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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Maurice Winn who wrote (203381)9/18/2006 4:30:08 AM
From: Doug R  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Are you completely stupid or something? You don't read the freaking news?

9/11's Grim Toll on Health Continues

MONDAY, Sept. 11 (HealthDay News) -- Five years after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, many of those at or near the World Trade Center site carry grim reminders of that day in their minds, hearts and even their lungs.

Thousands of workers who toiled for months on the smoldering pile that was Ground Zero continue to complain of respiratory illness, including a chronic, soot-laden hacking known as "World Trade Center Cough." At the same time, researchers are keeping tabs on the development of hundreds of children, born early and underweight, to women living in Lower Manhattan. And psychologists worry that the anniversary day itself could reawaken mental woes for those once traumatized by the devastation.

In short, the health problems that have emerged over the last five years will become a lasting legacy of 9/11, and one that will continue to grow, experts say.

The potential cost of treating the long-term health effects of 9/11 is daunting. Most pressing are the needs of 40,000 first-responders and clean-up workers who experts say inhaled a toxic soup of lead, mercury, dioxin, asbestos, benzene and other contaminants from the debris of the collapsed towers.

New research released last week by Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York City found that 69 percent of these workers developed new or worsened respiratory symptoms after working at the site, with 59 percent still showing evidence of symptoms today. Those who arrived first on the scene tended to have the worst symptoms, the researchers said.

"It wasn't surprising to me to see these effects from a toxic exposure that goes on for that length of time, even for several days or weeks, with deposition of metals in the lung and no way for the lungs to clear it," Dr. Len Horovitz, a pulmonary specialist at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City, told HealthDay.

Horovitz added that things could possibly get worse for some of those affected, especially in terms of workers' long-term risk for cancer.

"It's not clear whether we're going to see a rise in malignancies, but one would suspect that that certainly is possible," he said.

Doctors have already attributed one death -- that of 34-year-old NYC police detective James Zadroga -- to respiratory problems caused by Ground Zero exposures. Last Friday, Zadroga's father, Joseph, told a House subcommittee hearing that the government has spent too much time studying the health issues and not enough time treating those who were sickened or still at risk.

Last Thursday, the first federal funds for treating 9/11-linked health issues were announced by U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Mike Leavitt. The amount was $75 million.

Critics called it too little, too late.

"They seem to be running from the people who are sick, not standing with them and helping them," Rep. Carolyn Maloney, a New York City Democrat, told the New York Times last week.

The terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon also left many Americans across the country with deep and lingering emotional scars.

A team led by Dr. David Spiegel, a professor of psychiatry at California's Stanford University, conducted surveys of New York City residents in the six months after the attacks.

"Initial rates of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) involved large proportions of the population," Spiegel said. "We found that 7.5 percent of people in the New York City metropolitan area initially met criteria for PTSD, and 20 percent of people south of Canal Street -- right where the WTC is -- met the criteria."

While studies on national rates of PTSD following 9/11 haven't been done, "our research shows that just witnessing somebody else getting injured or killed can induce PTSD-like symptoms," he said. That includes witnessing horrific scenes via television, the Stanford expert said.

But there is some good news, he noted.

The number of people with symptomatic PTSD linked to 9/11 has subsided over time, he said. People who were less isolated and able to talk over their fears and feelings with others tended to recover more quickly, he added.

The jury is still out, however, on the youngest potential victims of the attacks.

Beginning soon after the disaster, a team led by child health expert Dr. Federica Perera, of Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health, has tracked the birth outcomes and long-term development of more than 300 babies born to women living near the site. All of the women were at some stage of pregnancy on Sept. 11, 2001.

"Babies born to women who had been living with a two-mile radius of the World Trade Center site during the months following 9/11 weighed significantly less at birth -- about a third of a pound less -- compared to infants born to other women living further away," Perera said. The study also found that nearly all women, regardless of their proximity to the site, gave birth slightly earlier than usual -- probably the result of an increase in stress linked to 9/11.

However, the tendency toward smaller birth weights continued even after Perera's team adjusted for this prematurity. "So, we infer that there was [also] a potential effect of the pollutants themselves," she said.

Blood tests on newborns' umbilical cords confirmed relatively high levels of combustion-linked toxins called polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in babies born to mothers living in Lower Manhattan, she added.

These "children of 9/11" are now 4 and 5 years of age, and Perera said her team intends to soon publish findings on the impact of the disaster -- if any -- on their ongoing health and development. "This is to help the families who are concerned, to reassure where we can do that, and to take note of any potential risk where that is appropriate," she said.

medicinenet.com



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (203381)9/18/2006 4:32:40 AM
From: Doug R  Respond to of 281500
 
9/11 first responders getting sick and dying
What the Investigators found out about dust from Ground Zero

The Eyewitness News Investigators
(New York- WABC, May 24, 2006) _ - Health officials deny it but many first responders to the 9-11 terror attacks seem to be getting sick or are dying at an alarming rate because of exposure to toxic chemicals. Tonight the Eyewitness News Investigators test items of clothing used by an angry responder. Jim Hoffer with his exclusive report.

An NYPD detective dies at age 34. An autopsy links his death to dust exposure at Ground Zero. An FDNY medic dead at 41, doctors point to his "exposure to the World Trade Center disaster." In both cases, the city denies any link.
Patrick Bahnken, Pres. FDNY EMT Union: "The reality is we are dying quicker than medical science can catch up to us."

