Rachel's News #993

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Rachel's Democracy & Health News #993

"Environment, health, jobs and justice--Who gets to decide?"

Thursday, January 8, 2009...............Printer-friendly version
www.rachel.org
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Featured stories in this issue...

Can Chemicals Be Regulated?
  In the past 20 years, four new discoveries have altered our
  understanding of chemical hazards, making chemical testing and
  regulation far more difficult than previously imagined.
Billions Could Go Hungry from Global Warming by 2100
  "There is a 90% chance that 3 billion people will have to choose
  between going hungry and moving their families to milder climes
  because of climate change within 100 years, says new research."
Coral Decline Warns of Ocean Changes: Australian Scientists
  A sharp slowdown in coral growth on Australia's Great Barrier Reef
  since 1990 is a warning sign that precipitous changes in the world's
  oceans may be imminent, says a new Australian study.
Lead and Violent Crime
  New research reveals that, even at low levels, exposure to toxic
  lead early in life shrinks key areas of the brain, and is linked with
  violent crime.
A New Cigarette Hazard: 'Third-hand Smoke'
  "Third-hand smoke" is the invisible yet toxic brew of gases and
  particles clinging to smokers' hair and clothing, not to mention
  cushions and carpeting, that lingers long after second-hand smoke has
  cleared from a room. The residue includes heavy metals, carcinogens
  and even radioactive materials that young children can get on their
  hands and ingest.
Crops Absorb Livestock Antibiotics, Science Shows
  People have long been exposed to antibiotics in meat and milk. Now,
  new research shows that they also may be ingesting them from
  vegetables, even ones grown on organic farms.
A Final Report Card on the Reagan Years?
  Two days before Christmas, with hardly anyone at all paying much
  attention, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office delivered up a
  final report card on the Reagan era. The highest grades? They went,
  almost exclusively, to the super rich.

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From: Rachel's Democracy & Health News #993, Jan. 8, 2009
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CAN CHEMICALS BE REGULATED?

By Peter Montague

In the past 20 years, four new discoveries have completely changed our
understanding of chemical hazards.

1. Many chemicals can interfere with the hormone system

Beginning roughly 80 years ago, scientific studies started showing
that some chemicals can interfere with growth, development, and
behavior of animals, including humans. For 50 years these studies were
generally ignored. Then during the 1980s, dozens of new studies --
often done in the Great Lakes region -- showed that male fish were
being feminized, that female gulls were pairing up to sit on nests
together... and so on. There were other effects as well, but the sex-
related changes caught people's attention first.

In 1991 Theo Colborn pulled together a meeting at the Wingspread
Conference Center in Racine, Wisconsin, which issued a consensus
statement, "Chemically Induced Alterations in Sexual Development: The
Wildlife/Human Connection." Subsequently Colborn and others published
the popular book, Our Stolen Future. Since that time, a flood of new
studies have confirmed and reconfirmed that many industrial chemicals
can interfere with the chemical signaling systems that coordinate all
the biological activities that a living thing requires -- beginning at
conception and ceasing only with death. (See Rachel's #263, #264,
and #365.) And the changes are not just sex-related -- the central
nervous system is strongly affected, as is the immune system.
"Endocrine disrupting" chemicals are all-purpose poisons.

With this new understanding of endocrine-disrupting chemicals, we have
also learned that...

(a) the timing of exposure combines with the amount of exposure to
produce a chemical's effect;

(b) in some cases low doses can be more effective (more damaging) than
higher doses.

Thus this new understanding of toxicity has falsified Paracelsus's
450-year-old maxim, "The dose makes the poison." Today we know that
often the timing makes the poison and that sometimes less is worse.
(See Rachel's #754.) As you might imagine, this new understanding
has greatly complicated the task of toxicity testing.

2. Chemical exposures in the womb can "program" a fetus for life

Scientists studying cell-signal-disrupting chemicals discovered "fetal
programming" -- that the lifelong development of a human can sometimes
be permanently determined by chemical exposures in the womb, including
chronic diseases that may only become apparent in middle age (cancer,
adult-onset asthma, diabetes, etc.) (See Rachel's #343, #447, and
#909, among others. Of course this applies to non-human mammals as
well.) This, too, has greatly complicated the task of toxicity
testing.

3. "You are what your grandmother ate."

In recent years, an entirely new theory of genetic inheritance --
called epigenetics -- has become widely (if not yet universally)
accepted. Epigenetics tells us that environmental influences on cells
can be inherited even though the structure of the cell's DNA has not
been fundamentally altered. A generation ago, such a concept was
considered heresy, unthinkable really. This new knowledge means that
environmental influences are far more important than anyone understood
previously. (One popular expression of this understanding is, "You are
what your grandmother ate.") (See Rachel's #876.) Many scientists
believe that epigenetic changes contribute importantly to fetal
programming and to the initiation of cancers and other chronic
diseases that only become apparent years or decades later. Ask
yourself, how can you rapidly test a chemical to see if it will cause
a chronic disease years in the future?

4. The "cocktail" effect

Many studies now show that exposure to "insignificant" doses of
several chemicals can combine to produce significant effects. In other
words, simultaneous exposure to very "low" doses of several chemicals
can cause biological effects that none of the chemicals alone could
cause. British toxicologist Andreas Kortenkamp calls this the
"something from nothing" effect. And U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) scientist Earl Gray calls this phenomenon "the new math
-- zero plus zero equals something."

