
NPR's Living On Earth for
January 16, 2004
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- Your Chemical Body Burden /
Ingrid Lobet
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- More and more people are
demanding the right to know what chemicals are in their bodies. In
California, a bill is being pushed that would set up the first
statewide biomonitoring system to collect and analyze breast milk.
But some fear testing might cause people to confuse chemical
exposure with illness and cause undue alarm. Living on Earth's
Ingrid Lobet reports.
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- CURWOOD: It's Living on Earth.
I'm Steve Curwood. In many cities and towns across the U.S. you
can read the local newspaper to find out what's in the air you
breathe. And in many communities, the water company will tell you
what's in the tap water. It's useful information, but these days
some people are demanding more. They want to find out what
synthetic chemicals are in their blood, urine and breast milk.
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- Scientists at the National
Centers for Disease Control have started keeping data on what
substances are found in the tissues of the average American. But
some people say averages aren't enough -- that there's an
individual right to know, as well. In California, groups are
pushing a bill that would set up the first statewide collection
and analysis of human fluids. Living on Earth's Ingrid Lobet
reports on the growing trend in biomonitoring.
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- LOBET: As Sharyle Patton sat in
a tiny clinic room watching her blood fill yet another vial, she
mused that after years as an activist lobbying against persistent
chemicals, she would finally learn her own chemical fingerprint --
what had built up in her body over a lifetime. When the results
were emailed to her, she compared notes with several of her
friends.
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- PATTON: Well, we all had funny
different reactions to it. Some of us looked at our scores and
felt good because our numbers were less than other people in the
group [laughs]. I mean, there was that kind of reaction.
And I looked at my PCB levels and realized they were really high.
And I thought, my goodness, I've just about won the PCB contest.
And that my dioxin levels are as high as some folks that live in
Louisiana, in cancer alley.
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- LOBET: The levels were a
surprise for Patton, because she's chosen to live amid the wild
green of Bolinas, a famously remote community on the coast north
of San Francisco.
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- PATTON: I grew up in Colorado,
in a high mountain town, far away from factories and industry and
incinerators, right, growing our own cattle, our own vegetables.
So the fact that I had these high levels said a couple of things.
First of all, it's really hard to figure out the pathway of
exposure by looking at your body burden levels. You just really
don't know. You can't tell. There's no little marker on that
chemical that says it was manufactured by this company, or this is
where you got it. There's no way I can send a bill to somebody for
using my body as a toxic waste site.
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- LOBET: Patton's body, it turned
out, contained 105 of the 210 metals and synthetic chemicals
researchers tested for. Safe levels for many have not been set.
Her test results are consistent with other studies in the United
States and Europe that chart the intrusion of the Industrial Age
on the human body. Certain pesticides, for example, and PCBs used
in plastics and insulators, find their way into living things and
settle in fat. Some are passed to babies in utero.
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- Interest in body burden
testing, or "biomonitoring", has spiked since the late 1990s, when
scientists discovered that a type of chemical flame retardants
&endash; called PBDES &endash; had rapidly been building up in
animals and humans.
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- As reported previously on
Living on Earth, those flame retardants &endash; used in foam
mattresses, drapes and furniture &endash; have now been found just
about everywhere researchers have looked for them; in whales, in
seabird eggs, in seals, and in breast milk. And nowhere higher
than the United States. Speaking last year on this program,
California State Toxicologist Tom McDonald explained why these
fire suppressants are a concern for developing babies.
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- MCDONALD: There's three primary
concerns that we have with respect to health effects, and those
include neuro-developmental changes, meaning learning and memory
deficits in children, also thyroid hormone disruption, as well as
possibly cancer. The concern basically comes from animal studies
that have all shown that either in rats and mice, when you give
PBDEs to them, either in utero or early after birth, you get
permanent changes in behavior and learning and memory.
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- HOOPER: [Giving tour of
lab] These are two half million dollar machines, high
resolution mass spectrometer and gas chromatography.
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- LOBET: At the same lab where
researchers found the flame retardants in seals and American
breast milk, another researcher is taking the issue one step
further. Environmental biochemist Kim Hooper is asking a question
you don't often hear from American scientists &endash; whether the
current way of regulating chemicals is sufficiently protective of
fetal and infant health.
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- HOOPER: For the last 25 years
we've been following this paradigm of we need to show a
chemical-human disease connection. And it hasn't worked because
we're not really regulating that many more chemicals than we were
25 years ago. So, we need some kind of new paradigm -- and one new
paradigm would be, let's look at chemical body burdens.
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- LOBET: Hooper and others made
sure their research on PBDEs made it into the hands of activists.