The head of the fire department's paramedics union got so mad at the city's repeated denials about 9-11 illnesses, he wrote a letter to the editor of this labor newspaper challenging the city to analyze the dust on the clothing he wore at Ground Zero. The city ignored him. We didn't and took his clothing to this lab to be tested for any toxic substances.

Patrick Bahnken, Pres. FDNY EMT Union: "It's not a coincidence, there is a common linking factor and that is the trade center and what you see on my shoes and on these clothes is exactly what people breathed in."

Environmental Testing Lab spent a week analyzing the clothing, running numerous tests to determine whether they contained any hazardous levels of heavy metals, which are known to cause lung damage.

Even though nearly five years had passed, contaminants were still found some at high concentrations.

Newman: "They are red flags because exposure to any of these substances at sufficient level would be cause for concern."

We asked industrial hygienist David Newman to interpret the lab findings.

Dust from the shoes and clothing contained several heavy metals including cadmium which can damage the lungs. It existed at two times the level that's considered hazardous in soil.

Newman: "It would be 100 percent above the trigger that would warrant a cleanup."

The lab also found mercury, linked to respiratory problems, at four times the level the state considers hazardous for soil.

David Newman, Hygienist: "Over a period of time evaporates. We are four years past 9/11 so I'm surprised to find any mercury."

Lead tested at two and a half times above the hazardous level. Chromium, known to cause lung disease, existed at ten times the level that would require a mandatory cleanup.

Newman: "These are toxic substances if they get in the air and if you breath them inhale them at sufficient concentrations and for significant periods of time they have the potential to do serious significant health damage." FDNY medic John Viciguerra believes the months he spent breathing in dust at Ground Zero has given him lung disease at age 38. No matter how many medications he needs or how many medical reports he gathers, the city has yet to acknowledge a Ground Zero connection.

John Vincingera, FDNY Medic: "I was denied workman's compensation. They told me that too much time had passed since 9/11."

The clothing we had tested for contaminants was worn by John's friend and colleague. The samples that tested high for heavy metals came from the same dust that he and thousands of others inhaled and that many now believe has made them ill.

Vincegerra: "I was there to help the city and now I feel the city is turning its back on me."

Lt Vinciguerra is still trying to resolve his workers' comp claim with the city. The city says of the more than 1,200 September 11th related claims only about four percent have been disputed by them.

We did make several attempts to get a response from the health department on this story.

If you have a tip about this or any other investigative story, give our tipline a call at 877-TIP-NEWS.

(Copyright 2006 WABC-TV)
abclocal.go.com



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (203381)9/18/2006 4:34:55 AM
From: Doug R  Respond to of 281500
 
Lung problems rife among WTC responders By AMY WESTFELDT, Associated Press Writer
Tue Sep 5,

NEW YORK - Nearly 70 percent of the rescue and cleanup workers who toiled in the dust and fumes at ground zero have had trouble breathing, and many will probably be sick for the rest of their lives, doctors said Tuesday in releasing results of the biggest Sept. 11 health study yet.

The Mount Sinai Medical Center study is conclusive proof of a link between recovery work at the World Trade Center ruins and long-term respiratory problems, doctors said.

"There should no longer be any doubt about the health effects of the World Trade Center. Our patients are sick," said Dr. Robin Herbert, co-director of the group that has monitored the health of nearly 16,000 ground zero workers.

Herbert said that most of the patients in the study first came to ground zero between Sept. 11 and Sept. 13, 2001, which exposed them to asbestos, pulverized concrete, mercury and toxins that will leave them chronically sick.

"Our patients were very, very highly exposed, and are likely to suffer health consequences as a result of that for the rest of their lives," she said.

Herbert was joined by lawmakers who accused the federal government of not doing enough to protect the workers' health and not spending enough to treat them.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg cast doubt on the study's claims, saying, "I don't believe that you can say specifically a particular problem came from this particular event."

Dr. John Howard, who was appointed by the Bush administration in February to coordinate the various ground zero health programs, called the findings "extremely important" and said they support other researchers' work, including a study of city firefighters.

The study, to be published Thursday in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives, focused mostly on what has come to be called "World Trade Center cough" in 9,442 ground zero workers examined between July 2002 and April 2004.

They included construction workers, police and firefighters and other volunteers who worked at the site, in the city morgue or at a landfill where more than 1 million tons of trade center debris were carted.

In lung function tests, ground zero workers had abnormalities at a rate double that expected in the general population; these problems persisted for months and in some cases years after the exposure, the study found.

The study said that almost 70 percent of trade center responders had new or worsened respiratory problems during or after the attacks. Sixty-one percent of responders who had no health symptoms before the attacks developed problems while working at ground zero. One third of those tested had abnormal lung function, which Herbert said is a rate twice as high as the nonsmoking population.

Ironworker John Sferazo, who spent 30 days on the smoldering debris pile and now takes 26 medications a day to deal with his lung problems, said the White House did too little, too late. "If President Bush wanted this situation to be cleaned up, it would have been cleaned up long before now," he said.

He said he was having trouble getting words out at Tuesday's news conference because he is constantly short of breath and has restrictive airway disease. "I'm lucky if I can run a city block without dropping dead," said Sferazo, 51.

news.yahoo.com