Study bolsters link between Parkinson's, pesticide

Fungicide widely used in Valley found as a common factor in patients with disease.

By Barbara Anderson / The Fresno Bee

November 16, 2008

 

    For years, researchers have suspected commercial pesticides put people at risk for Parkinson's disease. Now evidence in the San Joaquin Valley suggests it's true.

    Researchers have found a strong connection between the debilitating neurological disease and long-term exposure to pesticides, particularly to a fungicide that is sprayed on thousands of acres of almonds, tree fruit and grapes in the Valley. 

    The fungicide ziram -- the 20th most-used agricultural toxin in California in 2006--emerged as a common factor in a UCLA study of 400 people with Parkinson's in the Valley. Read more

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Lawsuit seeks EPA pesticide data in disappearance of honeybees

Jane Kay, SFGate - August 19, 2008

 

    The US EPA is refusing to disclose records about a new class of pesticides that could play a role in the disappearance of millions of honeybees in the United States.

    The National Resources Defense Council wants to see studies that EPA required when it approved a pesticides made by Bayer CropScience five years ago. Read more

 

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Household Exposure to Pesticides and Risk of Childhood Hematopoietic Malignancies: The ESCALE Study (SFCE)

Environmental Health Perspectives, July 2008 Vol 11 Number 7


Objectives: We investigated the role of household exposure to pesticides in the etiology of childhood hematopoietic malignancies. Read more

 

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Pesticides blamed for plummeting salmon stocks

NEW SCIENTIST, ENGLAND

Ewen Callaway , June 2008

 

 

     A weak mix of pesticides in river water dampens a salmon's sense of smell, say researchers. In experiments, Steelhead rainbow trout exposed to low levels of 10 common agricultural pesticides could not perceive changes in levels of a predator's scent.

     "You can imagine if a fish is unable to detect just how close it is to a [wading] bear, it's a problem," says Keith Tierney, a toxicologist who led the study while at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, British Columbia.


     A depressed sense of smell might also keep fish from finding mates and food. Trout are closely related to salmon, and, though the theory is unproven, pesticides may be a cause of plummeting salmon stocks in Canada and the US, Tierney says. Read More...

 

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USDA axes national survey charting pesticide use

By Garance BURKE, Associated Press Writer.

Thursday, May 22, 2008

 

FRESNO, Calif. - Consumers and farmers will soon be on their own when it comes to finding out which pesticides are being sprayed on everything from corn to apples.

    The U.S. Department of Agriculture said Wednesday it plans to do away with publishing its national survey tracking pesticide use, despite opposition from prominent scientists, the nation's largest farming organizations and environmental groups.

    "If you don't know what's being used, then you don't know what to look for," said Charles Benbrook, chief scientist at The Organic Center, a nonprofit in Enterprise, Ore. "In the absence of information, people can be lulled into thinking that there are no problems with the use of pesticides on food in this country."

Since 1990, farmers and consumer advocates have relied on the agency's detailed annual report to learn which states apply the most pesticides and where bug and weed killers are most heavily sprayed to help cotton, grapes and oranges grow. Read more...

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Pesticide Parkinson's Strong Link

BBC News - March 28, 2008

 

    There is strong evidence that exposure to pesticides significantly increases the risk of Parkinson's disease, experts believe.

    It comes as another study, published in the BMC Neurology journal, has made the link to the neurological disease.

    The US researchers found those exposed to pesticides had a 1.6 times higher risk after studying 600 people.  Experts said it was now highly likely pesticides played a key role - albeit in combination with other factors. The disorder, which normally develops later in life...Read more

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Pesticides Too Harmful to Use in Any Form, Doctors Warn

April 24, 2004
by Alannna Mitchell

 

ONTARIO - The link between common household pesticides and fetal defects, neurological damage and the most deadly cancers is strong enough that family doctors in Ontario are urging citizens to avoid the chemicals in any form.

    The frightening message came yesterday when the Ontario College of Family Physicians released the most comprehensive study ever done in Canada on the chronic effects of pesticide exposure at home, in the garden and at work.

    "The review found consistent evidence of the health risks to patients with exposure to pesticides," the study said, naming brain cancer, prostate cancer, kidney cancer, pancreatic cancer and leukemia among many other acute illnesses.

    As well, the college found consistent links between parents' exposure to certain agricultural pesticides at their jobs and effects on a growing fetus ranging from damage to death. The risks, they concluded, can come even from residue on food, ant spray and the tick collar on the family cat.The researchers also found that children are far more vulnerable to the effects of pesticides than adults because their bodies are growing, they have a greater skin surface in proportion to their size than adults, they ingest more food for their size than adults and they often have less-developed systems to excrete chemicals. More... www.globeandmail.ca

See Ontario College of Family Physicians' full report on pesticides: www.ocfp.on.ca

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TruGreen ChemLawn
"Honored" with 2003 Dirty Dozen Award

North Andover, December 4, 2003

 

    Citing their widespread promotion and use of toxic pesticides on residential lawns and town fieldsacross the region, HealthLink members from Marblehead and Swampscott joined Toxics Action Center of Boston to present TruGreen/ChemLawn with a 2003 "Dirty Dozen Award" at their headquarters in North Andover.

"TruGreen/ChemLawn is turning our yards and playing fields into toxic dump sites," said Kathleen Klett of HeathLink. "These pesticides are dangerous for our kids and our pets. All pesticides are poisons, that's why when you go to dispose of pesticides it is considered hazardous waste."

The citizen groups refer to scientific studies linking pesticide use on lawnsto increased risk of childhood illnesses including, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, brain cancer, leukemia and neurological disorders a major reason for citing TruGreen/ChemLawn.

The award highlights ChemLawn's widespread marketing tactics through their partnership with US Youth Soccer as an example of their disregard for the health and safety of children.

"It's time for TruGreen/ChemLawn to come clean and educate consumers about the dangers of pesticide use on lawns and playing fields," said Jay Rasku, Field Director for Toxics Action Center. "Instead, ChemLawn has begun an advertising campaign using children in US Youth Soccer programs to market their products to soccer parents. This marketing strategy is dangerous and wrong, since exposure to pesticides is a health threat to the developing bodies of children."

Nate Leeson, 8 years old, a Marblehead Youth Soccer player, carried a sign which said, "Please Don't Poison My Pets!" He said "I feel that ChemLawn should not be 'spreaded' because it could make our pets sick." His mother added "None of us are blindfolded to the serious health issues that effect today's society. We should all take preventative measures especially when it concerns our children."