Slowly poisoned health consequences of pollution and environmental
- Slides: 130
Slowly poisoned: health consequences of pollution and environmental toxins Martin Donohoe, MD, FACP Portland State University Campaign for Safe Foods, Oregon Physicians for Social Responsibility
Overview • • • Public health approach Air pollution Garbage Toxins Education/Corporate Influence Progress and Solutions
Some Major Sources of Air Pollution • • Industry - #1 Agriculture Automobiles Indoor combustion of coal and biomass for cooking, heating and food preservation
Air Pollution
Air Pollution
Air Pollution • Top ten most polluted cities in the world are in China and India • Most polluted areas in US: –LA, Houston, San Joaquin Valley in Central California, Pittsburgh
Health Effects of Air Pollution • Causes approximately 60, 000 75, 000 premature deaths/yr. in U. S. (656, 000 in China) –More than are killed by auto accidents • 1. 8 million worldwide
Health Effects of Air Pollution • Air pollution causes asthma and impairs lung development and function • Deaths from cardiopulmonary diseases correlate with air pollution levels in US cities –Both day to day and over time
Health Effects of Air Pollution • Increased admissions for CHF, asthma, COPD, PVD, and cerebrovascular disease (stroke and TIA) • Increased lung cancer mortality • Decreased exercise tolerance, increased pulmonary symptoms
Health Effects of Air Pollution • • Increased risk of DVT Impaired sperm production Increase in SGA and LBW infants Increased risk of appendicitis – ? Via link with inflammation? • Increased numbers of migraines
Effects of Ozone Destruction • Ozone hole over Antarctic (2½X size of Europe) • Increased cataracts (UV damage) • Increased lifetime melanoma risk – 1/1500 - 1930 – 1/68 - today
Automobiles
Automobiles • Number of autos -US: 1 car/2 people -Mexico: 1/8 -China: 1/100 (increasing; leaded gasoline) • Global auto population to double in 25 -50 years
Automobiles • Average miles traveled/car/year in U. S. – 1965 - 4, 570 mi. – 1975 - 6, 150 mi. – 1985 - 7, 460 mi. – 1995 - 9, 220 mi. – 2008 – 12, 000 mi.
Automobiles • 25 lbs. of CO 2 produced for every gallon of gasoline manufactured, distributed, and then burned in a vehicle • U. S. energy costs exceed $500 billion/yr. (plus military costs to keep foreign oil flowing)
Automobiles • Average fuel efficiency of U. S. autos stagnant – Ford Model T – 25 mpg (1908); Avg. Ford vehicle – 22. 6 mpg (2003) – Cars: 27. 5 mpg required by 2011, 37. 5 mpg required by 2015 – Light trucks / SUVs: 23. 5 mpg by 2011, 28. 6 mpg by 2015 – European and Japanese standards higher
Automobiles: Alternatives • Relatively low oil prices (until recently) • Growing market (until recently) for lowefficiency pickups, minivans, and SUVs • Rapid transit • Electric cars – killed by oil companies, automakers, tire manufacturers in early 20 th century – Convicted under Sherman Antitrust Act
Automobiles: Alternatives • Car sharing • Pay-as-you-drive auto insurance • “Peak Pricing” and “Congestion Fees” – E. g. , London → 21% decrease in traffic, 43% increase in bus ridership, cleaner air • Bicycles/walking – 30% of all trips by bike in Amsterdam; 2% in Portland, OR
Automobiles: Alternatives • Busses • Trains – 15 x more efficient per passenger than autos • Natural gas and/or gasohol -generate less CO 2
Automobiles: Alternatives • Telecommuting • Biodiesel – Vegetable oil-based fuel – Problem: Cheapest biodiesel is oil from palm trees; Indonesia, Malaysia deforesting areas to plant palm trees, leading to increase in global CO 2
Automobiles: Alternatives • Solar cars • Hydrogen-powered cars – Byproduct = water – Problem: Hydrogen production requires fossil fuels
Energy Spending/Research • Since 1947, the U. S. has spent $145 billion on nuclear R and D vs. $5 billion on renewables R and D • < 5% of the DOE’s budget pays for energy efficiency and renewables • BP invests $100 million annually in clean energy = amt. it spends annually to market its new name and environmentally-friendly image of moving “Beyond Petroleum”
