Gesundheit - Health

22
Jul
2004

Tap water can make you FAT

ALERT! FLUORIDE=HYPOTHYROIDISM=OBESITY! Finally, the link!

"Fluoride toxins can cause hypothyroidism, a disorder affecting the thyroid gland controlling weight" ...Dr B Durrant-Peatfield leading UK Thyroid specialist.

Yesterday's Daily Express (UK national) picked-up on Birmingham's Sunday Mercury article and published the artcle below.

Tap Water in Obesity Scare, pg 6

Tap water can make people fat and could be fueling obesity levels, a medicalexpert claimed yesterday.

Fluoride has been added in areas of England for 40 years to keep teeth healthy. But Dr Barry Durrant-Peatfield said fluoride toxins can cause hypothyroidism, a disorder affecting the thyroid gland controlling weight.

He thinks children suffer if their mothers drank fluoridated water while pregnant and it could be to blame for obesity in the "fat zone" - the West Midlands.

Tap water can make you FAT, say experts - Jul 11 2004
By Caroline Wheeler, Sunday Mercury

http://www.lap-band-surgery.org/obesity.cfm/43921644/Fluoride-and-fluoridation-scam:-Tap-water-can-make-you-FAT,-say-experts/

Jane Jones Campaign Director National Pure Water Association
http://www.npwa.freeserve.co.uk


Informant: Planttrees

19
Jul
2004

Plutonium viel gefährlicher als bisher angenommen

Krebsrisiko zehnmal höher: Plutonium viel gefährlicher als bisher angenommen

19.07.04

Plutonium dürfte sehr viel gefährlicher sein als bisher angenommen: Das aus einer Belastung innerhalb des Körpers resultierende Krebsrisiko könnte zehn Mal höher sein als von internationalen Richtlinien angenommen. Zu diesem Ergebnis kommt eine Studie des Committee Examining Radiation Risks from Internal Emitters (CERRIE) für für die britische Regierung. Die Wissenschaftler vertreten laut einhellig die Auffassung, dass die von Plutonium abgegebene niedrige Strahlendosis mehr Schaden anrichten kann als bisher angenommen...

Die ganze Nachricht im Internet:
http://www.ngo-online.de/ganze_nachricht.php4?Nr=8938

16
Jul
2004

Plastic and the Microwave

PLASTIC & MICROWAVE: Carcinogens - At 10,000,000 Times FDA Limits" (excerpt)

Plastic and the Microwave! It's amazing what a curious student can
learn. As a seventh grade student, Claire Nelson learned that diethylhexyladepate (DEHA), considered a carcinogen, is found in plastic wrap. She also learned that the FDA had never studied the effect of microwave cooking on plastic-wrapped food. Claire began to wonder: Can cancer-causing particles seep into food covered with household plastic wrap while it is being microwaved?

Three years later, with encouragement from her high school science teacher, Claire had an idea for studying the effect of microwave radiation on plastic-wrapped food, but she did not have the equipment. Eventually, Jon Wilkes at the National Center for Toxicological Research in Jefferson, Arkansas, agreed to help her. The research center, which is affiliated with the FDA, let her use its facilities to perform her experiments, which involved microwaving plastic wrap in virgin olive oil.

Claire tested four different plastic wraps and found not just the carcinogens but also xenoestrogen was migrating into the oil. Xenoestrogens are linked to low sperm counts in men and to breast cancer in women.

Throughout her junior and senior years, Claire made a couple of
trips each week to the research center, which was 25 miles from her home, to work on her experiment. An article in Options reported her analysis found that DEHA was migrating into the oil at between 200 parts and 500 parts per million. The FDA standard is 0.05 parts per billion. Her summarized results have been published in science journals.

Carcinogens - At 10,000,000 Times FDA Limits"
Options May 2000.
Published by People Against Cancer, 515-972-4444.

Claire Nelson received the American Chemical Society's top science prize for students during her junior year and fourth place at the International Science and Engineering Fair (Fort Worth, Texas) as a senior. On Channel 2 (Huntsville, AL) this morning they had a Dr. Edward Fujimoto from Castle Hospital on the program. He is the manager of the Wellness Program at the hospital. He was talking about dioxins and how bad they are for us. He said that we should not be heating our food in the Microwave using plastic containers.
This applies to foods that contain fat. He said that the combination of fat, high heat and plastics releases; dioxins into the food and ultimately into the cells of the body. Dioxins are carcinogens and highly toxic to the cells of our bodies...

