Google Groups no longer supports new Usenet posts or subscriptions. Historical content remains viewable.
Dismiss

The Navy knows thousands may have been exposed to cancer-causing materials, but hasn't told them

3 views
Skip to first unread message

Leroy N. Soetoro

unread,
Jan 29, 2024, 2:59:20 PMJan 29
to
https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/other/the-navy-knows-thousands-may-have-
been-exposed-to-cancer-causing-materials-but-hasn-t-told-them/ar-BB1hlq8y

Moments after he landed in Los Angeles for his son’s wedding last year,
Gilbert “Kip” Wyand said he vomited a gallon of blood in the airport
parking lot.

Severe stomach pain, drenching night sweats and sudden body temperature
changes soon followed. Two months later, in May, Wyand was diagnosed with
acute lymphoblastic leukemia — a type of cancer of the blood and bone
marrow that the National Cancer Institute says can be caused by radiation
exposure.

The diagnosis confused him. At 57, he had been healthy his whole life,
rarely even having a cold, and he had no family history of health issues.
But the next month, as his son tried to make sense of his illness, he
stumbled upon a newly published Navy report, outlining efforts to address
radioactive materials that have contaminated the now-closed Long Beach
Naval Shipyard in California for decades.

It was the first time Wyand, a Navy veteran who lived and worked at the
shipyard in the late 1980s, learned he may have been exposed to radium-226
and strontium-90 — radionuclides that build up in the body over time and
are linked to leukemia and other cancers.

The Navy has known about multiple environmental contaminations at the base
for more than 20 years. In 2008 it conducted a study that found radiation,
then publicly documented for the first time in 2023 the detection of
radiation involving levels of radium-226 and strontium-90. But the Navy
had not alerted Wyand or any others to the potential exposure. A
spokesperson said there is no mechanism in place to notify veterans of
possible exposures after a base is no longer operational.

That means tens of thousands of veterans who worked at the shipyard may
have been exposed to cancer-causing radioactive materials and still do not
know.
“It’s disturbing,” Wyand said from his hospital bed in Tampa, Florida,
after his third round of chemotherapy last fall. “More should have been
done. There should be transparency when something is found out.”

Wyand sought to spread awareness about the exposure so that other veterans
of the shipyard would know that they too could be at risk, as he scrambled
to secure approval for a bone marrow transplant from the Department of
Veterans Affairs.

He said the VA required him to make about a dozen medical appointments,
including one for a mental health assessment and another for a dental
exam. In November, he told NBC News he was beginning to panic.

“I don’t have time to wait and see what’s going to happen,” he said. “By
the time I jump through all these hoops, it’s going to be too late for
me.”

On Jan. 10, Wyand died, leaving his family dazed and outraged.

“We’re all angry,” his son, Adam Wyand, said. “We all feel like we’ve been
robbed.”

Decades of contamination
The initial contamination at the former Long Beach shipyard, where vessels
used to dock for repair and maintenance, occurred from the 1940s to the
1960s, when workers were disposing of toxic waste, according to the report
the Naval Facilities Engineering Systems Command (NAVFAC) released last
June.

Then, from the 1960s until 1980, about 3,000 gallons of chemical waste had
leaked out of damaged storage drums into the ground, the 99-page report
said.

It poisoned the groundwater with high levels of dichloroethene,
trichloroethylene, vinyl chloride and benzene, a Navy report released in
2000 said. The colorless chemicals can cause several diseases, including
cardiac defects and some cancers, according to the Agency for Toxic
Substances and Disease Registry, a federal public health agency under the
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Concentrations ranged from
32 to 583 times higher than what was considered acceptable.

On top of that, nuclear weapons testing, which began globally in 1945,
released radioactive materials into the atmosphere that eventually settled
on the ground, according to the California Department of Public Health.

Navy officials first detected radium and strontium as they were cleaning
up the affected groundwater and soil in the early 2000s, the NAVFAC report
said. In 2008, they confirmed that levels of the substances were above the
remediation goals set for public safety.

“It was a death concoction,” Wyand’s son, Adam, said. “When you talk about
genetic mutation, that’s a lot of variables.”

From 1985 to 1987, Wyand said, he lived and worked on the USS George
Philip, which was docked with many other ships on a pier extending into
Long Beach Harbor. It was the worst contaminated area at the Long Beach
shipyard, according to the Navy report.

In his early 20s, Wyand did not have the money to live off base or have
relatives nearby he could stay with. So, he said, “I was there all the
time. I was really digging in deep with that stuff.”

The state health department, which reviewed the latest Navy report and
gave feedback before it was published, said it is possible that veterans
who lived and worked at the shipyard could have been exposed to radiation
from radium and strontium.

It’s unclear how many may have been affected — or how many served during
the start of the contamination in the 1940s until the shipyard closed in
1997 — because the Navy’s Base Realignment and Closure office that handles
environmental cleanups at closed facilities does not have access to
personnel records, Navy spokesperson Lt. Cmdr. Joe Keiley said.