Initially scientists assumed that only chemicals acting by a
particular biological mechanism could combine to produce an effect.
But more recently, experiments have shown that chemicals acting by a
variety of biological mechanisms can combine to produce a single
effect. When we are exposed to a mixture of chemicals, "Every mixture
component contributes to the effect, no matter how small," says
Andreas Kortenkamp.

These four new understandings of chemicals make chemical regulation a
daunting task, to put it mildly.

First you need to know the potency of each single chemical, which
biological tissues it affects in what ways, and whether a population
will be exposed to other chemicals that affect the same tissues. Then
you must test groups of chemicals in combinations at low doses and
high doses, and several doses in between. Then you need to determine
whether the creature being studied (rat, bird, human, or whatever) is
affected by this combination of chemicals at one particular stage of
life and not at other stages. For example in the case of humans we
know that, during gestation in the womb, exposure during one
particular week may produces effects not seen when exposure occurs
during a different week.

Now consider the actual environment in which exposures to humans are
presently occurring. Here is the opening paragraph from an article in
New Scientist magazine in late 2007:

"Today, and every day, you can expect to be exposed to some 75,000
artificial chemicals. All day long you will be breathing them in,
absorbing them through your skin and swallowing them in your food.
Throughout the night they will seep out of carpets, pillows and
curtains, and drift into your lungs. Living in this chemical soup is
an inescapable side effect of 21st-century living. The question is: is
it doing us any harm?

"There are good reasons to think that it might be. Not because of the
action of any one chemical but because of the way the effects of
different components combine once they are inside the body."

Taken together, these new understandings of toxicity make thorough
premarket chemical testing not merely difficult, but impossible. The
steps required are far too cumbersome, complex, and -- most
importantly -- expensive. Thorough testing is not going to happen.
Scientists (or advocates) who says it is are kidding us (or
themselves).

Not convinced? Suppose we wanted to test just 1000 chemicals in unique
combinations of 5 chemicals. Then we'd have to test 8,250,291,250,200
(yes, 8 trillion) unique groups of chemicals.[1] If we assume we could
test a million combinations each year (a wildly optimistic
assumption), then it would take us 8,000 years to complete the task.
And we are presently putting 700 new chemicals into commercial
channels each year.

No, chemicals are not going to be thoroughly tested before being
marketed, especially not in combination with other chemicals already
on the market.

These new understandings of chemical toxicity will eventually drive
almost everyone to the conclusion that broad screening principles must
be applied before individual chemical tests -- thus requiring us to
far go beyond even the European Union's new chemicals policies. The
Swedish Natural Step principles would seem to be the place to start
in designing a truly adequate and protective chemicals policy, but few
in the U.S. are there yet. (See Rachel's #667-668.)

I don't want to be too gloomy, but I notice that most chemical policy
activists are not mentioning the real problem with chemical
regulation: the regulators are routinely captured by the corporations
they regulate. This is at least as true under Democrats as it is under
Republicans.

To their credit, chemicals policy activists have petitioned the Obama
administration for a well-though-out list of regulatory reforms.
However in their "Letter of Principles for Toxic Chemical Regulatory
Reform" (which I signed) to the Obama transition team, there is no
mention -- zero -- of how to make regulations actually work. The
letter spells out a vast array of requirements that could protect the
public a little better from industrial poisons. But ideas for creating
human regulatory agencies or departments that are independent of big
money? Complete silence.

Former 30-year EPA employee William Sanjour in 1992 told us why
regulatory agencies fail. We could probably all gain by carefully re-
reading his essay, "Why EPA is Like It Is, and What Can Be Done About
It." (5 Mbytes PDF).

Chemical regulation is not a primarily a technical problem. It is
primarily a human problem of money and political power. Many of us
like to pretend that it's not, but pretending -- and hoping -- won't
change what we're up against.

[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Combination

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From: New Scientist, Jan. 8, 2009
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BILLIONS COULD GO HUNGRY FROM GLOBAL WARMING BY 2100

By Catherine Brahic

There is a 90% chance that 3 billion people will have to choose
between going hungry and moving their families to milder climes
because of climate change within 100 years, says new research.

The study forecasts that temperatures at the close of this century are
likely to be above those that crippled food supplies on at least three
occasions since 1900.

David Battisti, a climatologist at the University of Washington, used
23 models vetted by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change to
calculate how temperatures will vary with climate change.

Unlike previous studies, his team focused on temperatures during
growing seasons around the world. This allowed them to determine the
effect on food supplies.

Their results show there is a 90% chance that average temperatures in
the tropics and subtropics will be higher than the hottest heat waves
of the past century. With more than 3 billion people living in those
areas, most of whom rely heavily on locally produced crops for both
food and income, the effects could be catastrophic.

Expanding desert

In the Sahel, the belt of semi-arid land that lies just south of the
Sahara, average temperatures between 2080 and 2100 are predicted to be
a couple of degrees higher than the hottest temperatures experienced
in that region between 1900 and 2006.

This is a region that resembles a desert during the dry season, and
where crops can only grow if monsoon rains are sufficient. From the
late 1960s to the early 1990s, the Sahel suffered one of the worst
droughts in living memory. Although the seasonal monsoon rains have
since returned to some parts, temperatures can still be so high that
rainwater evaporates before it hits the ground.

"The Sahel might not be a region that can support agriculture in
future," says Battisti's colleague Rosamund Naylor, of Stanford
University's programme on food security and the environment. Farming
currently employs 60% of the population and supplies 40% of the GDP.
"It is likely that there will be migration out of agricultural areas
into rural areas or other countries," says Naylor. "We need to prepare
for this."