Omega: best for your health to avoid microwave cooking at all; more under:
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/209635/

10
Jul
2004

MAD COW REGULATIONS: A LONG TIME COMING

Last January, after the first case of Mad Cow Disease was discovered in the U.S, the federal government tried to alleviate consumer concerns by announcing new regulations that would forbid the feeding of blood, slaughterhouse wastes, and manure to cows. Six months later, none of those regulations have been implemented, although the USDA says the formal publications of new rules is imminent. The beef industry has applied intense pressure to the FDA and USDA to ensure that new regulations don't cut too deeply into profits. At the same time, the health of the American consumer is being jeopardized.

http://www.organicconsumers.org/madcow/laws.cfm

30
Jun
2004

Ökologischer Fortschritt: die Vergiftung unserer Lebensmittel wird nun behördlich kontrolliert

Auch der zunehmende Einfluss grüner Politiker auf unsere Lebensmittelproduktion hat wenig bis nichts geändert: weiterhin werden unsere Lebensmittel vergiftet: heute jedoch unter behördlicher Kontrolle.

Nach einer Foodwatch-Recherche wird offensichtlich Hühnerfleisch mit dem Gift PCB angereichert, ohne dass die zuständigen Behörden einen Handlungsbedarf sehen. Der sächsische Agrarminister bezeichnete es als Erfolg, dass man nun solche Vorgänge beobachten könne.

Der Produzent des mit PCB und Dioxin vergifteten Pflanzenoels für die Verwendung im Tierfutter, von dem 25 Tonnen u.a. in Hamburg, Sachsen, Bayern und Baden-Württemberg verteilt wurden, genießt den Schutz des hessischen Umweltministers Becht, der eine Schließung des Betriebs ablehnte und darüber hinaus den Namen der Firma geheimhält.

Auch unter dem grün geführten Verbraucherministerium unter Renate Künast bestehen weder ein Verbot der Verwendung von Giften wie PCB in Futtermitteln noch eine Haftung oder eine Verantwortlichkeit des Herstellers sondern eine "freiwillige Kontrolle"

http://foodwatch.de/cmsimages/1088596042PCBs%20und%20Dioxine%20im%20Futter%20290604_Web.pdf
http://www.taz.de/pt/2004/06/30/a0151.nf/text


Nachricht von Gerhard Wendebourg

28
Jun
2004

Record 600,000 Protest Bush Plan to Weaken Mercury Emission Controls

June 28, 2004

Tomorrow marks the last day for the public to comment on the highest-profile battle in years between the Bush administration and advocates of public health. The administration is under court order to finalize the first-ever federal regulations to reduce poisonous emissions of mercury from power plants--the largest uncontrolled source of mercury pollution in the U.S.

The battle is marked by an unprecedented public protest against a Bush administration Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) proposal that would allow power plants to emit six to seven times more mercury into America's air--and for at least a decade longer--than would be the case if the current Clean Air Act were simply implemented in good faith.

An EPA analysis earlier this year stated that 630,000 American newborns are at risk each year of having unsafe levels of mercury in their blood. Mercury can cause serious developmental and neurological problems in children. It is a highly toxic chemical whose effects on the central nervous system are comparable to those of lead. Many people are exposed to mercury by eating tainted fish. Currently, more than 40 states have issued advisories against eating mercury-contaminated fish from their rivers, lakes and streams.

Properly implemented, the Clean Air Act would bring about a 90 percent reduction of mercury emissions over three years. But the Bush administration has stubbornly defended its plan to reduce mercury emissions by only 70 percent--and over a period of 13 years. As a result, over 600,000 citizens have submitted comments opposing the Bush plan. This is more than twice the highest number of comments EPA has ever received on a rulemaking--greater even than the outcry when the administration tried (unsuccessfully) to fend off stronger controls over arsenic in drinking water.

Two months ago 45 Senators and 10 attorneys general called on EPA Administrator Michael Leavitt to abandon the EPA proposal and instead finalize a rule that complies with the Clean Air Act. And this week 184 members of the House did the same.

"It seems the only people applauding the administration's mercury rule are the people who wrote it: power companies and the Bush administration," Angela Ledford, director of Clear the Air, an environmental health advocacy group, told BushGreenwatch. "Today's Washington Post reports that mercury releases are up 10 percent. This underlines the need to require power plants to reduce emissions as much and as fast as technology allows."

