Guest guest Posted March 16, 2001 Report Share Posted March 16, 2001 From: " ilena rose " <ilena@...> Sent: Thursday, March 15, 2001 3:01 PM Subject: What Are The Effects Of A Media Campaign To Convince Us That Poisons Are Safe, April 15, 1993 > http://www.rachel.org/bulletin/bulletin.cfm?Issue_ID=796 > > Environmental Research Foundation Home > 's Environment & Health News > > > #333 - What Are The Effects Of A Media Campaign To Convince Us That > Poisons Are Safe, April 15, 1993 > > > What Are The Effects Of A Media Campaign To Convince Us That Poisons Are Safe > > As chemical contamination of the natural environment continues to > spread,[1] and public concern continues to grow,[2] a major effort has > developed to try to convince the American people that industrial poisons > in our food and water are safe. > > Mainstream scientific organizations like > the American Association for the Advancement of Science have been > recruited and are on board. The NEW YORK TIMES is on board. (See RHWN > #330, #331, #332.) In an editorial February 26, 1993, SCIENCE magazine > said, " Synthetic pesticides in marketed foods constitute no appreciable > threat to human health. " (They did not define " appreciable. " ) SCIENCE went > on to say that strict enforcement of the Delaney clause (see RHWN #324, > #326), to force removal of 70 suspected or known carcinogens from the > American food supply, would have " negligible " benefits.[3] Recently the > NEW YORK TIMES, editorialized (in its news columns) that many unnamed > " experts " are asking whether the nation is " wasting billions of dollars > regulating substances that might pose little risk. " And: " Many experts... > question the wisdom of spending billions of dollars to protect people from > traces of toxic compounds. " > > Such media campaigns do have an effect. People are worried about intimate > contact with industrial poisons for obvious reasons (common sense says you > should keep them out of your food, if you can). Many people therefore find > it reassuring to have established and usually- reliable sources of > information telling them all is well, don't worry. It is evident that > people are hungry for reassurance, even if it is not substantiated by any > facts. Dozens of newspapers have reprinted the TIMES'S recent unsupported > claims that low levels of chemicals harm no one. (One reader called from > California to tell us that the TIMES'S series was handed out at a Regional > Water Control Board meeting about leaking underground tanks. " The > government is now using the NEW YORK TIMES to try to convince us we're > overreacting to all instances of chemical contamination, " said Marie > Stenberg.) > > Propaganda campaigns like this one serve to reassure people that > industrial poisons are our friends, that it's OK to let poisons into our > homes and have intimate contact with them. Such campaigns clearly work. > Unsuspecting Americans brought 189 million pounds of pesticides into their > homes in 1988, and spread them into and onto their closets, cabinets, > floors and pets, then eventually into and onto their rugs, carpets, > furniture, linens, towels, air, food, and children. > > Until very recently, surprisingly little has been known about actual > patterns of use of pesticides in homes. A pioneering 1992 study of 238 > Missouri families revealed eye-opening new information about the way > people use pesticides.[4] Of the 238 families studied, 98 percent used > pesticides in home or garden at least once a year and 64 percent (two- > thirds) used pesticides more than five times a year. Eighty percent of > families used pesticides inside their homes at least once a year. > Fifty-seven percent of families used herbicides to control weeds. Half of > all families used insecticides to control fleas and ticks on pets. > > Flea collars were the most popular single pesticidal product (half the > families used them). Carbaryl and Sevin were also popular, with 28.2 > percent of families using them. inon was another favorite with 8.4 > percent using it. No-pest strips (dichlorvos) and Kwell shampoo (lindane) > were used by 10 percent. > > The study examined pesticide use in relation to the age of children in the > home. (The families were selected partly because they had children under > 10 years old, so these families are not representative of the general > public.) > > During pregnancy, 46.6 percent of families used pesticides at least once, > and 34.0 percent used them more than 5 times. Use of pesticides by the > mother herself during pregnancy was more limited: 28.9 percent of pregnant > women used pesticides at least once and 12.3 percent used pesticides more > than 5 times. These numbers represent a substantial decrease of pesticide > use during pregnancy, compared to other times; this probably reflects > awareness that humans are particularly sensitive to toxins before birth. > > When the home had a baby aged 6 months or less, pesticide use dropped > somewhat more, compared to the period of pregnancy. Only 10.2 percent of > families used pesticides on the garden when the baby was less than 6 > months old (as opposed to 18.1 percent who put pesticides on the garden > while the mother was pregnant). Likewise, yard use of herbicides dropped > from 28.2 percent of families during pregnancy to 23.7 percent of families > after the baby arrived. Authors of the study believe this reflects > parental awareness that infants are especially sensitive to toxins. > > Spray cans and spray liquids are the most popular forms of pesticides. > After the child reaches 7 months of age (or older), 50 percent of families > apply pesticides by this method. Dusts, " bombs, " and no-pest strips were > used by 5 percent to 15 percent of families. > > Use of flea collars remained constant regardless of pregnancy or age of > the child. " This was in contrast to all other product types that showed > substantially less use during pregnancy and birth to six months of age, " > the study's authors said. Evidently most people do suspect the possibility > of pesticidal effects on their young children but they do not seem to > recognize that flea collars cover their pets with low levels of poison. > > * * * > > A 1993 study of brain cancer in Missouri children shows statistically > significant associations between childhood brain cancer and several types > of pesticide use in the home, including no-pest strips, flea and tick > collars on pets, and chemicals for controlling nuisance pests (roaches, > ants, spiders, mosquitoes), termites, lice, garden and orchard pests, yard > weeds and pet pests (ticks and fleas).