Crops hit hard

Poor countries will not be the only ones to suffer. The models suggest
that the heat wave which struck Europe in 2003, killing 52,000 people,
will become the norm by 2080.

Not only did the 2003 heatwave take lives, it also had long-lasting
effects on European food supplies. The highest temperatures hit at the
height of the summer growing season. It Italy, maize yields dropped by
36% in one year; in France, fruit harvests were cut by one quarter.

In the summer of 1972, temperatures in southeast Ukraine and southwest
Russia were between 2 and 4 deg. C higher than the long-term average
at the time.

The region represented the former-USSR's main breadbasket. The
heatwave caused grain production across the USSR to drop by 13%.
Instead of dealing with the losses domestically, as it had done
previously, the government unexpectedly decided to enter the global
market. As a result, global grain prices were affected.

Scientific solution?

"What our study shows is that temperatures over land for seasons where
the main crops are grown will be way out of norm," says Naylor. "That
is what we have to prepare for." She adds that if shortages happen at
the same time around the world, global food markets will not be able
to come to the rescue.

For many agricultural scientists, the solution lies in crops that are
either genetically modified or bred to be more heat-resistant.

"For new varieties to be developed, tested, [and] released, and for
seed to become available to farms in significant quantities, it takes
more than a decade, in spite of modern tools," says Marianne Banziger,
director of the Global Maize Program at the agricultural research
institute CIMMYT.

"We need to change our investment strategy now, or we are headed
towards major food insecurities," she says.

Journal reference: Science (DOI: 10.1126/science.1164363)

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From: Sydney (Australia) Morning Herald, Jan. 2, 2009
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CORAL DECLINE WARNS OF OCEAN CHANGES: AUSTRALIAN SCIENTISTS

By Agence France Presse

A sharp slowdown in coral growth on Australia's Great Barrier Reef
since 1990 is a warning sign that precipitous changes in the world's
oceans may be imminent, scientists said Friday.

Strong evidence points to the cause being a combination of warmer seas
and higher acidity from increased levels of atmospheric carbon
dioxide, Australian Institute of Marine Science researchers reported.

"The data suggest that this severe and sudden decline in calcification
is unprecedented in at least 400 years," said Glenn De'ath, principal
author of a paper published Friday in the international journal
Science.

The research shows that corals on the reef have slowed their growth by
more than 14 percent since the "tipping point" year of 1990 and on
current trends the corals would stop growing altogether by 2050.

"It is cause for extreme concern that such changes are already
evident, with the relatively modest climate changes observed to date,
in the world's best protected and managed coral reef ecosystem," said
co-author Janice Lough.

Coral skeletons form the backbone of reef ecosystems and provide the
habitat for tens of thousands of plant and animal species and more
acidic oceans will affect many sea creatures, not just coral, a
statement on the report said.

"All calcifying organisms that are central to the function of marine
ecosystems and food webs will be affected, and precipitous changes in
the biodiversity and productivity of the world's oceans may be
imminent," it added.

The findings are based on analyses of annual growth bands -- like
rings on trees -- extending back in time up to 400 years.

Rising sea temperatures are blamed on global warming caused by the
build-up in the atmosphere of greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide
-- which is also blamed for higher acidity in sea water.

A UN report warned in 2007 that the Great Barrier Reef, described as
the world's largest living organism, could be killed by climate change
within decades.

The World Heritage site and major tourist attraction, stretching over
more than 345,000 square kilometres (133,000 sq miles) off Australia's
east coast, could become "functionally extinct", the report said.

The journal Science is published by the American Association for the
Advancement of Science.

Copyright 2009 AFP

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From: Living on Earth, Jan. 2, 2009
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LEAD AND VIOLENT CRIME

For the past three decades, researchers from the University of
Cincinnati have been following 240 people from predominately African
American neighborhoods of Cincinnati with high lead contamination.
With each passing year, more is revealed about how lead in the
environment affects health and behavior. Now, new research reveals
that, even at low levels, lead exposure in early development shrinks
key areas of the brain, and is linked with violent crime. Living on
Earth's Ashley Ahearn traveled to Cincinnati and has our story.

By Ashley Ahearn

For information on how to listen to audio on our website, click
here.

RealAudio for this Story (Requires RealPlayer)
Download this Story (mp3 format)

CURWOOD: Lead is a neurotoxin, linked to disorders such as lower IQ
and Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder. And now there is more
compelling evidence linking lead exposure in the womb and early
childhood with violent crime later in life.

These latest findings come from researchers at the University of
Cincinnati and Cincinnati Children's Hospital. For almost three
decades they have been following a group of Cincinnati residents -
more than 90 percent of them African American. They grew up in
neighborhoods with high lead contamination -- mostly from the dust of
deteriorated lead paint in older apartments and houses.

Living on Earth's Ashley Ahearn reports.

[SUNDAY MORNING CHURCH SINGING]

AHEARN: It's Sunday morning and city council member Cecil Thomas is
here at Christ Emmanuel Church -- where he comes for his weekly dose
of hope and renewal. Serving as a police officer for 27 years in
Cincinnati, Councilman Thomas watched the violence grow, seemingly
without rhyme or reason. The new lead research gives him one potential
explanation.

