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markalot
22 Oct 2007, 11:37 AM
This raises too many questions for me to be worried. We've always done the stink test when it comes to toys and bedding, if it stinks we don't buy it. The kids slept with us when young too, so no cheap krib krap to be exposed too.

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* Story Highlights
* 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. See which household products contain industrial chemicals »

"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. VideoWatch Anderson Cooper get his blood drawn for testing »

Dr. 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 1½ 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.

Dr. 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 than we do."

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.

Dr. 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."


Find this article at:
http://www.cnn.com/2007/TECH/science/10/22/body.burden/index.html

silentpaul
22 Oct 2007, 11:46 AM
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.
There are a lot more cases of cancer than there used to be. Maybe this accounts for part of it?

Sushi
22 Oct 2007, 11:54 AM
I just read this, and it's scary. Our daughter had slightly elevated lead levels in her blood when she came home from China, but that has subsided. I never really thought about other chemicals. Most children's pajamas are marketed as being flame retardant. You think that's a good thing but don't think about the fact that those chemicals are right next to your child's skin. And I don't know that you can buy pajamas that haven't been treated with flame retardants--gotta go do some research.

Hellburger
22 Oct 2007, 12:59 PM
"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.

From the wiki entry for the American Council on Science and Health:
"According to the Congressional Quarterly's Public Interest Profiles, Whelan's organization received more than 75 percent of their funding from the chemical and pharmaceutical industry. As a result, the ACSH has been accused of being more of a public relations firm, and less of a neutral council on Science."

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 the agency has that has the proper tools, but doesn't use them, how can it protect?

Hogarth
22 Oct 2007, 01:02 PM
If, nothing else, having strange chemicals in your blood makes your liver work harder to filter it all out, which may leave you more susceptible for other diseases.

purdueman_in
22 Oct 2007, 01:10 PM
And yet we environmentalists are called "whackos" and "alarmists"

DLDude
22 Oct 2007, 04:24 PM
Tests reveal people fucking worried about everything these days.


CHILL OUT!

Marlowe
22 Oct 2007, 04:32 PM
uh, the life expectancy rate continues to rise, so let's not pull our hair out and panic just yet.

bestlaidplans
22 Oct 2007, 04:55 PM
Yeah, maybe we're just better preserved now...

classicgrrl
22 Oct 2007, 06:57 PM
just let all the kids run around naked in the woods until they are the age of 6.


oh, wait thats right. we don't HAVE any woods left...
:rolleyes:

mikeatthemadfro
23 Oct 2007, 06:44 PM
just had friends down from cleveland and they have a 7 month old who has elevated lead levels....

they had moved into a fixer upper a few years ago, and now they're considering selling...suspecting lead paint as culprit...

lead must be in a lot of painted items other than children's toys from china...

are all chinese made products emitting lead from their paint? have we just scratched the surface>?

Homsar
23 Oct 2007, 11:23 PM
Maybe it's all the new shit we've invented and put into the air/water/ground.
New tests don't mean new diseases.
Plenty of trees around, but not where people are.


are all chinese made products emitting lead from their paint? have we just scratched the surface>?
I hope not. That would make it worse.

kgray
24 Oct 2007, 07:57 AM
yeah, it sounds pretty scary...especially since they mentioned children.

I think I'm more worried about the possible shortening of the taint. :p :p

skidminix
24 Oct 2007, 08:01 AM
uh, the life expectancy rate continues to rise, so let's not pull our hair out and panic just yet.
But that's just what they "expect" life to last - it's not the life actuality rate. :p