Critics of the Bush plan note that a combination of 25 mercury-emitting utilities have donated nearly $6 million to President Bush's campaign, and that they would share a savings of $2.7 billion under the administration proposal.

TAKE ACTION
Submit a comment to EPA through MercuryHurts.org :
http://www.mercuryhurts.org

Source: http://www.bushgreenwatch.org/mt_archives/000144.php

21
Jun
2004

18
Jun
2004

FORMALDEHYDE LABELED A CARCINOGEN

By Tom Hamburger and Alan C. Miller
Los Angeles Time
June 16, 2004

http://tinyurl.com/2vvw7

WASHINGTON - A World Health Organization panel has upgraded its assessment of the danger of formaldehyde, declaring for the first time that the chemical is "carcinogenic to humans."

The warning from the International Agency for Research on Cancer contrasts with the approach taken by the Bush administration in February, when the Environmental Protection Agency approved an industry-backed rule intended to spare many plywood and timber-product plants from strict formaldehyde emission controls.

In doing so, the EPA adopted a far more lenient assessment of formaldehyde danger. Administration officials said the controversial change was justified by the "best available science."

Administration critics Tuesday characterized the international health group's action as a rebuke of the EPA's handling of the matter. An industry representative downplayed the international finding, noting that the reclassification of formaldehyde was not a finding of actual risk.

The World Health Organization panel, made up of 26 scientists from 10 countries, reviewed the latest literature and concluded that formaldehyde posed a greater hazard than previously thought.

"Based on this new information, the expert working group has determined that there is now sufficient evidence that formaldehyde causes nasopharyngeal cancer in humans, a rare cancer in developed countries," said a statement Tuesday from the agency's headquarters in Lyon, France. Nasopharyngeal refers to the area in the back of the mouth and nose.

The organization's previous evaluation of formaldehyde had concluded it was "probably carcinogenic." Review of the latest epidemiological studies "increased the overall weight of the evidence" about the toxic chemical, the expert panel said.

The scientists included in their assessment recent studies by the National Cancer Institute and the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health showing that exposure to formaldehyde might also cause leukemia in humans. The panel concluded that evidence of such a link was "strong but not sufficient" to establish a causal relationship.

The administration adopted its less stringent formaldehyde risk assessment shortly after the leukemia studies were disclosed. The EPA wood products rule did not mention leukemia risk. White House and EPA officials said this was because the two U.S. studies and a third in England appeared contradictory and were not thoroughly reviewed.

The WHO scientists took a different view. The link to leukemia "reflects the epidemiologists' finding of strong evidence in human studies," an organization statement said.

It also noted that the international experts had not yet determined how formaldehyde would cause leukemia. The panelists called for more study of leukemia risks.

Administration officials said it was too soon to say what effect the international group's decision could have on the EPA.

"The science on formaldehyde continues to evolve," EPA spokeswoman Cynthia Bergman said. "We are eager to take a close look at their findings."

The EPA is doing its own evaluation of formaldehyde and has said it will adjust its risk assessment if it finds merit in the leukemia or other studies.

Betsy Natz, executive director of the Formaldehyde Council Inc., an industry trade association, said the international health agency had "simply tried to answer the question of whether, under any circumstances, formaldehyde could produce cancer in humans."

She noted that some of the cancers cited as a basis for reclassification were based on exposure of workers in decades past, before modern industrial hygiene and safety standards were in place.

Others said the new findings showed that the Bush administration failed to protect the public and called for reconsideration of the timber products rule.

"The Bush administration is out of step with the international community on yet another important issue for public health and the environment," said Rep. Henry A. Waxman (D-Los Angeles). "It appears that EPA's recent plywood rule downplayed or disregarded scientific information that the World Health Organization finds to be credible and strong."

A prominent epidemiologist went further.

"If the leading international agency on cancer has reevaluated the data and declared formaldehyde to be a human carcinogen, it no longer seems right for the EPA and the White House to ignore these data," said David Michaels, who was assistant Energy secretary for environment, safety and health in the Clinton administration.

The World Health Organization panel deliberated last week in Lyon and planned to publish a treatise in the next few months.

Formaldehyde occurs naturally in the environment and is produced in large scale around the world for use as adhesives and binders for wood products, pulp, paper and other manufactured products.


Informant: NHNE

The Fluoride Deception

How a Nuclear Waste Byproduct Made Its Way Into the Nation's Drinking Water

http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=04/06/17/1437211


Informant: Let's Make Change

Environment Hazards a Big Killer of Children

Study

http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/25582/story.htm
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