THOMAS: The environment as a totality really pretty much dictates a
lot of our problems as relates to crime and things of that nature.
Because when you look at areas of our city that are most affected by
crime and then you look at buildings that are tainted with lead
poisoning paint, then you have to start thinking well maybe there is a
link between the effects of lead poising and the overall crime rates,
especially in the inner city neighborhoods.

AHEARN: Cecil Thomas knew it was time to make the jump from police
work to politics when he started arresting the kids and grandkids of
folks he had arrested years before. He says the findings of the
Cincinnati Lead Study offer a key avenue to understanding the violence
he saw during his time on patrol.

THOMAS: If lead poisoning has a direct impact on the ability to make
decisions in a much more rational way, then we are on to something, so
to speak. I been a law enforcement officer, some of the times I would
say "what's missing here?" I recall an individual was on his way to
the symphony and a young man came up to rob him but it wasn't enough
just to rob him, he then beat him to death with a brick. Now this
young man was a product of that environment because he lived down in
the Over the Rhine [neighborhood] so you have to ask yourself, 'well
was lead poisoning a factor in this individual committing such a
crime?'

[CHURCH SOUNDS]

AHEARN: Dr. Kim Dietrich and his team at the University of Cincinnati
are working to answer just that question. They took the criminal
records of the 250 study participants and compared the numbers of
violent crimes with the levels of lead each participant had been
exposed to throughout his or her life.

DIETRICH: What we found was interesting. The most robust and
significant associations were between early exposure to lead and
arrests involving violent acts, some sort of violent aggressive
behavior.

AHEARN: But they needed the "why". What might lead be doing, on the
physical level, to the brain to cause this violent aggressive
behavior?

[MRI SOUNDS]

AHEARN: At Cincinnati Children's Hospital, Damon's lying inside the
giant white cylinder of the MRI machine as it takes thousands of
pictures of his brain.

[MRI SOUNDS]

AHEARN: Damon grew up in Over the Rhine, a neighborhood of downtown
Cincinnati where rundown brick buildings line the streets, many of
them contaminated with lead paint. He's been participating in the
Cincinnati Lead Study since before he was born. Now he's 28.

DAMON: I remember the cab rides, the trips with my mama. It's just
something I been doing since I was a little boy and it continues.

AHEARN: The lead Damon was exposed to may have affected the size of
certain parts of his brain -- the frontal lobe in particular.

CECIL: The frontal lobe is probably the part that makes us the most
human in that it's executive functioning, attention, inhibition,
reasoning, judgment, kind of overall control.

AHEARN: Dr. Kim Cecil is a professor of radiology at the University of
Cincinnati and works with Dr. Dietrich. She's found that children with
higher lead levels have smaller frontal lobes as they reach adulthood.
She says that may be because lead takes the place of calcium in the
brain.

CECIL: It interferes with many enzymes that preserve the neurons in
the brain so it stops the healthy maintenance of neurons and thus
neurons can die. And it looks like a shriveled up brain. So in a way
it looks like a person who's much, much older.

AHEARN: Older -- as in closer to senility -- not older -- as in more
mature. Young men, like Damon, show more volume loss to the frontal
lobe than young women exposed to similar levels of lead.

But women are by no means exempt from lead's effects. Like Damon,
Laquisha's been participating in the lead study her whole life. It
started with her mom taking her to regular appointments at Cincinnati
Children's Hospital.

[SHAWTY LO HIP HOP IN BACKGROUND]

LAQUISHA: Ma, C'mere.

[TEA CUP STIRRING]

MOM: It wasn't easy as a matter of fact. I was living Over the Rhine,
downtown, in the rehab. It was the paint chippings from the window.
They let me know that she had lead poisoning. They did tell me that
her lead level was so high they almost had to hospitalize her at one
point.

She been hell on wheels, Ok.

[SHAWTY LO FADES UP]

LAQUISHA: This is Shawty Lo, one of my favorite rappers, cuz he be
keepin it real (singing along)

[SHAWTY LO FADES OUT]

LAQUISHA: I wasn't like the other kids. I won't catch on as quick as
them. Like I can't concentrate on one thing too long.

I tend, like when stuff doesn't go my way or whatever, like, sometimes
I tend to want to hurt myself or other people. When I couldn't get my
way, I like tear down the whole bedroom, I break mirrors, and
everything, I pull all my hair out. And then at the end I be wishin' I
never did it. Like when I went to prison for hitting that police
officer, I didn't really mean to hit him, it was just I don't know.

Me and my old boyfriend, we was downtown at a restaurant, at Arby's.
And he was ordering his food and the same cashier always get his order
wrong. So he told her, "Give my money back, I'm tired of you, every
time I come here you get my order wrong."

So they was just going back and forth, and the police was in there and
when he grabbed me he slapped one handcuff on me and I was goin'
crazy. I was kickin' screamin'. I wouldn't let him get the other
handcuff on me. So he slammed me and came down with his other knee in
my stomach. So I grabbed his belt and the collar of his shirt and I
flipped him on his head and I was hitting him with my handcuff that
was free and then somehow he got me in a headlock. He was punchin' me
in my head, we was just exchangin'.

At that point in time I just wasn't thinkin'. And that got me two
years in prison. My first time ever bein' in trouble. Eighteen. It
feel like you ain't never goin' nowhere, when your time gonna come.

[INSTRUMENTAL]

MOM: She got a very short temper, very short attention span. Don't
nothin' hold her interest for too long, nothin'. But I tell you what
she can do for hours and hours. She can just sit up and write for
hours and hours. She loves to write.

