the first, Harvard Medical School researchers compared the diets of >more than 90,000 premenopausal U.S. nurses. Over a 12-year period, >1,021 of the relatively young women developed invasive breast cancers. >The more red meat a woman ate, the higher was her risk of developing >invasive breast cancer, Eunyoung Cho and her colleagues reported in >the Archives of Internal Medicine last November. The increased risk >was restricted, however, only to those types of breast cancers that >are fueled by estrogen or progesterone. > >Overall, women who ate the most red meat -- typically 1.5 servings or >more per day -- faced nearly double the invasive breast-cancer risk of >those eating little red meat each week. > >Related findings emerged in the April 10 British Journal of Cancer. >There, researchers at the University of Leeds reported data from a >long-running study of more than 35,000 women in the United Kingdom who >ranged in age from roughly 35 to 70. Regardless of the volunteers' >age, Janet E. Cade's team found, those who consumed the most meat had >the highest risk of breast cancer. > >Shortly thereafter, Susan E. Steck of the University of South >Carolina's school of public health and her colleagues linked meat >consumption yet again with increased cancer risk, but only in the >older segment of the women they investigated. By comparing the diets >of 1,500 women with breast cancer to those of 1,550 cancerfree women, >the scientists showed that postmenopausal women consuming the most >grilled, barbecued, and smoked meats faced the highest breast-cancer >risk. > >These data support accumulating evidence that a penchant for well-done >meats can hike a woman's breast-cancer risk, Steck and her colleagues >concluded in the May Epidemiology. > >PhIP fighters > >Such findings have been percolating out of the epidemiology community >for years. Nearly a decade ago, for instance, National Cancer >Institute scientists reported finding that women who consistently ate >their meat very well done -- with a crispy, blackened crust -- faced a >substantially elevated breast-cancer risk when compared to those who >routinely ate rare- or medium-cooked meats. > >However, even well-done meats without char can contain heterocyclic >amines, chemical analyses by others later showed. The compounds' >presence appears to correlate best with how meat is cooked, not merely >with how brown its interior ended up (SN: 11/28/98, p. 341). > >At high temperatures, the simple sugar glucose, together with >creatinine -- a muscle-breakdown product, and additional free amino >acids, can all interact within beef, chicken, and other meats to form >heterocyclic amines. In contrast, low-temperature cooking or a quick >searing may generate none of the carcinogens. > >Because there's no way to tell visually, by taste, or by smell whether >PhIP and its toxic kin lace cooked meat, food chemists have been >lobbying commercial and home chefs to reduce the heat they use to cook >meats -- or to turn meats frequently to keep the surfaces closest to >the heat source from getting too hot. > >The significance of this was driven home to Gooderham several years >ago when just such tactics spoiled an experiment he was launching to >test whether Brussels sprouts and broccoli could help detoxify PhIP. > " I bought 30 kilograms of prime Aberdeen angus lean beef, " he recalls. > " Then we ground it up and I gave it to a professional cook to turn >into burgers and cook. " Professional cooks tend to move meats around >quite a bit, he found. The result: His expensive, chef-prepared meat >contained almost no PhIP. > >In the end, he says, " I sacked the cook, bought another 30 kilos of >meat and prepared the burgers myself. It was a costly lesson. " > >Once restarted, however, that study yielded encouraging data. > >One way the body detoxifies and sheds toxic chemicals is to link them >to what amounts to a sugar molecule. Consumption of certain members of >the mustard (Brassica) family, such as broccoli and Brussels sprouts >(both members of the B. oleracea species) -- can encourage this >process. So Gooderham's team fed 250 grams (roughly half a pound) each >of broccoli and Brussels sprouts each day to 20 men for almost 2 >weeks. On the 12th day, the men each got a cooked-meat meal containing >4.9 micrograms of PhIP. > >Compared to similar trial periods when their diets had been Brassica- >free, the volunteers excreted up to 40 percent more PhIP in urine, the >researchers reported in Carcinogenesis. > >Experimental data suggest that two brews may also help detoxify >heterocyclic amines. In test-tube studies, white tea largely prevented >DNA damage from the heterocyclic