NAVFAC’s website says at least 40,000 people were stationed at Long Beach
from 1965 to 1970 — a peak period of personnel and ship activity during
the Vietnam War.

It’s also unclear how many other veterans besides Wyand may have submitted
claims to the VA related to toxic exposure from the Long Beach shipyard.
The agency said it does not have site-specific exposure data.

“We encourage any veteran who believes they were exposed to toxins during
their military service to coordinate with their local Veterans Affairs
office,” Keiley said.

Exposure to high levels of strontium may cause leukemia and cancers of the
bone, nose, lung and skin, according to the Agency for Toxic Substances
and Disease Registry, while high levels of radium may lead to increased
risks of bone, liver and breast cancer.

Experts say it is unclear how long a person would have to be exposed
before cancer forms. Neha Mehta, a researcher with the University of
Brussels and the lead author of a 2019 study on the two contaminants, said
it depends on the dose amount, duration and proximity.

The effects, she said, are not immediate. Strontium stays in the bones,
and radium, the most long-lived isotope, builds up in the lungs and bones
over time.

“It has a long half-life in the body, during which time the radiation
continues,” said Dr. James Dahlgren, who has been treating and studying
people with toxic chemical exposures for more than 50 years.

When it comes to acute lymphoblastic leukemia, there is no way to prevent
it. But Dahlgren said it could have helped if Wyand had gotten the
earliest possible care. “If he knew he was at risk for cancer, the doctors
taking care of him could recognize the early signs,” he said.

Wyand’s son said there was no way to know. The symptoms appeared suddenly
and severely.

“It waits 30 years and then it hits you like a sack of potatoes,” Adam
said. “Every second counts.”

No time to wait
From the Los Angeles airport last March, Adam rushed his father, whose
shoes were soaked in blood, to a nearby Veterans Affairs hospital.

Wyand underwent surgery to staple ulcers in his stomach. His son said the
doctors there believed the ulcers were caused by Wyand not eating enough
food while taking over-the-counter pain relievers for back pain. “They
told him to stop taking ibuprofen,” Adam said.

Less than three days later, Wyand was standing by his son’s side at the
wedding. “It took everything he had to make it,” Adam said.

Wyand felt fine, relieved to see his son surrounded by so many people who
loved him, according to Louise Wyand, who at the time was his girlfriend
of 12 years. That night, he asked Louise about renting a car and driving
to Las Vegas to get married themselves “if that sounded good.”

They changed their return flight and tied the knot at the Little White
Wedding Chapel in Sin City the next day.

Back home in Hudson, Florida, more symptoms emerged: night sweats,
abdominal pain, chills. The newlywed said it felt like being “run over by
a truck.” By May, his battle to get lifesaving care began.

Wyand underwent his first chemotherapy treatment over the summer, but he
needed to get a bone marrow transplant to survive. That approval process,
the VA said, typically requires comprehensive clinical and psychosocial
evaluations, dental assessments and alcohol, tobacco and toxicology
screens.

“Time was of the essence,” Adam said, adding that he felt handcuffed by
the VA’s multistep mandates and the waiting times for appointments. Adam
said his father could not book the necessary dental exam with a VA
provider for three weeks.

A recent search by NBC News on a VA website that alerts patients to
average wait times found that the nearest dental clinic near Wyand was not
accepting new appointments. The second closest clinic had an average wait
time of 25 days.

“His life and death is in their hands,” Adam said. “Instead of helping
him, they made him go to 12 other appointments.”

Wyand’s health quickly deteriorated, and his frail body grew increasingly
resistant to chemotherapy treatments.

A ‘systemic lack of candor’
Wyand believed the shipyard exposure caused his cancer.

While the connection may be possible, experts said it is difficult to know
for sure. Dahlgren said he “would not hesitate” to say the shipyard is at
least a “significant contributor to the cause.” “It’s not a crazy idea at
all,” he said.

When asked whether the Navy notified veterans who may have been exposed,
NAVFAC base environmental coordinator Dave Darrow responded by saying the
radioactive objects were buried in the ground, which he said was the
accepted disposal practice at the time.

The Navy, along with the VA and California’s health and toxicity agencies,
say the levels of contamination at the former shipyard are currently low
and pose no public health hazards. The site now houses one of the world’s
largest container terminals.

This is not the first time the Navy has had to contend with toxic
materials and contamination at its facilities.

Some 400 miles north of Long Beach, critics say there are many reasons to
be skeptical.

The Navy has made similar safety claims about the former Hunters Point
Naval Shipyard in San Francisco. But officials said two new radioactive
objects were recently found at the site, which is reportedly earmarked for
the city’s biggest development project.

The findings have worsened public trust there, years after two government
contractors were sentenced in federal court for falsifying records by
saying soil levels were safe in areas that were not in fact tested.