[PAPERS TURNING]

LAQUISHA: I got a lot of stuff that I used to write. And when I wrote
this I was in Mary's View.

MOM: Women's prison.

LAQUISHA: It's a women's prison. I was 20 years, I was probably almost
on my way home. I don't know, I just used to write so many and I
didn't put no dates on them. But this one, it say:

Hey I'm only 20 years old. I'm in prison because I fail to realize how
much I love my family and how memories can hurt. I miss bein' eight
years old, when I come home from school the sound of my father's car
pickin' me up. I miss watching cartoons with my big brother every
morning before we go to school. I miss the smell of my cheeks that I
used to wipe away when my mom would kiss me. I miss my brother
brushin' my hair when I was little. I miss the knob opening my bedroom
when my mom come home from work. There's no way I can tell you all the
reasons not to come to prison and how to stay out of trouble on one
page but I can tell you this: The next time your grandma or mom kisses
you and leaves lipstick on your cheeks, don't wipe it off, you might
regret it in years to come.

That's just the type of stuff that I used to write.

And uh, see these, these obituaries of my friends that passed. This my
friend, Mama, her name is Bedra. We call her Miss Betty. Her and my
friend 'Lil Rodney got killed together, somebody, she had opened her
door and somebody had shot her and came in her house and shot
everybody else that was in there.

AHEARN: Of the 250 people in the Cincinnati Lead Study Laquisha takes
part in, nine have been killed in violent crime. To put that in
perspective, this group is 650 times more likely to die in violent
crime than the average American.

[SOUND IN CHURCH]

AHEARN: Sitting in a pew after the service at Christ Emmanuel Church,
Councilmember Cecil Thomas says that from his perspective, homicide
and lead exposure seem to go hand in hand. But there's something else
in the mix. It's no surprise to him that less than half of the study
participants finished high school.

THOMAS: Eighty percent of individuals that committed homicides did not
finish high school and 75 percent of the victims had not finished high
school so there was a direct link between the education and violence.
Then you go back to the question of, "well why is that young man not
finishing school. Has the lead poisoning affected his ability to
learn?" So when we start looking at lead poisoning yes we are looking
at maybe one of the causative factors to violence in our city.

AHEARN: Lead exposure levels have gone down in Americans of all races,
but African American children are still twice as likely as white
children to suffer from lead poisoning, thanks to housing patterns and
poor nutrition. And with statistics showing black men as likely to go
to jail as to go to college, this latest research linking violent
crime and lead raises key questions for society.

There are many factors behind violence -- home life, education, easy
access to drugs and weapons... But a growing body of scientific
evidence suggests lead also belongs on that list. Dr. Kim Dietrich of
the University of Cincinnati likes to say that lead may not be the
"gun," so to speak, but it appears to be one factor that's helping to
pull the trigger.

For Living on Earth, I'm Ashley Ahearn in Cincinnati, Ohio.

==============

Kim Dietrich's study "Associations of Prenatal and Childhood Blood
Level Concentrations with Criminal Arrests in Early Adulthood."

Kim Cecil's study: "Decreased Brain Volume in Adults with Childhood
Lead Exposure."

Cincinnati Children's Environmental Health Center

Living on Earth wants to hear from you! Email us at comm...@loe.org,
or call our listener line (1-800-218-9988). Our mailing address is:

Living on Earth 20 Holland Street Suite 408 Somerville, MA 02144-2749

Copyright 2009 Living on Earth and World Media Foundation

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From: New York Times, Jan. 2, 2009
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A NEW CIGARETTE HAZARD: 'THIRD-HAND SMOKE'

By Roni Caryn Rabin

Parents who smoke often open a window or turn on a fan to clear the
air for their children, but experts now have identified a related
threat to children's health that isn't as easy to get rid of: third-
hand smoke.

That's the term being used to describe the invisible yet toxic brew of
gases and particles clinging to smokers' hair and clothing, not to
mention cushions and carpeting, that lingers long after second-hand
smoke has cleared from a room. The residue includes heavy metals,
carcinogens and even radioactive materials that young children can get
on their hands and ingest, especially if they're crawling or playing
on the floor.

Doctors from MassGeneral Hospital for Children in Boston coined the
term "third-hand smoke" to describe these chemicals in a new study
that focused on the risks they pose to infants and children. The study
was published in this month's issue of the journal Pediatrics.

"Everyone knows that second-hand smoke is bad, but they don't know
about this," said Dr. Jonathan P. Winickoff, the lead author of the
study and an assistant professor of pediatrics at Harvard Medical
School.

"When their kids are out of the house, they might smoke. Or they smoke
in the car. Or they strap the kid in the car seat in the back and
crack the window and smoke, and they think it's okay because the
second-hand smoke isn't getting to their kids," Dr. Winickoff
continued. "We needed a term to describe these tobacco toxins that
aren't visible."

Third-hand smoke is what one smells when a smoker gets in an elevator
after going outside for a cigarette, he said, or in a hotel room where
people were smoking. "Your nose isn't lying," he said. "The stuff is
so toxic that your brain is telling you: 'Get away.'"

The study reported on attitudes toward smoking in 1,500 households
across the United States. It found that the vast majority of both
smokers and nonsmokers were aware that second-hand smoke is harmful to
children. Some 95 percent of nonsmokers and 84 percent of smokers
agreed with the statement that "inhaling smoke from a parent's
cigarette can harm the health of infants and children."