Then breast cancer activists, in particular, helped get two widely
used flame retardants banned in California last summer. Next, the
manufacturer volunteered to stop making them. But the activists
want more. Donne Brownsey is a lobbyist in Sacramento for the
Breast Cancer Fund. She hopes a program for broad body burden
testing might one day reveal why one in eight women in the United
States develops breast cancer.
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- BROWNSEY: We believe breast
cancer is a public health crisis. We believe we can no longer just
ask women to be dutiful about doing monthly exams. We have to
start looking at environmental causation.
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- LOBET: And Brownsey believes
the increased interest in biomonitoring indicates a shift in
public attitude.
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- BROWNSEY: We think that finally
some of these environmental issues have rightfully taken their
places as environmental health issues.
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- LOBET: The emerging movement in
America to test human beings for chemicals has found its center in
the office of California State Senator Deborah Ortiz. She's
sponsoring a bill that would create a statewide human monitoring
program &endash; the first in the country.
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- ORTIZ: There are other
countries that have actually done this &endash; Sweden, Germany,
as well &endash; that have been doing this over time, and
measuring body burdens. So, someone suggests we're really behind
the curve in California
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- LOBET: If her bill becomes law,
scientists would choose three distinct communities for initial
testing. Senator Ortiz, who chairs the senate health committee,
sees biomonitoring as a powerful political tool because it could
reveal geographic differences in exposure.
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- ORTIZ: So that we can, in fact,
measure women in East Los Angeles who live near an incinerator, or
women who live in an area in the Central Valley, where there is a
lot arsenic in the water. As well as women who live in relatively
non-heavily populated, non-industrial areas. I'd like to get us to
the point where we have so much information that we can't turn a
blind eye, that we can't turn our back, to the huge huge problems
and the risks that we are placing on women throughout California.
Maybe that data will get us there.
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- LOBET: Ortiz's emphasis on
women points to one sensitive aspect of the California bill. It
intends to find out what's in people's bodies by testing breast
milk. Breast milk contains more fat, and so more of the fat-loving
chemicals than blood. And you don't need a needle to extract it.
But advocates of the bill, like Donne Brownsey, say there's a
political reason for choosing breast milk, too.
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- BROWNSEY: We believe that if
breast milk talks, people will listen.
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- LOBET: Little Nicholas Howard
clamps his mouth onto his mother's breast. But then he notices a
microphone intruding on his nursing nirvana. And there's another
distraction, his buddy Antonio.
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- LOBET: Some worry that using
breast milk as the test fluid might dissuade some women from
breastfeeding. I ran that concern past nursing moms Jane Donofrio
and Carolyn Howard.
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- DONOFRIO: I would give a sample
immediately. I don't know, what do you think?
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- HOWARD: I would be interested
in giving a sample first of all just to see what's in my actual
breast milk. Because that would give me more information. So I
wouldn't have reservations about going ahead and giving a sample.
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- DONOFRIO: Absolutely. I mean
that's why I think we eat the way we eat. When you know you're
giving it to your baby, it's like, okay, I'll get the organic
peppers -- even if they're more expensive, 'cause it's worth it.
And breast milk, like in relation to formula, I think, okay,
there's some negative things in it, but maybe that's where we can
address our society on a whole with toxins in our world. You know,
it's more of a societal, huge issue, as to we have these things in
our bodies, and why certain things are contaminated.
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- LOBET: Few people have
contemplated both the contamination and the health benefits of
breast milk as much as biologist Sandra Steingraber of Ithaca
College. Steingraber has been calling for a national dialogue on
contaminants in breast milk. I asked her to read from a letter
recently published in the Ribbon newsletter from Cornell
University.
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- STEINGRABER: "Breastfed infants
have fewer respiratory infections, diarrhea, middle-ear
infections, and die less often from Sudden Infant Death Syndrome.
Breastfed infants grow into children who suffer less than their
bottle-fed counterparts from juvenile diabetes, rheumatoid
arthritis, obesity, dental malocclusions, and some leukemias. They
respond more vigorously to vaccinations. They have better hearing
and visual acuity. They develop balance and gross motor
coordination more quickly."
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- "It's also true that breast
milk commonly violates Food and Drug Administration action levels
for poisonous substances in food. Were it regulated like infant
formula, the breast milk of many U.S. mothers would not be able to
legally sold on supermarket shelves."
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- LOBET: Steingraber is always
careful to send a pro-breastfeeding message. She makes sure she's
always photographed breast-feeding her two-year-old.
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- STEINGRABER: The people who are
advocating it in the public health community, the lactation
community, the midwifery community, pediatricians and
obstetricians -- they're very touchy about any negative comment
about breastfeeding and breast milk. And I feel that way myself.
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- On the other hand, I don't
think public health is ever served by keeping secrets, and the
idea that nursing mothers should be protected against knowledge of
what's in their milk is profoundly condescending. Certainly, as a
nursing mother myself, I want to know what's in my milk &endash;
in the same way I want to know about infant car seat recalls.