Garbage • 98% of the country’s total refuse is industrial waste; 2% municipal waste • American produce 4. 4 lbs/d garbage • In a lifetime, the average American will throw away 6500 times his/her adult weight in garbage
Garbage • In one year, Americans generate 236 million tons of garbage – 30% recycled – 164 million tons thrown away
U. S. Garbage Composition • • Paper and Paperboard - 39% Yard Waste - 13% Food Waste - 10% Plastics - 12% Metals - 8% Glass - 6% Wood - 5%
U. S. Recycling Rates • • • Tires - 22% Plastic containers - 25% Overall plastics – 5% Glass containers - 28% Yard waste - 41% Paper and Paperboard - 42% Aluminum packaging - 54% Steel cans - 60% Auto batteries - 93%
Garbage • Landfills (2300 in US) • Incinerators • Garbage exports
Toxins
Annual World Production of Synthetic Organic Chemicals • 1930 - 1 million tons • 1950 - 7 million tons • 1970 - 63 million tons • 1990 - 500 million tons • 2000 - 1 billion tons
Toxins • 6 trillion tons of over 85, 000 chemicals produced annually – more than 90% have never been screened for toxicity • Chemical manufacturers are not required to prove safety – the legal burden is on the government to prove that a product is dangerous – Consequence of 1976 Toxic Substances Control Act – Consumer Product Safety Commission has failed in its regulatory responsibilities
Toxic Pollutants • 85, 000 known or suspected hazardous waste sites in the U. S. – Plus up to 600, 000 lightly contaminated former industrial sites (“brownfields”) • EPA estimates that there will be 217, 000 new hazardous waste sites by 2033 – Will cost hundreds of billions of dollars to mitigate environmental impacts
Toxic Pollutants • 1 in 4 U. S. citizens lives within 4 mile of a Superfund site (approximately 1, 305 sites listed; another 2, 500 sites eligible) • Taxpayers paying increasing share of cleanup costs – 54% in 2003 – Vast majority presently – Overall funding decreasing
Toxins • Body burden of industrial chemicals, pollutants and pesticides high – Environmental Working Group (2004)found 287 pesticides, consumer product ingredients, and wastes from burning coal, gasoline, and garbage in umbilical cord blood • Many other compounds not even tested; numbers undoubtedly higher
Fetuses and Children are Most Vulnerable to Toxins • Greater pound-for-pound exposure • Immature, porous blood brain barrier • Lower levels of chemical binding proteins, allowing more chemicals to reach “target” organs
Fetuses and Children are Most Vulnerable to Toxins • Organs/organ systems rapidly developing, thus more vulnerable to damage • Systems that detoxify and excrete industrial chemicals are not fully developed • Longer future life span allows more time for adverse effects to arise
Toxins in breast milk • Human babies at the top of the food chain • Fat soluble toxins concentrated in breast milk – Benefits of breast feeding still exceed risks • Birth defects, learning disabilities increasing – Toxins play important role
Toxins and gender • Sex ratio changing: – Normal = 105 boys/girls born (skewed by early male mortality) – Fewer boys being born in industrialized countries • Other causes include obesity, older parental age, stress, fertility aides
Pesticides • 2. 2 billion lbs/yr pesticides –Including agricultural pesticides, wood preservatives, and disinfectants – 8. 8 lbs/person/yr in US
Pesticides • EPA estimates U. S. farm workers suffer up to 300, 000 pesticide-related acute illnesses and injuries per year – Possibly linked to higher rates of sarcoidosis in agricultural workers – Pesticide-exposed men have impaired semen quality, which is associated with reduced fertility and testicular cancer
Pesticides • NAS estimates that pesticides in food could cause up to 1 million cancers in the current generation of Americans • Linked to autism, Parkinson’s Disease, diabetes, obesity (with prenatal exposure) • Children living on or near farms score 5 points lower on IQ tests and other mental and verbal tests – May be due to pesticide exposure
