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RE: Pesticide Exposure in NC

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Several of you have emailed indicating

that the links that I included in the email I sent Friday, May 26, did not

work. If you copy and paste or retype the links into your browser, you should

be able to view both documents that I referred to.

A. Triantafillou, MPH

Family/Community Partnership Specialist

East Coast Migrant Head Start Project

4901 Glenwood Avenue, Suite 300

Raleigh, North Carolina 27612

(919) 420-0334 ext. 274 phone

(919) 783-8441 fax

striantafillou@...

www.ecmhsp.org

From:

[mailto: ] On Behalf Of n

Sent: Saturday, May 27, 2006 12:02

PM

To:

Subject: [ ]

Pesticide Exposure in NC

Hello,

Both of the links you provided led to a 'not found at

this site'

n Moses M.D.

San

Francisco

----- Original Message -----

From: Triantafillou,

Sent: Friday, May 26,

2006 7:39 AM

Subject:

[ ] Pesticide Exposure in NC

Colleagues—

As many of you may be aware, farmworker health professionals

and advocates in North Carolina

have been following very closely the case of three farmworker women who were

exposed to pesticides while pregnant and working in the fields and the

potential link between this exposure and the birth of babies with birth

defects. Please find below links to a very recent article that appeared

in the local newspaper about the case and a link to the official report

released by the NC Division of Public Health who conducted an assessment of the

three cases:

http://www.newsobserver.com/719story/442930.html

http://www.epi.state.nc.us/epi.oii.html

select Assessment of Maternal Occupational

Pesticide Exposures during Pregnancy and Three Children with Birth Defects:

North Carolina, 2004

We hope this will prompt you to monitor this issue in your respective states.

Sincerely,

A. Triantafillou, MPH

Family/Community Partnership Specialist

East Coast Migrant Head Start Project

4901 Glenwood Avenue, Suite 300

Raleigh, North Carolina 27612

(919) 420-0334 ext. 274 phone

(919) 783-8441 fax

striantafillou@...

www.ecmhsp.org

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Guest guest

I am looking academicians that have

studied (health, migration patterns, etc in the Deep South (North

Carolina, South Carolina,

Georgia, Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi and Louisiana). We are

trying to see what information exists in these states on migrants and

immigrants.

Dennis deLeon

President

Latino Commission on AIDS

212-584-9300

917-697-8040 (cell)

212-202-3620 (fax)

ddeleon@...

www.latinoaids.org

From:

[mailto: ]

On Behalf Of Triantafillou,

Sent: Tuesday, May 30,

2006 9:50 AM

To:

Subject: RE:

[ ] Pesticide Exposure in NC

Several of you have emailed indicating

that the links that I included in the email I sent Friday,

May 26, did not work. If you

copy and paste or retype the links into your browser,

you should be able to view both documents that I referred to.

A. Triantafillou, MPH

Family/Community Partnership Specialist

East Coast Migrant Head Start Project

4901 Glenwood Avenue,

Suite 300

Raleigh, North Carolina 27612

(919) 420-0334 ext. 274 phone

(919) 783-8441 fax

striantafillou@...

www.ecmhsp.org

From:

[mailto: ] On Behalf Of n

Sent: Saturday, May 27,

2006 12:02 PM

To:

Subject: [ ]

Pesticide Exposure in NC

Hello,

Both of the links you provided led to a 'not found at

this site'

n Moses M.D.

San

Francisco

----- Original Message -----

From: Triantafillou,

Sent: Friday, May 26,

2006 7:39 AM

Subject:

[ ] Pesticide Exposure in NC

Colleagues—

As many of you may be aware,

farmworker health professionals and advocates in North Carolina have been following very

closely the case of three farmworker women who were exposed to pesticides while

pregnant and working in the fields and the potential link between this exposure

and the birth of babies with birth defects. Please find below links to a

very recent article that appeared in the local newspaper about the case and a

link to the official report released by the NC Division of Public Health who

conducted an assessment of the three cases:

http://www.newsobserver.com/719story/442930.html

http://www.epi.state.nc.us/epi.oii.html

select Assessment of Maternal Occupational

Pesticide Exposures during Pregnancy and Three Children with Birth Defects:

North Carolina, 2004

We hope this will prompt you to monitor this issue in your respective states.

Sincerely,

A. Triantafillou, MPH

Family/Community Partnership Specialist

East Coast Migrant Head Start Project

4901 Glenwood Avenue,

Suite 300

Raleigh, North Carolina 27612

(919) 420-0334 ext. 274 phone

(919) 783-8441 fax

striantafillou@...

www.ecmhsp.org

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