[5] > > The case-control study examined 45 Missouri children with brain cancer, > plus two control groups (85 healthy friends of the cancer-stricken > children, and 108 children with other types of cancers besides brain > cancer). > > Cancer is the second leading cause of death in children under 14 and brain > tumors are the second most frequent type of cancer, accounting for > approximately 20 percent of all cancers in children. The survival rate of > children with brain cancer has not improved in recent years (35 percent > survive five years or longer).[6] > > According to data compiled by the National Cancer Institute, during the > past 15 years there has been a " dramatic rise " in brain cancers among two > age-groups in the U.S.: old people and children. Brain cancer in children > aged 0-4 is rising at a steady 2.6 percent each year (thus doubling in > incidence every 27 years, or doubling each generation).[7] Between 1973 > and 1988, brain cancer in children under 14 increased 47% (from 2.3 per > 100,000 to 3.4 per 100,000).[8] > > Families of the children with brain cancer seemed like ordinary people. > Fifteen percent had only a high school education; another 40 percent had > high school plus additional training; 24 percent had graduated from > college. Thirty-eight percent had a family income between $20,001 and > $30,000; 16 percent had family incomes between $30,001 and $40,000; 16 > percent had family incomes above $40,001. > > In making the comparisons between the brain cancer cases and the controls, > researchers took into account the child's exposure to environmental > tobacco smoke, family income, family members working in construction > trades (among adults, brain cancer is associated with exposure to many > industrial chemicals, especially paint--see RHWN #266), father's education > and mother's education, among other things. > > What chiefly distinguishes the " case " families from the " control " families > is that the " case " families used chemical pesticides in their homes more > often than did families whose children have not developed brain tumors. > > In all, the study found 15 separate statistically significant associations > between one type or another of pesticide use and childhood brain cancer. > Types of pesticide use are such things as " use of no-pest strips for > nuisance pests " and " inon used in the garden or orchard. " > > This study has several limitations. The number of cases is small; many > associations were tested, so a few of the 15 positive associations may be > due to random chance. The study may suffer from " recall bias " because the > data were supplied by mothers whose recall may have been been biased by > their emotional reaction to their child's experience. > > The authors say, " Although our findings are not conclusive, they are > suggestive of an association between childhood brain cancer and several > pesticide use situations, product types, and specific products. The > results of this study highlight the need for expanded research on the > health effects of pesticides. " And, it seems to us, the need for some > common-sense steps like PREVENTION. > > -- Montague > > ===== > > [1] Curtis C. and Sheri T. Hester, " Global Chemical Pollution, " > ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY Vol. 25, No. 5 (May, 1991), pgs. > 814-819. > > [2] o Suro, " Pollution-Weary Minorities Try Civil Rights Tack, " NEW > YORK TIMES January 11, 1993, pgs. 1, B7. > > [3] Philip H. Abelson, " Pesticides and Food, " SCIENCE Vol. 259 (February > 26, 1993), pg. 1235. > > [4] R. and others, " Family Pesticide Use in the Home, Garden, > Orchard and Yard, " ARCHIVES OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY > Vol. 22 (1992), pgs. 260-266. > > [5] R. and others, " Family Pesticide Use and Childhood Brain > Cancer, " ARCHIVES OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONTAMINATION AND TOXICOLOGY Vol. 24 > (1993), pgs. 87-92. > > [6] Ellen Gold and others, " Risk Factors for Brain Tumors in Children, " > AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY Vol. 109 (1979), pgs. 309-319. > > [7] Nigel H. Greig, Lynn G. Ries, Rosemary Rancik, and Stanley I. > Rapoport. " Increasing Annual Incidence of Primary Malignant Tumors in the > Elderly, " JOURNAL OF THE NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE, Vol. 82 (October 17, > 1990), pgs. 1621-1624. > > [8] Lynn A. Gloeckler Ries and others, CANCER STATISTICS REVIEW 1973- 1988 > [National Institutes of Health Publication No. 91-2789]. Bethesda, Md.: > National Cancer Institute, 1991, pg. II.[32]. > > Descriptor terms: pesticides; journalism; propaganda; new york times; > science magazine; aaas; mo; pesticide use data; insecticides; herbicides; > pets; flea collars; carbaryl; diazinon; dichlorvos; kwell shampoo; > lindane; brain cancer; childhood cancer; mortality statistics; morbidity > statistics; no pest strips; > > > 's Environment & Health News is a publication of the Environmental > Research Foundation, P.O. Box 5036, polis, MD 21403. Fax (410) > 263-8944; E-mail: erf@.... Back issues available by E-mail; to get > instructions, send Email to INFO@... with the single word HELP in > the message. Subscriptions are free. To subscribe, E-mail the words > SUBSCRIBE RACHEL-NEWS YOUR FULL NAME to: listserv@... NOTICE: > Environmental Research Foundation provides this electronic version of > RACHEL'S ENVIRONMENT & HEALTH NEWS free of charge even though it costs our > organization considerable time and money to produce it. We would like to > continue to provide this service free. You could help by making a > tax-deductible contribution(anything you can afford, whether $5.00 or > $500.00). Please send your tax- deductible contribution to: Environmental > Research Foundation, P.O. Box 5036, polis, MD 21403-7036. Please do > not send credit card information via E-mail. For further information about > making tax-deductible contributions to E.R.F. by credit card please phone > us toll free at 1-888- 2RACHEL. -- Montague, Editor > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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