amine IQ (SN: 4/15/00, p. 251), and >in mice, extracts of beer tackled MeIQx and Trp-P-2 (see Beer's Well >Done Benefit). > >The best strategy of all, most toxicologists say, is to prevent >formation of heterocyclic amines in the first place. In addition to >frequently turning meat on the grill or fry pan, partially cooking >meats in a microwave prior to grilling will limit the toxic chemicals' >formation. So will mixing in a little potato starch to ground beef >before grilling (see How Carbs Can Make Burgers Safer) or marinating >meats with a heavily sugared oil-and-vinegar sauce (SN: 4/24/99, p. >264). > >References: > >Cho, E., et al. 2006. Red meat intake and risk of breast cancer among >premenopausal women. Archives of Internal Medicine 166(Nov. >13):2253-2259. Abstract available at http://archinte.ama-as >sn.org/cgi/content/short/166/20/2253. > >Felton, J.S., et al. 1995. Reduction of heterocyclic aromatic amine >mutagens/carcinogens in fried beef patties by microwave pretreatment. >Available at http://www.llnl.gov/str/pdfs/UCRL-JC-116450.pdf. > >Gooderham, N.J., et al. 2007. Mechanisms of action of the carcinogenic >heterocyclic amine PhIP. Toxicology Letters 168(Feb. 5):269-277. >Abstract available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.toxlet.20 >06.10.022. > >Lauber, S.N., and N.J. Gooderham. 2007. The cooked meat-derived >genotoxic carcinogen 2-amino-3-methylimidazo[4,5-b]pyridine has potent >hormone-like activity: Mechanistic support for a role in breast >cancer. Cancer Research 67(Oct. 1):9597-9602. Abstract available at h >ttp://cancerres.aacrjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/67/19/9597. > >Murray, S.,... and N.J. Gooderham. 2001. Effect of cruciferous >vegetable consumption on heterocyclic aromatic amine metabolism in >man. Carcinogenesis 22(September):1413-1420. Available at http:/ >/carcin.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/22/9/1413. > >Steck, S.E., et al. 2007. Cooked meat and risk of breast cancer -- >Lifetime versus recent dietary intake. Epidemiology 18(May):373-382. >Abstract available at http://www.epidem.com/pt/r >e/epidemiology/abstract.00001648-200705000-00016.htm. > >Taylor, E.F., et al. 2007. Meat consumption and risk of breast cancer >in the UK Women's Cohort Study. British Journal of Cancer 96(April >10):1139-1146. Available at http://www.nature.com/bjc/jour >nal/v96/n7/full/6603689a.html. > >Walters, D.G.... N.J. Gooderham, et al. 2004. Cruciferous vegetable >consumption alters the metabolism of the dietary carcinogen 2-amino-1- >methyl-6-phenylimidazo[4,5-b]pyridine (PhIP) in humans. Carcinogenesis >25(September):1659-1669. Available at http://carcin.oxfordjourn >als.org/cgi/content/full/25/9/1659. > >Further Readings: > >Raloff, J. 2007. Concerns over genistein, part II -- Beyond the heart. >Science News Online (July 7). Available at http://www.scie >ncenews.org/articles/20070707/food.asp. > >______. 2007. Concerns over genistein, part I -- The heart of the >issue. Science News Online (June 16). Available at >http://www.sciencene ws.org/articles/20070616/food.asp. > >______. 2006. Pesticides mimic estrogen in shellfish. Science News >170(Dec. 16):397. Available to rs at http://www.scien >cenews.org/articles/20061216/note12.asp. > >______. 2006. No-stick chemicals can mimic estrogen. Science News >170(Dec. 2):366. Available to rs at http://www.scie >ncenews.org/articles/20061202/note16.asp. > >______. 2006. Meat poses exaggerated cancer risk for some people. >Science News Online (March 25). Available at http://www.scien >cenews.org/articles/20060325/food.asp. > >______. 2005. Beer's well done benefit. Science News Online (March 5). >Available at http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20050305/food.asp. > >______. 2005. Carcinogens in the diet. Science News Online (Feb. 19). >Available at http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20050219/food.asp. > >______. 2004. How carbs can make burgers safer. Science News Online >(Dec. 4). Available at http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20041 >204/food.asp. > >______. 2004. Uranium, the newest 'hormone'. Science News 166(Nov. >13):318. Available to rs at http://www.sciencenews.or >g/articles/20041113/note14.asp. > >______. 2001. Fire retardant catfish? Science News Online (Dec. 8). >Available at http://www.sciencenews.org/articles/20011208/food.asp. > >______. 1999. Well-done research. Science News 155(April 24):264-266. >Available at http://www.sciencenews.org/pages/sn_arc99/4_24_99/b >ob1.htm. > >______. 1998. Very hot grills may inflame cancer risks. Science News >154(Nov. 28):341. Available at http://www.sciencenews.org/pages/s >n_arc98/11_28_98/fob3.htm. > >______. 