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A new report by a group of
physicians says that millions of children in the
U.S. exhibit learning disabilities, reduced IQ and
destructive, aggressive behavior because of
exposures to toxic chemicals.[1]
"Neurodevelopmental disabilities are widespread,
and chemical exposures are important and
preventable contributors to these conditions," the
report says (pg. 117).
Titled IN HARM'S WAY, the
report was written by physicians Ted Schettler and
Jill Stein and two of their colleagues and was
published by Greater Boston Physicians for Social
Responsibility in partnership with the Clean Water
Fund. IN HARM'S WAY links toxic exposures during
early childhood, or even before birth, to lifelong
disabilities including attention disorders, reduced
IQ and poorly-controlled aggression.
IN HARM'S WAY reviews
scientific and medical information on a range of
toxins to which most or all American children are
exposed, and draws links to the rising number of
children diagnosed each year with abnormal brain
development or function. The report is a call to
action for everyone interested in children's
welfare and the future of our society. To avert
brain damage in growing numbers of children, we
have to reclaim our government from corporate
special interests, the report concludes.
Developmental disabilities
such as autism, attention deficit hyperactivity
disorder (ADHD), dyslexia and uncontrollable
aggression currently affect an estimated 12 million
children under age 18 in the U.S. -- almost one
child in five. Furthermore, the incidence of some
of these disabilities appears to have increased
dramatically in recent decades. For example,
nationwide, the number of children classified with
learning disabilities and placed in special
education programs increased 191% between 1977 and
1994. The number of children taking the drug
Ritalin to combat attention deficit hyperactivity
disorder (ADHD) has approximately doubled every 4
to 7 years since 1971. Experts estimate that autism
rates have risen from around 4 per 10,000 in the
early 1980s to between 12 and 20 per 10,000 in the
1990s. According to a recent article in US NEWS AND
WORLD REPORT, the number of children in New York
classified with learning disabilities rose 55
percent between 1983 and 1996. [2]
Some argue that reported
disabilities are increasing because of improved
diagnosis and rising expectations as children are
required to learn more complicated skills at
younger ages. But many parents, teachers, and
physicians who work with children think these
explanations are only partially correct because
"they can not imagine that such disabilities
escaped notice in the past," the report says. (pg.
11)
Experts may argue about the
exact number of children suffering from individual
disorders, but the undisputed reality is that huge
numbers of children currently suffer with serious
developmental disabilities and they are exposed to
many toxic chemicals that are known to produce such
disabilities. "We believe we can no longer ignore
the mounting evidence that chemical exposures
contribute to the epidemic of developmental
disabilities," the report says. (pg. 9)
IN HARM'S WAY walks us
through a sampling of neurotoxic substances to
which many or all American children are exposed --
metals (lead, mercury, manganese); nicotine;
pesticides; persistent organochlorine compounds
(e.g., dioxin and PCBs); solvents, including
alcohol; fluoride; and food additives -- and
reviews existing human and animal data on
developmental effects of these chemicals. These
effects can vary dramatically depending on the
exact timing of exposures. Tiny exposures that
would have no noticeable effect at most stages of
development can produce devastating permanent
damage if they occur during a "window of
vulnerability" when certain organs are developing
rapidly. (pg. 9)
Here is a sampling of the
toxins that can misdirect the development of a
child's brain.
-- Lead exposure in infants
and children is associated with attention deficit,
aggression, and reduced IQ. Blood lead levels below
those labeled "safe" by U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) are associated with
learning problems, and no threshold has been
identified below which adverse effects do not
occur. Young monkeys exposed to lead show symptoms
including heightened distractability and
inappropriate responses to stimuli. One million
American children currently live with blood lead
levels above the threshold recognized by EPA as
affecting behavior and cognition. Millions more
would be added to this list if EPA's threshold were
updated to take account of the most current science
on the effects of lead in children.
-- At low doses, mercury
exposure can produce impairments in language
ability, attention, and memory; at high doses it
can cause mental retardation, vision problems, and
problems walking. Mercury enters the environment
through waste incinerators and coal-burning power
plants. It bioaccumulates in fish in its most toxic
form, methylmercury (see REHW #597). The EPA
estimates that 1.16 million women of childbearing
age "eat sufficient amounts of mercury-contaminated
fish to pose a risk of harm to their future
children." (pg. 64)
-- Many pesticides kill
insects by exerting a toxic effect on cells in the
nervous system. Not surprisingly, such pesticides
can disrupt the development and functioning of the
human nervous system by the same mechanisms. Animal
studies show that neurotoxic pesticides can produce
permanent changes in brain structure and
functioning when exposures occur on a single
critical day of development. For example, some
effects occurred in newborn mice if exposures
occurred on day 10 of development, but not if
exposures occurred on day 3 or 19. (pg. 82)
Short-lived "pulse" exposures may have devastating
developmental effects and yet can be difficult or
impossible to identify after the fact (see REHW #
648).
-- One pesticide exposure
study examined children in two Mexican communities.