But far fewer of those surveyed were aware of the risks of third-hand
smoke. Since the term is so new, the researchers asked people if they
agreed with the statement that "breathing air in a room today where
people smoked yesterday can harm the health of infants and children."
Only 65 percent of nonsmokers and 43 percent of smokers agreed with
that statement, which researchers interpreted as acknowledgement of
the risks of third-hand smoke.

The belief that second-hand smoke harms children's health was not
independently associated with strict smoking bans in homes and cars,
the researchers found. On the other hand, the belief that third-hand
smoke was harmful greatly increased the likelihood the respondent also
would enforce a strict smoking ban at home, Dr. Winickoff said.

"That tells us we're onto an important new health message here," he
said. "What we heard in focus group after focus group was, 'I turn on
the fan and the smoke disappears.' It made us realize how many people
think about second-hand smoke -- they're telling us they know it's bad
but they've figured out a way to do it."

The data was collected in a national random-digit-dial telephone
survey done between September and November 2005. The sample was
weighted by race and gender, based on census information.

Dr. Philip Landrigan, a pediatrician who heads the Children's
Environmental Health Center at Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New
York, said the phrase third-hand smoke is a brand-new term that has
implications for behavior.

"The central message here is that simply closing the kitchen door to
take a smoke is not protecting the kids from the effects of that
smoke," he said. "There are carcinogens in this third-hand smoke, and
they are a cancer risk for anybody of any age who comes into contact
with them."

Among the substances in third-hand smoke are hydrogen cyanide, used in
chemical weapons; butane, which is used in lighter fluid; toluene,
found in paint thinners; arsenic; lead; carbon monoxide; and even
polonium-210, the highly radioactive carcinogen that was used to
murder former Russian spy Alexander V. Litvinenko in 2006. Eleven of
the compounds are highly carcinogenic.

Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company

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From: Environmental Health News, Jan. 6, 2009
[Printer-friendly version]

CROPS ABSORB LIVESTOCK ANTIBIOTICS, SCIENCE SHOWS

By Matthew Cimitile, Environmental Health News

For half a century, meat producers have fed antibiotics to farm
animals to increase their growth and stave off infections. Now
scientists have discovered that those drugs are sprouting up in
unexpected places.

Vegetables such as corn, potatoes and lettuce absorb antibiotics when
grown in soil fertilized with livestock manure, according to tests
conducted at the University of Minnesota.

Today, close to 70 percent of the total antibiotics and related drugs
produced in the United States are fed to cattle, pigs and poultry,
according to the Union of Concerned Scientists. Although this practice
sustains a growing demand for meat, it also generates public health
fears associated with the expanding presence of antibiotics in the
food chain.

The Minnesota researchers planted corn, green onion and cabbage in
manure-treated soil in 2005 to evaluate the environmental impacts of
feeding antibiotics to livestock. Six weeks later, the crops were
analyzed and found to absorb chlortetracycline, a drug widely used to
treat diseases in livestock. In another study in 2007, corn, lettuce
and potato were planted in soil treated with liquid hog manure. They,
too, accumulated concentrations of an antibiotic, named
Sulfamethazine, also commonly used in livestock.

As the amount of antibiotics in the soil increased, so too did the
levels taken up by the corn, potatoes and other plants.

"Around 90 percent of these drugs that are administered to animals end
up being excreted either as urine or manure," said Holly Dolliver, a
member of the Minnesota research team and now a professor of crop and
soil sciences at the University of Wisconsin-River Falls. "A vast
majority of that manure is then used as an important input for 9.2
million hectares of (U.S.) agricultural land."

The scientists found that although their crops were only propagated in
greenhouses for six weeks--far less than a normal growing season--
antibiotics were absorbed readily into their leaves. If grown for a
full season, drugs most likely would find their way into parts of
plants that humans eat, said Dolliver.

Less than 0.1 percent of antibiotics applied to soil were absorbed
into the corn, lettuce and other plants. Though a tiny amount, health
implications for people consuming such small, cumulative doses are
largely unknown.

"The antibiotic accumulation in plants is just another negative
consequence of our animal agriculture industry and not surprising
given the quantity fed to livestock," said Steve Roach, public health
program director for the non-profit Food Animal Concerns Trust.

For highly processed plants such as corn, the drugs would most likely
be removed, added Dolliver. But many food crops such as spinach and
lettuce are not processed, only washed, allowing antibiotics to
remain.

"Nobody particularly eats corn or soybean directly," said Satish
Gupta, a University of Minnesota professor of soil science and study
leader. "But there are crops I am much more worried about, like
cabbage and lettuce, because these are leaves we eat directly and
consume raw."

One finding that particularly worries food scientists is the
accumulation of antibiotics within potato tubers. Tubers are an
enlarged, underground stem that uptake and store nutrients from the
soil. In crops like potatoes, carrots and radishes, it is the part
humans eat.

"Since these tubers and root crops are in direct contact with the soil
they may show a greater propensity for (antibiotic) uptake," said
Gupta.

Health officials fear that eating vegetables and meat laced with drugs
meant to treat infections can promote resistant strains of bacteria in
food and the environment.

Roach said "the clearest public health implication" from treating
livestock with antibiotics is the development of resistant bacteria
that reduces the effectiveness of human medicine. Past studies have
shown overuse of antibiotics reduces their ability to cure infections.
Over time, certain antibiotics are rendered ineffective.