1996. Another meaty link to cancer. Science News 149(June >8):365. Available at http://www.sciencenews.org/pages/pdfs/da >ta/1996/149-23/14923-13.pdf. > >______. 1996. 'Estrogen' pairings can increase potency. Science News >149(June 8):356. Available at http://www.sciencenews.org/pages/ >pdfs/data/1996/149-23/14923-03.pdf. > >______. 1995. Beyond estrogens: Why unmasking hormone-mimicking >pollutants proves so challenging. Science News 148(July 15):44. >Available at http://www.sciencenews.org/pages/pdfs/data/1 >995/148-03/14803-15.pdf. > >______. 1994. Meaty carcinogens: A risk to the cook? Science News >146(Aug. 13):103. > >______. 1994. Not so hot hot dogs? Science News 145(April 23):264-269. > >______. 1994. How cooked meat may inflame the heart. Science News >145(March 12):165. > >______. 1994. The gender benders. Science News 145(Jan. 8):24. >Available at http://www.sciencenews.org/pages/sn_edpik/ls_7.htm. > >Smith-Roe, S.L., et al. 2006. Induction of aberrant crypt foci in DNA >mismatch repair-deficient mice by the food-borne carcinogen 2-amino-1- >methyl-6-phenylimidazo [4,5-b] pyridine (PhIP). Cancer Letters. >244(Nov. 28):79-85. Abstract available at http://dx.doi.org/10.101 >6/j.canlet.2005.12.002. > >______. 2006. Mlh1-dependent responses to 2-amino-1-methyl-6- >phenylimidazo [4,5-b] pyridine (PhIP), a food-borne carcinogen. >(Abstract # 514). Toxicologist 90(March):105. > >______. 2006. Mlh1-dependent suppression of specific mutations induced >in vivo by the food-borne carcinogen 2-amino-1-methyl-6-phenylimidazo >[4,5-b] pyridine (PhIP). Mutation Research/Fundamental and Molecular >Mechanisms of Mutagenesis 594(Feb. 22):101-112. Abstract available at >http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.mrfmmm.2005.08.011. > >Sources: > >Janet E. Cade >UK Women's Cohort Study Centre for Epidemiology and Biostatistics >30/32 Hyde Terrace >The University of Leeds >Leeds LS2 9LN >United Kingdom > >Eunyoung Cho >Channing Laboratory >Department of Medicine >Harvard Medical School >181 Longwood Avenue >Boston, MA 02115 > >Nigel J. Gooderham >Biomolecular Medicine >Imperial College London >Sir Alexander Fleming Building >London SW7 2AZ >United Kingdom > >Susan Elizabeth Steck >Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics >Statewide Cancer Prevention and Control Program >Arnold School of Public Health >University of South Carolina >2221 Devine Street, Room 231 >Columbia, SC 29208 > >Copyright 2007 Science Service > >Return to Table of Contents > >:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::\ ::::::::::::::::::::: > > Rachel's Democracy & Health News (formerly Rachel's Environment & > Health News) highlights the connections between issues that are > often considered separately or not at all. > > The natural world is deteriorating and human health is declining > because those who make the important decisions aren't the ones who > bear the brunt. Our purpose is to connect the dots between human > health, the destruction of nature, the decline of community, the > rise of economic insecurity and inequalities, growing stress among > workers and families, and the crippling legacies of patriarchy, > intolerance, and racial injustice that allow us to be divided and > therefore ruled by the few. > > In a democracy, there are no more fundamental questions than, " Who > gets to decide? " And, " How do the few control the many, and what > might be done about it? " > > As you come across stories that might help people connect the dots, > please Email them to us at dhn. > > Rachel's Democracy & Health News is published as often as > necessary to provide readers with up-to-date coverage of the > subject. > > Editors: > Peter Montague - peter > Tim Montague - tim > >:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::\ ::::::::::::::::::::: > > To start your own free Email subscription to Rachel's Democracy > & Health News send any Email to: rachel-. > > In response, you will receive an Email asking you to confirm that > you want to . > > To , send any Email to: rachel-. > >:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::\ ::::::::::::::::::::: > >Environmental Research Foundation >P.O. Box 160, New Brunswick, N.J. 08903 >dhn >:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::\ ::::::::::::::::::::: > ****** Kraig and Shirley Carroll ... in the woods of SE Kentucky http://www.thehavens.com/ thehavens 606-376-3363 --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.859 / Virus Database: 585 - Release 2/14/05 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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