The two communities were very similar in ethnic
composition and culture, but one community
practiced chemical-intensive agriculture while the
other used few farm chemicals. Children in the
community with chemical-intensive agriculture
scored substantially lower on measures of memory,
physical stamina and coordination, and had trouble
with ordinary children's activities such as drawing
a simple picture of a person. (pgs. 82-83) Children
in the pesticide-exposed group also displayed more
aggressive behavior than their unexposed
counterparts (see REHW #648).
-- Dioxins and
polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) are organochlorine
compounds that bioaccumulate in fatty tissue and
are found at significant levels in human breast
milk. Both animal and human studies show strong
links between these pollutants and developmental
disorders. Monkeys exposed before birth to dioxin
in the range of human breast milk contamination
levels were impaired in their ability to reverse a
learned behavior in response to new stimuli. Young
monkeys exposed to PCBs at levels typically found
in human breast milk showed retarded learning as
well as abnormally repetitive behavior. Studies of
human children have found lowered IQs associated
with PCB exposure in the womb, and a study of
babies whose mothers ate PCB-contaminated fish from
Lake Ontario found impaired development including
abnormal reflexes and startle responses. (pgs.
76-79) These are just a few of the studies covered
in IN HARM'S WAY.
Government officials set
"safe" exposure levels based on individual
chemicals. But in the real world children are
exposed to many chemicals simultaneously. Such
multiple exposures can be far more damaging than
exposure to single chemicals. For example, one
study found that certain combinations of pesticides
produce changes in thyroid levels that are not
observed when the chemicals are tested
individually, and thus the combination may produce
unexpected developmental effects (see REHW #648).
Proper thyroid levels are essential for brain
development. Other studies reveal that exposure to
a combination of mercury and PCBs, two pollutants
that accumulate in fish, can produce even greater
effects on neurological development than either
pollutant alone. (pg. 67)
Under our current
regulatory system, industrial chemicals need not be
tested for toxicity before they are marketed. (pg.
108) EPA estimates that somewhere between 2400 and
4000 industrial chemicals now on the market are
neurotoxic. (pg. 107) However, this number is
"highly speculative" (pg. 107) because most
chemicals in commercial use have not been tested
for neurotoxicity. EPA's Toxics Release Inventory
(TRI) -- which covers just 625 out of 80,000
industrial chemicals -- reported that nearly a
billion pounds of known neurotoxins were released
directly into air and water in 1997. (pg. 103)
Pesticides must be tested before marketing, but not
for toxicity to the nervous system. Of 890
pesticide "active ingredients" EPA believes 140 are
neurotoxins. Some 20 million U.S. children under
age 5 eat an average of 8 different pesticides on
their food each day. (pg. 106)
The authors of IN HARM'S
WAY point out that there is no reason to delay
protecting our children; we don't need more
scientific information before taking precautionary
action. "We should not need to identify with
certainty exactly how much and through what
mechanism a neurotoxic pesticide impairs brain
development before coming to the conclusion that
public health is not protected when the urine of
virtually every child in this country contains
residues of these chemicals. ... We do not need to
exhaustively understand the mechanism by which
methylmercury interferes with normal fetal brain
development before concluding that it is not
acceptable for freshwater and many ocean fish to be
sufficiently contaminated with mercury to threaten
developing brains. We know how to reduce the
environmental releases of mercury so that fish are
once again safe to eat regularly. We can modify
manufacturing practices so that lead use in
products goes steadily down instead of up. We can
eliminate or modify outmoded technologies that
produce the dioxin that contaminates fetuses and
breast milk. We know how to do these things." (pgs.
121-122)
In order to do these
things, we have to take back control of our
regulatory system. As things stand now,
corporations that benefit financially by exposing
children to toxic substances are accepted -- even
by most environmentalists -- as valid
"stakeholders" in the process that determines
"safe" levels of exposure. As a result, we have
failed to protect our children from industrial
poisons. As the authors of IN HARM'S WAY put it,
"The role of special interests in the regulation of
environmental chemicals is an important matter for
public debate, as it has direct relevance to the
neurological development of children now and in the
future." (pg. 121) In sum, our current regulatory
system is like a trial in which the criminal
defendant gets to serve on the jury. If we want to
have children who can play, think and learn
normally, we will have to change corporations and
our government so that protecting brain development
comes ahead of protecting profits.
=======================
* Rachel Massey is a
consultant to Environmental Research
Foundation.
[1] Ted Schettler,
Jill Stein, Fay Reich, Maria Valenti, and David
Wallinga, IN HARM'S WAY: TOXIC THREATS TO CHILD
DEVELOPMENT (Cambridge, Mass.: Greater Boston
Physicians for Social Responsibility
[GBPSR], May 2000). Available on the web at
http://www.igc.org/psr/ or as a paper copy from
GBPSR in Cambridge, Mass.; telephone 617-497-7440.
[2] Sheila Kaplan
and Jim Morris, "Kids At Risk," US NEWS AND WORLD
REPORT Vol. 128, No. 4 (June 19, 2000), pgs. 47-53.
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