The fraud was made public in 2018 only after the nonprofit Public
Employees for Environmental Responsibility filed a Freedom of Information
Act request. The group obtained EPA documents that flagged a “widespread
pattern of practices that appear to show deliberate falsification.”

“It set off a firestorm,” Jeff Ruch, an attorney with the nonprofit, said.

Ruch said it is the latest example of the Navy’s “systemic lack of
candor.”

In one of the largest water contamination cases in U.S. history, up to 1
million people who lived or worked at Camp Lejeune in North Carolina from
1953 to 1987 may have been exposed to a drinking water supply contaminated
with chemicals, federal health officials said.

Military leaders at Camp Lejeune were alerted to the water problem as
early as 1980. But in 2010, higher-ups were still downplaying the issue.

Many people who were exposed went many years before they learned about the
contamination. Tens of thousands of victims are still seeking justice
through legal pathways today.

Separately, in 2021, a fuel leak poisoned thousands of people at the Red
Hill Bulk Fuel Storage Facility in Hawaii. Investigators said the
contamination was the result of the Navy’s “ineffective immediate
responses” and failure to act with urgency.

‘Fighting for his life’
On Dec. 4, 2023, Wyand was paralyzed from his waist down, and his eye
became infected, side effects of either the chemotherapy or the cancer
itself, Adam said.

The prognosis was grim, but the family got some good news. The VA had not
yet relayed a decision on the bone marrow transplant, but it had approved
Wyand for a form of immunotherapy called CAR T-cell therapy, the family
said.

“My Dad is getting his CarT treatment today,” Adam said in a text message
on Jan. 2. “It’s going to be tough on him because the chemo didn’t work
prior to today. But staying positive!”

Wyand initially responded well to the treatment, flooding his family with
more hope than they had in months. But on Jan. 10, his body crashed. “My
Dad is in the ICU fighting for his life,” Adam texted.

As doctors rushed into the room, Wyand called out for his wife. “He pulled
me over to his chest and was holding me there, and he said, ‘I need my
dad,’” Louise said. “That was the last time I talked to him.”

Wyand’s parents, his two daughters and his aunts raced to the hospital.
But his heart and his lungs had stopped. His major organs failed.

Once the family had assembled at Wyand’s bedside, they took him off life
support.

Adam told his father that he knew he had fought as hard as he could.
Wyand’s father, Keith Wyand, 79, told his son he tried his best to get to
him in time.

On April 11, on what would have been Wyand’s birthday, his family plans to
spread his ashes at John’s Pass on Madeira Beach in Florida, his favorite
place to go fishing.

“If he could have just gotten treatment before his health started
massively deteriorating,” Adam said, “he would have had a chance.”

This article was originally published on NBCNews.com

--
We live in a time where intelligent people are being silenced so that
stupid people won't be offended.

Durham Report: The FBI has an integrity problem. It has none.

No collusion - Special Counsel Robert Swan Mueller III, March 2019.
Officially made Nancy Pelosi a two-time impeachment loser.

Thank you for cleaning up the disaster of the 2008-2017 Obama / Biden
fiasco, President Trump.

Under Barack Obama's leadership, the United States of America became the
The World According To Garp. Obama sold out heterosexuals for Hollywood
queer liberal democrat donors.

President Trump boosted the economy, reduced illegal invasions, appointed
dozens of judges and three SCOTUS justices.

Siri Cruise

unread,
Jan 29, 2024, 5:31:39 PMJan 29
to
Leroy N. Soetoro wrote:
> he diagnosis confused him. At 57, he had been healthy his whole life,
> rarely even having a cold, and he had no family history of health issues.
> But the next month, as his son tried to make sense of his illness, he
> stumbled upon a newly published Navy report, outlining efforts to address
> radioactive materials that have contaminated the now-closed Long Beach
> Naval Shipyard in California for decades.
>
> It was the first time Wyand, a Navy veteran who lived and worked at the
> shipyard in the late 1980s, learned he may have been exposed to radium-226
> and strontium-90 — radionuclides that build up in the body over time and
> are linked to leukemia and other cancers.
>
> The Navy has known about multiple environmental contaminations at the base
> for more than 20 years. In 2008 it conducted a study that found radiation,
> then publicly documented for the first time in 2023 the detection of
> radiation involving levels of radium-226 and strontium-90. But the Navy
> had not alerted Wyand or any others to the potential exposure. A
> spokesperson said there is no mechanism in place to notify veterans of
> possible exposures after a base is no longer operational.

The government just has to declare the site is safe and no
contamination. Another government did that and thus prevented
exploding a reactor in Ukraine and contaminating Europe.
Governments have always had the power to declare what reality is,
and reality conforms.

--
Siri Seal of Disavowal #000-001. Disavowed. Denied. @
'I desire mercy, not sacrifice.' /|\
The Church of the Holey Apple .signature 3.2 / \
of Discordian Mysteries. This post insults Islam. Mohamed
0 new messages