Anthropological Study of Children Exposed to Pesticides Children from villages practicing organic agriculture Children from villages practicing non-organic agriculture
Pesticides • 1, 000 people killed by pesticides over the last 6 years (WHO) • CA and NY are the only states currently tracking pesticide sales and use • EPA currently allows pesticide testing in humans, despite strong opposition
Pesticides • Even so, the EPA and NAS have OK’d human subject testing • 2008: USDA axes national survey charting pesticide use
Pesticides
Pesticides • $2. 4 billion worth of insecticides and fungicides sold to American farmers each year • Pesticide runoff contributes to coastal dead zones – Baltic Sea, Mouth of Mississippi in Gulf of Mexico – Red tides • Pesticides inhibit nitrogen fixation, decrease crop yields
Pesticides • Evidence suggests that pesticides promote pests (vs. natural pesticides) • 30% of medieval crop harvests were destroyed by pests vs. 3542% of current crop harvests – Implies organic farming more costeffective
Lead • 2 million US children with elevated levels • 120 million people with level > 10 mcg/d. L worldwide –Due to increased environmental exposure and, possibly, early umbilical cord clamping • #s affected dropping
Lead • Affects brain development, associated with lower IQ – No safe level for neurological development • Levels between 4 and 10 significantly increase risk of cardio- and cerebrovascular disease • Elevated levels associated with crime and violent behavior • Poor, African-Americans more commonly exposed
Lead Poisoning: S/S, DX, and RX • S/S: AP, CP, arthralgias, myalgias, HA, anorexia, ↓libido, ↓memory, anemia, nephropathy, HTN, cataracts, CV dz, cancer, ↓sperm count, lead line on teeth, basophilic stipling • Dx: lead level, FEP (free erythrocyte protoporphyrin) • Rx: ↓exposure, Cs. EDTA, DMSA
Toxic Pollutants – Economic Costs • Birth defects, learning disabilities increasing – Toxins play important role • Americans pay more than $55 billion annually for direct medical expenses plus special schooling and long-term care for pediatric diseases caused by lead • This excludes the greatest toxic pollutant tobacco
Mercury • Released into air by coal combustion, industrial processes, mining, and waste disposal – 4500 tons/yr • Travels throughout atmosphere and settles in oceans and waterways • Bacteria convert it to toxic methyl-mercury • Travels up food chain via fish
Mercury • ↓ coal burning • New EPA ruling ineffective: – allows cap-and-trade of power plant emissions – Removes power plants from list of pollution sources subject to federal Clean Air Act
Mercury • 16% of women of childbearing age exceed the EPA’s “safe” mercury level • Freshwater fish mercury levels too high for pregnant women to eat in 43 states • Mercury dental amalgams pose health risks to pregnant women, unborn babies, and children (FDA)
Mercury: S/S, Dx, and Rx • S/S: neuropsychiatric symptoms, inflammation of gums with excessive salivation, rash, nephropathy – Linked to autism • Dx: mercury levels in air, blood, urine (>100 mcg/l in blood and/or urine = toxic) • Rx: chelation with BAL, penicillamine, DMPS, DMSA
Arsenic • Contaminates groundwater in Bangladesh, also, India, China, Mexico, Argentina, Thailand, and parts of the U. S. – 13 million Americans have drinking water exceeding EPA’s “safe level” – Exposure also via seafood
Health Consequences of Arsenic Exposure • Pigmentary skin changes • Diabetes • Increased risk of lung, bladder, and skin cancers • Lead, mercury, or arsenic found in 1/5 of both U. S. - and India-manufactured Ayurvedic medicines purchased via the internet
Manganese • Welders exposed via fumes • Causes “manganism” (like Parkinson’s Disease) • Welding companies covered up link for decades (like lead paint, etc. )
Cell phones • ? Link to parotid gland tumors? • ? Link to brain tumors? – Gliomas? – Acoustic neuromas? • Precautionary principle – hands-free headset – ? Other safety benefits?