Scientists believe antibiotics also may have contributed to the
explosive rise in asthma and allergies in children over the last 20
years. Researchers at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit, following 448
children from birth for seven years, reported that children who
received antibiotics within their first six months had a higher risk
of developing allergies and asthma.

Such health concerns led the European Union in 2006 to ban antibiotic
use as feed additives for promoting livestock growth. But in the
United States, nearly 25 million pounds of antibiotics per year, up
from 16 million in the mid 1980s, are given to healthy animals for
agriculture purposes, according to a 2000 report by the Union of
Concerned Scientists.

Livestock producers contend that the spread of resistant strains of
bacteria stems from the overuse of all medicines to treat infectious
diseases in both humans and animals. Removal of antibiotics, they say,
would only lead to increased disease in animals and reduction in food
safety.

Tainted manure can impact more than just the soil. Once applied to the
land, antibiotics can infiltrate water supplies as it seeps through
the soil into aquifers or spills into surface water due to runoff,
explained Dolliver.

"The other thing to remember is that the field is not a sterile
environment. Mice, rabbit and foxes traverse farmland while other
animals graze, all with the potential to become vectors for the
resistant bacteria organisms and spread it throughout different animal
populations," said Pat Millner, a U.S. Department of Agriculture
microbiologist based in Maryland.

The presence of antibiotics within the food chain is likely to
increase as the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has permitted
greater use of controversial drugs on farm animals. For example, this
past October, the FDA dropped plans to halt use of cefquinome, a
potent antibiotic, after it said in July it would push against its use
in animals.

While there are restrictions on use of raw manure in U.S. organic
farming because of concern over bacteria, no such rules are in place
regarding antibiotics or hormones. Not all organic growers use manure
with antibiotics, but many do, said Gupta. Even if a product has the
USDA organic label, it still might harbor traces of antibiotics.
[Correction 1/6/09: FDA was changed to USDA]

High-temperature composting of manure, designed to kill pathogens, is
required for crops certified under the USDA organic label. That could
eliminate some antibiotics. But others are resistant, according to a
study by Dolliver and Kupta published last year. Growers are not
required to monitor crops for the drugs.

"Antibiotic uptake by plants may be of particular concern to organic
crop producers....To our knowledge, there is no current plan or
standardized methodology for monitoring antibiotics in animal manure,
which is often obtained from nonorganic farms where antibiotics are
commonly used," Dolliver said in the 2007 study.

Added Gupta, "We urgently need to find some way to put guidelines in
place on organic food regarding these chemicals."

Gupta said all growers should be told that composting manure can help
reduce antibiotics. Composting decays piles of food or manure as
microbes decompose organic matter using oxygen to survive, grow and
reproduce. Heating up the material creates conditions conducive for
bacteria to break down antibiotics and pathogens.

A pilot study by USDA scientists in Maryland added straw to a beef
cattle manure pile, heating up the dense material while allowing
spaces for air to penetrate. The higher temperatures sped up the
decaying process of harmful substances.

"The process happens very rapidly, in this study it took about 10
days," said Millner. "This is not too surprising since antibiotics are
not a thermally stable chemical compound."

In another study, the same researchers who discovered the uptake of
antibiotics by plants tested four of these drugs to determine how
effective composting would be in reducing harmful chemicals in turkey
manure. After 25 days using a combination of natural heat generated by
microbial activity, three of the four antibiotics broke down under the
high energy conditions created, said Dolliver.

Composting reduced concentrations of three antibiotics by 54 percent
to 99 percent, although one drug, sulfamethazine, did not degrade at
all, according to their study, published in May in the Journal of
Environmental Quality.

"These findings suggest manure management can be an important strategy
for reducing the overall impact for these compounds making their way
into the environment," said Dolliver.

Many questions still remain. Currently, projects are underway to grow
crops for a full season in antibiotic laced manure, to grow them in
fields rather than greenhouses and to analyze the concentrations and
locations of the antibiotics within the plants. Researchers also want
to determine which antibiotics are more likely to be picked up, which
plants are more prone to uptake, what composting methods are most
effective in reducing harmful material in manure and what antibiotics
may be resistant to composting.

There are serious societal implications regarding the discoveries
already made and the questions yet to be answered, Gupta concluded.

"We are a chemical society and humans are the main user of
pharmaceutical products," said Gupta. "We need a better understanding
of what takes place when chemicals are applied to sources of food and
must be more vigilant about regulating what we use to grow food and
what we put in our bodies."

==============

Matthew Cimitile, a second-year graduate student at Michigan State
University's Knight Center for Environmental Journalism, is an intern
at Environmental Health News. He can be reached at
mcim...@gmail.com.

Copyright Environmental Health Sciences

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From: OurFuture.org, Jan. 5, 2009
[Printer-friendly version]

A FINAL REPORT CARD ON THE REAGAN YEARS?

By Sam Pizzigati

Our current economic meltdown may finally have ended the era that
began when Ronald Reagan became President. Now a new study -- from the
Congressional Budget Office -- helps us understand the inequality that
has us melting.

Two days before Christmas, with hardly anyone at all paying much
attention, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office delivered up a
final report card on the Reagan era. The highest grades? They went,
almost exclusively, to the super rich.

You won't, to be sure, find any As, Bs, and Fs in this new
Congressional Budget Office report card. And the CBO's researchers
certainly didn't set out to grade America on the years since Ronald
Reagan became President a generation ago. But they've done just that.
On taxes and income distribution, their new report makes vividly
clear, the United States desperately "needs improvement."