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- LOBET: But while advocates of
biomonitoring see it as a right-to-know issue, others with a
strong interest see some efforts, such as California's, as lacking
focus, and even irresponsible. In a letter to Senator Ortiz, the
American Chemistry Council says it is wrong to test breast milk
and then somehow see the results as an indicator of community
health. The council, which represents chemical manufacturers and
users, did not respond to requests for an interview, but in the
letter it suggests that biomonitoring advocates must not confuse
chemical exposure with illness. And some scientists share that
concern.
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- KRIEGER: To many people,
knowing that they're exposed spells disease. Exposure isn't
disease. Exposure is contact and absorption of a chemical.
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- LOBET: At the University of
California at Riverside, toxicologist Robert Krieger and his
associates analyze pesticides in human urine. Krieger supports the
federal biomonitoring studies carried out by the Centers for
Disease Control. But he believes the kind of biomonitoring where
individuals get their own results back could cause unnecessary
alarm.
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- KRIEGER: It's possible to
measure much, much less than the amounts that have any biological
significance in terms of health. And given the poor general
information that people have about chemicals and their bodies, I
would think that a program such as that might carry more
liabilities than benefits.
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- DINOFF: If I can give you an
example here of a compound I found while doing an analysis
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- LOBET: Researcher Travis Dinoff
points to a screen showing a wave form of one chemical in a urine
sample from a farm worker.
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- DINOFF: This turns out to be
oxybenzone which is a sunscreen. And if someone got a result back
that said they had been exposed to "oxybenzone," they might say,
"oh god, I've been exposed to this chemical." But it's actually
something that they put on their skin on purpose, and those
compounds are going to be absorbed and excreted somehow out of the
body.
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- LOBET: Professor Krieger is
suspicious that many people who want widespread biomonitoring
really just want a back door to more chemical regulation.
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- KRIEGER: The numbers game is
very treacherous. The normal strategy is to find the low level of
something, and associate risk with it. And then regulate that
material at extremely low levels, as though you are removing a
risk. But if the risk was nil or zero when you started, no matter
how much you reduce it, you haven't done anything. The public has
not gained anything.
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- LOBET: Kreiger's concerned the
side effects of that could be wasted money, and an unwarranted
fear of chemicals. To see if other researchers share this worry, I
turned to Dana Barr, who has worked on the biomonitoring program
at the Centers for Disease Control and heads the pesticide lab
there. I asked her if she has reservations about testing as a tool
in the hands of individuals.
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- BARR: I do. Because when you
get all these data, a lot of them aren't that easy to interpret
right now on an individual basis. There are some that do have a
clinical outcome associated with them &endash; for instance, lead
or mercury exposure &endash; and so getting tested for those would
make real sense because then you could reduce the exposure;
there's some sort of intervention that could occur. If you get
tested for many of these other chemicals, we really don't know if
there are health outcomes associated with it. So, the data are
largely uninterpretable on an individual level.
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- LOBET: But Dana Barr says she
welcomes testing in city and state-run programs, like ones being
planned for New York City, for New England, the Rocky Mountain
west, and California.
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- BARR: Oh, I think it's an
outstanding idea. I think it is very important to get at this
geographic information because we do know that geography and
whether you live close to an agricultural region or whether you
live close to an inner city &endash; that can affect what
exposures you actually get.
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- LOBET: As biomonitoring gathers
steam, these initiatives are likely to meet stiff resistance from
chemical producers and users -- especially if they call on
companies to pay for the testing, as California's bill now does.
But whether new, broader testing materializes this year or much
later, its backers have raised intriguing questions about the
right, and the desire to know,. For Living on Earth, I'm Ingrid
Lobet.
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- Links for this story:
- &endash; Environmental Working
Group "Mother's Milk"
- &endash; Sandra Steingraber's
website
- &endash; Breast Cancer
Fund
- &endash; Biomonitoring
Legislative Proposal [PDF download]
- &endash; Chemical Body
Burden
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- CURWOOD: And for this week,
that's Living on Earth. Next week &endash; mercury. It's a
well-known toxic metal that damages the nervous system. We try to
keep it out of the food we eat and the air we breathe. But in some
communities, it's sprinkled around the house, burned in a candle,
and applied to the body &endash; often to bring luck.
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- WOMAN: I think we're not just
being contaminated by the incinerator. I think we're being
contaminated, contaminating ourselves by using this product in our
homes.
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- CURWOOD: The ritual use of
mercury, next week on Living on Earth. Until then, you can hear us
anytime and get the stories behind the news by going to
livingonearth.org. That's livingonearth.org.
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- CURWOOD: Living on Earth is
produced by the World Media Foundation. You can find us at
livingonearth.org.
-
- ANNOUNCER: Funding for Living
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