Toxic Pollutants • Dioxin - from manufacturing, medical incinerators, defoliants (“Agent Orange”) -Love Canal -cancers • Nitrates/nitrites, trichloroethylene, vinyl chloride, ozone • PFOA (Teflon): multiple health effects; being phased out by Dupont
Hazardous Waste and Fertilizer • Legal to dispose of hazardous waste by turning it into fertilizer • e. g. Uranium-laced fertilizer in Oklahoma, lead-laced fertilizer in SW Wash. , other mixtures containing arsenic, cadmium and dioxins • Unclear if a health hazard • No requirement that toxins be listed on ingredient labels
Persistent Organic Pollutants • Toxic, remain in environment longterm, resist degradation, can travel long distances • Bioaccumulate - higher concentrations as you move up the food chain
Persistent Organic Pollutants • 10 of these are endocrine disrupters – egs. - DDT, chlordane, heptachlor, dioxins, PCBs – possible cause of decreasing male sperm counts (100 million/ejaculate in 1950, 50 million in 1990) and increasing cases of hypospadias. early puberty, and breast cancer – Cases of hypospadias doubled in U. S. between late 1960 s and early 1990 s
Toxic Pollutants and DNA • Toxins can damage DNA • New evidence from rats of epigenetic transgenerational effects of endocrine disruptors on male fertility in rats • In 1938, 0. 5% of men were functionally sterile – 8 -12% in 2006
Pesticides and Other Toxins Linked to Neurological Disease • Parkinson’s Disease • Autism • Others
Phthalates/Bisphenol A • Found in construction materials, clothing, toys, cosmetics, pills, added to PVCs in IV tubing/other plastics • 5 million metric tons consumed by industry per year (13% in the U. S. ) • Exxon Mobil and BASF dominate the market
Phthalates/Bisphenol A • Wal-Mart, Target, Toys ‘R’ Us phasing out, San Francisco, California, Europe, and Canada have banned phthalates • Consumer Product Safety Commission reforms of 2008 will eliminate lead and phthalates from toys and children’s products
Phthalates • 90% of government-funded studies found adverse health effects – vs. 0% of industry-funded studies • Associated with: – demasculinization and alterations in genitalia in male infants – lower testosterone levels – lower sperm counts in adults
Phthalates/PVCs and Medical Devices • EPA regulations weak, based on 50 year old study • FDA has advised healthcare providers to use alternatives to DEHP -containing PVC medical devices, esp. in neonatal units • Banned by EU, CA, and WA – Federal legislation pending
Teflon (PFOA – perfluorooctanate) • Non-stick material made by Dupont • Chemicals released under high heat and when cookware damaged • Exposure linked with cancer, birth defects, and liver damage • Dupont hit with largest-ever civil penalty ($10. 25 million) in 2006 for concealing health consequences and transmission from mother to fetus
Environmental Racism and Toxic Imperialism • Environmental Racism – waste dumps/incinerators more common in lower SES neighborhoods – “Cancer Belt” (Baton Rogue to New Orleans) – “White residential neighborhoods” - 1. 7 acres parkland/1000 residents – “African-American neighborhoods” - 0. 3 • Toxic Imperialism
Mining and Pollution: Gold • Cyanide “heap leach” gold mining – cyanide dripped over crushed rock to extract gold – taxpayers often stuck with cleanup costs
Mining and Pollution: Gold • International gold mining linked to human rights abuses • 84% of gold becomes jewelry – To save the environment, consider not buying gold jewelry
Should I Send Flowers? • Most commercial flowers grown in sealed greenhouses in developing countries (e. g. , Colombia, India China, Mexico) • Carry 50 times the amount of pesticides allowed on food – One fifth of chemicals used banned in U. S. • Workers underpaid, 50 -60% suffer from pesticide poisoning
Electronic Waste • Only 5 -10% of computers recycled • Most sent overseas, children disassemble – Some returns to U. S. in children’s jewelry • EU now requires electronics firms to recycle and to eliminate lead, cadmium and mercury from their products • Dell, www. computertakeback. com
Electronic Waste • European laws re extended producer responsibility and product liability – Similar San Francisco resolution • Maine passed first law requiring elctronic manufacturers to pay for recycling their discarded products
