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San
Francisco Chronicle
3 February 2003
Polluted
bodies
by
Ruth Rosen
When
Michael Lerner volunteered to give blood and urine samples to medical
researchers, he figured they'd only find a few chemicals in his body.
After all, Lerner, the president and founder of Commonweal, a health and
environmental research institute in Marin County, has lived in Bolinas
for 20 years, eaten a healthy diet and avoided exposure to industrial
chemicals.
He
was wrong. Researchers found his body polluted with 101 industrial toxins
and penetrated by elevated levels of arsenic and mercury.
Scientists
call such contamination a person's "body burden."
Lerner
was one of nine people -- five of whom live and work in the Bay Areas
-- who were tested for 210 chemicals commonly found in consumer products
and industrial pollution. Mt. Sinai School of Medicine in New York, the
Environmental Working Group of Oakland and Washington, and Commonweal
collaborated on this innovative study of the body burden.
At
press conferences held in San Francisco and Washington, D.C., last week,
researchers revealed these shocking results: On average, each person had
50 or more chemicals linked to cancer in humans and lab animals, considered
toxic to the brain and nervous system or known to interfere with the hormone
and reproductive systems. (The Environmental Working Group's Web site
www.ewg.org/reports/bodyburden/ features biographies and toxic profiles
for each person as well as the kind of products that contain such chemicals.)
Lerner
was astounded. "Being tested yourself brings the body burden home
in a very personal way." For years, he has lived with a condition
that causes a hand tremor. Now he suspects why. "Mercury and arsenic
both cause tremor, so I've stopped eating all fish that have high mercury
levels."
Lerner's
wife, Sharyle Patton -- co-director of the Collaborative on Health and
Environment -- also participated in the study. To her surprise, the Bolinas
resident had as many toxins as people who have lived in cities. In fact,
she had the highest levels of dioxins and PCBs -- both highly toxic substances
-- of anyone in the test group. "What we learned," says Patton,
"is that we all live in the same chemical neighborhood."
Lerner,
who has devoted his life to promoting the health of people and the planet,
hopes that such bio-monitoring tests will become routine and affordable.
"Body burden tests," he says, "are the thermometer that
gives us our body's chemical fever. In a prudent world, no household would
be without a chemical thermometer in the medicine cabinet."
But
individual tests only provide information; they don't reduce our contamination.
"The truth is," Lerner says, "we are unwilling participants
in a huge chemical experiment, which would never be permitted by the FDA
if these chemicals came to us as drugs. But because these chemicals enter
us from industrial and agricultural sources, they are not subject to testing
that would ensure our safety."
The
report therefore calls for "the reform of the Toxics Substance Control
Act, under which chemical companies may put new compounds on the market
without any studies of their effect on people or the environment."
Andrea
Martin, founder and former executive director of the San Francisco's Breast
Cancer Fund, strongly supports the recommendation. Martin is a breast
cancer survivor who climbed Mount Fuji in 2000 with 500 breast cancer
survivors and supporters. More recently, she underwent surgery to remove
a brain tumor unrelated to breast cancer.
Martin,
who also gave samples to the Body Burden project, was stunned by the results.
"I was completely blown away," she told me. "There were
95 toxins, 59 of which were carcinogens."
Martin
has never worked with or near chemicals. But she now wonders whether her
formative years may have turned her into a self-described "walking
toxic waste site."
When
she grew up in Memphis, she and her friends loved to get splashed by the
streams of insecticide sprayed by trucks that roamed the neighborhood.
Later, she indulged a passion for water skiing -- in lakes clouded by
chemical pollutants.
"Where
did I get all these PCBs and dioxins?" she asks. "I'll probably
never know."
In
fact, no one is sure how industrial and synthetic chemical residues --
even long-banned pesticides such as DDT -- end up in our bodies. But scientists
suspect that chemicals first pollute the air, soil, food and water, then
climb through the food chain and finally accumulate in our blood, fat,
mother's milk, semen and urine.
I
asked Martin if she regrets getting tested. "At first, I was really
angry. But I believe knowledge is power. We're starting to learn that
pollution isn't only in the air, soil and water; it's also in us."
She
also wonders whether her chemical body burden has caused her cancers.
"We'll never know," she says, "because right now chemical
companies don't have to prove the safety of their products and no government
agency has ever studied the health risks that can be caused by chemical
toxins."
That
may change. Last week, the Centers for Disease Control also issued its
second report card on the body burden of chemicals carried by Americans.
Using data from 2,500 anonymous donors, the CDC provided further evidence
that chemical residues have polluted the bodies of most of us.
Although
no one yet knows what amount of trace chemicals are harmful for human
health, scientists and environmental health activists worry about the
cumulative assault on our health.
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