Many U.S. Residents
Carry Toxic Pesticides Above "Safe" Levels
Report
shows Children, Women and Mexican Americans Shoulder Heaviest
"Pesticide Body Burden"
Groups Call on Dow Chemical to Stop Producing Poisons
Found in Children's Bodies
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FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE:
May 11, 2004
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CONTACTS:
Kelly Campbell,
Pesticide Action Network North America
415-981-1771 ext. 350
Tracey Easthope, Ecology Center, 734-663-2400
Dave Dempsey, MEC, 517-487-9539
Michelle Hurd Riddick, 989-799-3313
Merrill Clark, 616-445-8769
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LANSING
-Many U.S. residents carry toxic pesticides in their bodies
above government assessed "acceptable" levels, according
to a report released today by Pesticide Action Network North
America (PAN) and the Ecology Center, Lone Tree Council, Michigan
Environmental Council and Michigan Organic Food and Farming
Alliance.
Chemical
Trespass: Pesticides in Our Bodies and Corporate Accountability,
makes public for the first time an analysis of pesticide-related
data collected by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC) in a study of levels of chemicals in 9,282 people nationwide.
The report reveals that government and industry have failed
to safeguard public health from pesticide exposures.
"None
of us choose to have hazardous pesticides in our bodies,"
said Kristin Schafer, PAN Program Coordinator and lead author
of the report. "Yet CDC found pesticides in 100% of the
people who had both blood and urine tested. The average person
in this group carried a toxic cocktail of 13 of the 23 pesticides
we analyzed."
William
Weil, M.D., Michigan State University professor emeritus and
pediatrician, commented: "There is no longer any doubt
that the fetus, the infant, the child and the adolescent are
more at risk for serious impairment from most environmental
chemical hazards than are adults. It is, therefore, incumbent
on the federal and state governments to eliminate these hazards
as expeditiously as possible, and in the interim to set exposure
limits with the additional safety factor in keeping with these
vulnerabilities, and to support research that can define these
limits more accurately when the existing data are inadequate."
Many of
the pesticides found in the test subjects have been linked to
serious short- and long-term health effects including infertility,
birth defects and childhood and adult cancers. "While the
government develops safety levels for each chemical separately,
this study shows that in the real world we are exposed to multiple
chemicals simultaneously," explained Margaret Reeves, Ph.D.,
Senior Scientist at PAN. "The synergistic effects of multiple
exposures are unknown, but a growing body of research suggests
that even at very low levels, the combination of these chemicals
can be harmful to our health."
Chemical
Trespass found that children, women and Mexican Americans
shouldered the heaviest "pesticide body burden." For
example, children-the population most vulnerable to pesticides-are
exposed to the highest levels of nerve-damaging organophosphorous
(OP) pesticides. The CDC data show that the average 6 to11 year-old
sampled is exposed to the OP pesticide chlorpyrifos at four
times the level U.S. Environmental Protection Agency considers
"acceptable" for a long-term exposure. Chlorpyrifos,
produced principally by Dow Chemical Corporation and found in
numerous products such as Dursban, is designed to kill
insects by disrupting the nervous system. Although US EPA restricted
chlorpyrifos for most residential uses in 2000, it continues
to be used widely in agriculture and other settings. In humans,
chlorpyrifos is also a nerve poison, and has been shown to disrupt
hormones and interfere with normal development of the nervous
system in laboratory animals.
The report
introduces the Pesticide Trespass Index (PTI), a new tool for
quantifying responsibility of individual pesticide manufacturers
for their "pesticide trespass." Using the PTI, the
report estimates that Dow Chemical is responsible for at least
80% of the chlorpyrifos breakdown products found in the bodies
of those in the U.S.
"Why
is it that chemical companies like Dow are not ingenious enough
to develop safer alternatives? Where is the celebrated American
know-how of our corporations? Where is the can-do attitude to
improve products rather than to deny and evade and continue
to sell clearly inferior products?" said Tracey Easthope,
MPH, Director of the Environmental Health Project at the Ecology
Center.
"The
fact that our children carry dangerous pesticides in their bodies
represents a dramatic failure in the way our government protects
us from toxic pesticides," said Dave Dempsey of MEC. "We
must stop this toxic trespass by shifting the burden from our
bodies back to the corporate boardroom where it belongs."
The report
also found that women have significantly higher levels of three
of the six organochlorine (OC) pesticides evaluated. This class
of pesticides is known to have multiple harmful effects when
they cross the placenta during pregnancy, including reduced
infant birth weight and disruption of brain development, which
can lead to learning disabilities and other neurobehavioral
problems. This ability of organochlorine pesticides to pass
from mother to child puts future generations at serious risk.
PAN's analysis
found that Mexican Americans carry dramatically higher body
burdens of five of the 15 evaluated pesticides in urine samples,
including a breakdown product of methyl parathion, a neurotoxic,
endocrine-disrupting, insecticide. Mexican Americans also had
significantly higher body burdens of the breakdown products
of the insecticides lindane and DDT than those found in other
ethnic groups.
Chemical
Trespass argues that pesticide manufacturers are primarily
responsible for the problem of pesticide body burden. "The
pesticides we carry in our bodies are made and aggressively
promoted by agrochemical companies," stated Skip Spitzer,
Corporate Accountability Program Coordinator at PAN. "These
companies also spend millions on political influence to block
or undermine regulatory measures designed to protect public
health and the environment."
Dr.
Chuck Cubbage, former chief of the state's Pesticide and Plant
Pest Management Division and former executive secretary for
the Toxic Substance Control Commission, said, "It is clear
that while it has made efforts to address sustainability, the
industry has nevertheless long used slogans voicing 'better
living through better chemistry' without adequately addressing
the long term health risks. Worse is the cognizant use of the
psychology of risk perception to minimize public awareness of
risks. 'Profit blinders' continue to create unacceptable health
and ecological risks for us all."
Chemical
Trespass provides recommendations for government, industry
and the public including:
- US Congress
should conduct a thorough and independent investigation into
corporate responsibility and liability for pesticide body
burdens, and establish financial mechanisms to shift health
and environmental costs of pesticides to the corporations
that produce them.
- US EPA
should ban use of pesticides known to be hazardous and pervasive
in the environment and our bodies, and should immediately
phase out all uses of chlorpyrifos and lindane.
- US EPA
should require that manufacturers bear the burden of proof
for demonstrating that a pesticide does not harm human health
before it can be registered, and should work with USDA to
actively promote least-toxic pest control methods.
- Individuals
should pressure government officials and corporations to implement
these changes, seek alternatives to pesticide use and buy
organic products whenever possible.
To obtain a copy of Chemical Trespass, call 415-981-1771 or
download from www.panna.org
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