Medical Waste • The 6, 000 US hospitals generate 2 million tons of waste per year; clinics and doctors’ offices an additional 700, 000 tons – 850, 000 tons incinerated • 15% infectious waste
Medical Waste • Incinerated pollutants include dioxin, mercury, cadmium and lead • EPA regulations weak • Segregation and alternatives to incineration would cost 93 cents/patient/day
Medical Waste • One hospital bed generates between 16 and 23 lbs/day of waste • Solutions: – 80% of thermometers no longer contain mercury – Remove PVCs from medical supplies (e. g. , IV tubing)
Water Pollution • 40% of U. S. waters are unfit for fishing or swimming – beach closings • The Jordan River (believed to be the gateway to the Garden of Eden and the place where Jesus was baptized) is now more than 50% raw sewage and agricultural runoff
Willamette River • One of the most polluted rivers in the American West – Arsenic, lead, mercury, DDT • 5. 5 mile stretch Superfund site • Current law allows polluters to calculate discharges using “toxic mixing zones” to get around limits on discharges
Water • In developing countries, 90 -95% of sewage and 70% of industrial wastes are dumped untreated into the local water supply • 13, 000 -15, 000 deaths per day worldwide from water-related diseases
Water Pollution: Bathtub=Toilet=Source of Drinking Water
Infamous Industrial Disasters • Minimata, Japan, 1920 s-1970 s (Chisso Corporation) - methylmercury poisoning -400 dead; 10, 000 injured • Bhopal, India, 1984 (Union Carbide) methyl isocyanate gas – 7000 -10, 000 dead within 3 days, 15, 00020, 000 more over next 10 years; tens of thousands injured –persistent water and soil contamination
Minimata Disease W Eugene Smith
Infamous Industrial Disasters • Chernobyl, USSR, 1986 - nuclear power plant explosion -25 -100 dead, up to 1, 000 injured acutely, NCI estimates 10 -75 K thyroid cancers • Alaska, Exxon Valdez, 1989 - oil spill -wildlife devastated, $5 billion damage • 2006 BP Alaskan pipeline ruptures
Since Exxon Valdez • At least 1. 1 million tons of oil have spilled from tankers worldwide –Equivalent to 30 Valdez incidents
Oil Pollution is Expensive to Clean Up
Oil Slicks Kill Marine Life
The Military and Pollution • World’s single largest polluter • 6 -10% of global air pollution • 2 -11% of world raw material use
The Military and Pollution • 97% of all high level and 78% of all low level nuclear waste – 1054 U. S. nuclear tests since 1940 s, 331 in atmosphere – 104 U. S. nuclear reactors – More than 210 million liters of radioactive and chemical waste stored at Hanford, WA • Site plagued by leaks
The Military and Pollution • Pentagon generates 750, 000 tons hazardous waste/year • Numerous toxic waste sites • Exempt from most environmental regulations
The Military and Pollution • “The more birds that the [Department of Defense] kill[s], the more enjoyment [people] will get from seeing the ones that remain: ‘Bird watchers get more enjoyment spotting a rare bird than they do spotting a common one. ’” – 2002 court summary of the U. S. Defense Department’s argument for exemption from the Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918
The Military • Small arms and rocket propelled grenades • Land mines • Nuclear, chemical and biological weapons
Military Waste • More than 27, 000 toxic hot spots at the pentagon’s 8, 500 properties – less than 400 toxic waste dumps have been cleaned up – costs to clean - immense: likely never to be completed • Military exempt from most environmental regulations
Worrisome Trends • • GATT NAFTA CAFTA Other trade agreements
SLAPP/SLAPP-Back • Strategic Lawsuits Against Private Parties/ Countersuits • SLAPPs- designed to harass environmental groups, deplete their financial resources through threatened or actual litigation
Politics: Bush Administration • Key administrators/committee members/regulators former industry representatives and/or lobbyists • Corporate profit before public good • Unsound/distorted/suppressed science • Eco-harassment – Criminalizing activists
Bush Administration • • Rollbacks of key environmental laws Lax enforcement of existing laws Huge tax cuts primarily benefit wealthy Federal and state government deficits astronomical – Program and funding cuts