That may or may not be the message Senate Finance Committee chair Max
Baucus from Montana had in mind, last year, when he asked the
Congressional Budget Office to dig a little deeper into the data on
taxes and income than the CBO had dug in a report released late in
2007.

The CBO's December 2007 study, Historical Effective Tax Rates, 1979 to
2005, had looked at the federal taxes Americans at different income
levels have been paying since the year before Ronald Reagan's
election. But the report had a hole. Nothing in it indicated how the
really rich have fared in the near three decades that the basic
principles of Reaganomics -- tax rate cuts, deregulation, and
privatization -- have set the public policy pace.

Senate Finance Committee chair Baucus asked the CBO to fill that hole
-- by focusing on the richest of the rich. The CBO's new report meets
that request, with dramatic results.

Americans in the overall top 1 percent, the 2007 CBO data showed, did
quite well in the Reagan era's first quarter-century. Their average
incomes, after taking inflation into account, essentially tripled,
rising 201 percent.

But these top 1 percent stats, the new CBO data help us understand,
hardly tell the full story. The truly stunning income increases over
recent decades have gone to the tippy-top of the U.S. income
distribution, not the top 1 percent, but the top tenth -- and top
hundredth -- of that top 1 percent.

The higher up you go on the income ladder, in other words, the sweeter
the Reagan era.

Between 1979 and 2005, the bottom half of the top 1 percent saw their
average incomes only double, after inflation. These incomes increased
105 percent. The next highest four-tenths of the top 1 percent
somewhat raised the income bar. Their average incomes, after
inflation, rose 161 percent.

That brings us to the top 0.1 percent of Americans. Their incomes,
from 1979 to 2005, rose a staggering 294 percent after taking
inflation into account. Not bad at all. But the top 0.01 percent did
even better. The 11,000 households in this rarified air took home an
average $35.5 million in 2005, a 384 percent increase over average top
0.01 percent incomes in 1979.

Need some perspective here? Let's compare Americans at the top to
Americans in the middle. Between 1979 and 2005, the average income of
America's statistical middle class -- the 20 percent of Americans in
the exact middle of the U.S. income distribution -- rose, according to
the CBO figures, a mere 15 percent. That's less than 1 percent a year.

But many average Americans never actually saw that less than 1
percent. That's because the CBO takes a kitchen-sink approach to
defining income. CBO researchers include in their "comprehensive
income" calculations all the standard household revenue streams --
wages, dividends, interest, and the like -- and lots more, too, from
food stamps and Social Security to employer-paid health benefits.

All these add-ins tend to inflate average household "incomes." If your
employer's health insurance company jacks up prices, for instance, the
extra dollars in premiums that your employer has to pay count as
income to you, at least in the CBO calculations.

The CBO actually has a good reason to take this "kitchen-sink"
approach to defining income. Conservative cheerleaders for the Reagan
era have been arguing for years that the United States isn't growing
that much more unequal, not when you calculate in the various benefits
that poor and average Americans get from government and their
employers.

But the CBO figures, by adding in all those benefits, neatly expose
the flim-flam behind this cheerleading. The United States definitely
has become substantially more unequal. Overall, after taxes, the very
rich -- the top 0.01 percent -- have nearly quadrupled their share of
the nation's income since 1979.

These super-rich Americans in the top 0.01 percent, even more
amazingly, now pay a lower share of their incomes in federal tax than
the merely rich.

The overall top 1 percent paid federal income tax at an average 19.4
percent rate in 2005. The top 0.01 percent paid at just a 17 percent
rate, mainly because the richest of the rich get nearly half their
income from capital gains -- and capital gains enjoy preferential tax
treatment.

Under George W. Bush, the tax rate on capital gains income -- income
from the sale of stocks, bonds, and other assets -- dropped to 15
percent, less than half the current top 35 percent tax rate on
"ordinary" income from paychecks.

And that brings us to about the only hopeful news we can take, of
late, from the Congressional Budget Office. No one on Capitol Hill has
spoken out more clearly on the noxious consequences of preferential
treatment for capital gains income than Peter Orszag, the CBO director
until last month.

Taxing capital gains at a lower rate than other forms of income, as
Orszag has testified to Congress, "creates opportunities for tax
avoidance and complicates the tax system."

As CBO director, Orszag couldn't do much about capital gains tax
breaks for mega millionaires. Now he can. President-Elect Barack Obama
last month named Orszag his choice to direct the Office of Management
and Budget, the federal government's most powerful fiscal agency.

=============

Sam Pizzigati edits Too Much, the online weekly on excess and
inequality.

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  Rachel's Democracy & Health News (formerly Rachel's Environment &
  Health News) highlights the connections between issues that are
  often considered separately or not at all.

  The natural world is deteriorating and human health is declining  
  because those who make the important decisions aren't the ones who
  bear the brunt. Our purpose is to connect the dots between human
  health, the destruction of nature, the decline of community, the
  rise of economic insecurity and inequalities, growing stress among
  workers and families, and the crippling legacies of patriarchy,
  intolerance, and racial injustice that allow us to be divided and
  therefore ruled by the few.  

  In a democracy, there are no more fundamental questions than, "Who
  gets to decide?" And, "How do the few control the many, and what
  might be done about it?"

  As you come across stories that might help people connect the dots,
  please Email them to us at d...@rachel.org.
  
  Rachel's Democracy & Health News is published as often as
  necessary to provide readers with up-to-date coverage of the
  subject.

  Editor:
  Peter Montague - pe...@rachel.org
  
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