Would You Sign a Petition to Ban Dihydrogen Monoxide? 1. It can cause excessive sweating and vomiting 2. It is a major component in acid rain 3. It can cause severe burns in its gaseous state 4. It can kill you if accidentally inhaled 5. It contributes to erosion 6. It decreases effectiveness of automobile brakes 7. It has been found in tumors of terminal cancer patients
Environmental Ignorance • A majority of Americans believe that electricity in the U. S. is produced in nonpolluting ways – 25% knew that majority (70%) comes from oil, coal and wood • 1/3 assumed that spent nuclear fuel (from our 104 plants) is stored “in a deep underground facility in the West” – Only 17% were aware that it is mostly stored on -site at powerplants pending a long-term solution (30, 000/tons)
Pseudoscientific Beliefs Percentage of Americans who believe “at least to some degree” in these “phenomena” 1997 • • Astrology 37% UFOs 30% Reincarnation 25% Fortune-Telling 14% 1976 17% 24% 9% 4%
Greenwash • Public relations / ad campaigns -Chevron’s “People Do” Campaign, butterflies/refinery -Dupont Freon Campaign in 1970’s -Grants to a few scientists who challenge environmental warnings -tobacco ads in 1950’s
Astroturf and Corporate Front Groups • Artificially-created grassroots coalitions • Corporate front groups – The American Council on Science and Health – The Oregon Lands Coalition – National Wilderness Institute – The Foundation for Clean Air Progress
Corporate PR tactics • Invoke poor people as beneficiaries • Characterize opposition as “technophobic, ” anti-science, ” and “against progress” • Portray their products as environmentally beneficial in the absence of (or despite the) evidence
Sponsored Environmental Educational Materials • Corporate-sponsored and supported by a loose coalition of antiregulatory zealots, corporate polluters, lapdog scientists and misguided parents
Sponsored Environmental Education Materials (Examples) • Exxon’s “Energy Cube” -“Gasoline is simply solar power hidden in decayed matter” -“Offshore drilling creates reefs for fish” • Pacific Lumber Company -“The Great American Forest is. . . renewable forever”
Sponsored Environmental Education Materials (Examples) • International Paper -“Clearcutting promotes growth of trees that require full sunlight and allows efficient site preparation for the next crop” • American Nuclear Society’s “Activities with the Atoms Family” • Dow’s “Chemipalooza”
“Doubt is our product” Brown and Williamson Tobacco Company Memo, 1960 s
Progress and Solutions
The “Benefits” of Sterility-Causing Chemicals in the Workplace? 12 September 1977 Dr. Eula Bingham, Assistant Secretary for Occupational Safety and Health [Regarding] worker exposure to DBCP. While involuntary sterility caused by a manufactured chemical may be bad, it is not necessarily so. After all, there are many people who are now paying to have themselves sterilized to assure they will no longer be able to become parents. . . If possible sterility is the main problem, couldn’t workers who were old enough that they no longer wanted to have children accept such positions voluntarily? Or…some [workers] might volunteer for such workposts as an alternative to planned surgery for a vasectomy or tubal ligation, or as a means of getting around religious bans on birth control when they want no more children? Sincerely, Robert K. Phillips, National Peach Council
Environmental Success Story The Montreal Protocol (1987) • Phaseout of chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) by 1996 • Developed in 1920 s; the chief working fluid in refrigerators, aerosol spray cans, insulating foams, and industrial solvents and cleaning agents -1 million tons/year manufactured in 1970 s -major cause of Antarctic and Arctic ozone holes -should disappear by 2060 -current substitute, HCFCs, much less damaging to ozone layer, also to be phased out
The Montreal Protocol • 1980 - 880, 000 tons CFC’s produced worldwide • 1996 - 141, 000 tons • 1996 - all industrialized nations stopped producing CFC’s • Today: Illegal CFC trade, once quite large, starting to taper off • 2010 - rest of world expected to stop
The Montreal Protocol • However, the Bush administration has withdrawn from the Treaty, under pressure from agribusiness and chemical lobbyists, who favor increased spraying of the pesticide methyl bromide (the most dangerous ozone-destroying chemical still in use)…. .
Toxic Pollutants: The Basel Convention • The Basel Convention on the Control of Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes (designed to control dumping of hazardous wastes from the industrialized world in developing countries)
Toxic Pollutants: The Basel Convention • Ratified by 170 countries • Despite being the largest producer of toxic pollutants in the world, the U. S. has signed but not ratified this agreement
Persistent Organic Pollutants • UN Environmental Program organizing worldwide phaseout of top 12 through the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants – Including DDT, PCBs, and dioxins – US has signed, but not ratified
Lead • American Assn. of Pediatrics now recommends toxic lead be removed from all housing and that all children be tested once during their first two years • 25% of U. S. homes still contain significant amounts of lead-based paint – Cost of removing lead from 4 million seriously affected homes: $28 billion • Cost savings each year thereafter: $43 billion (higher IQs, increased earning power, increased tax revenue, lower health care costs, less crime)
Leaded Gasoline • Banned in Canada in 1990, US in 1996 (after 25 -year phaseout period), EU in 2002, Africa in 2006 – Ban fought by industry for decades – Scientists harassed • Many countries still sell leaded gasoline: – Indonesia, Venezuela, North Korea, Iraq, Afghanistan, Jordan, Syria, Yemen
REACH • Registration, Evaluation, and Authorization of Chemicals • European Treaty requiring companies to test chemicals already on the market by a set timetable and test new products before putting them on the market
REACH • Cost of evaluations < 1% of chemical industry’s total sales • Economic analyses show REACH could bring environmental benefits worth € 95 billion over the next 25 years and result in health cost savings of € 50 billion over the next 30 years
Medical Waste • Organizations: – Health Care Without Harm – Green Health Center Movement • Hospitals built and operated on more environmentally sosund principles save money (NAS): – Costs recovered more quickly, patients get better sooner, patients’ families happier, medical errors reduced, steaf turnover/absenteeism/workers’ comp claims drop
Solutions Based on the Precautionary Principle “When evidence points toward the potential of an activity to cause significant, widespread or irreparable harm to public health or the environment, options for avoiding that harm should be examined and pursued, even though the harm is not yet fully understood or proven”
The Precautionary Principle: Practical Essentials • Give human and environmental health the benefit of doubt • Include appropriate public participation in the discussion • Gather unbiased, scientific, technological and socioeconomic information • Consider less risky alternatives
The Precautionary Principle • Endorsed by APHA, ANA, CMA, others • Puerto Rico, San Francisco have adopted, among others • Big business, US Chamber of Commerce oppose
The Precautionary Principle • "All scientific work is incomplete - whether it be observational or experimental. All scientific work is liable to be upset or modified by advancing knowledge. That does not confer upon us a freedom to ignore the knowledge we already have, or to postpone the action it appears to demand at a given time. " (Bradford Hill, 1965)
Contact Information Public Health and Social Justice Website http: //www. phsj. org martindonohoe@phsj. org
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