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Published on Tuesday, August 12, 2002 by CommonDreams.org
Blowing the Whistle on West Nile --
Shades of 1950's and DDT
by Lynn Landes
I'm reminded of the 1950's...TV newscasts showing clouds
of DDT sprayed on a clueless public, compromising their health and contaminating
the environment for decades to come, as Rachel Carson writes "Silent
Spring." But the time is now, other toxic pesticides have joined
the ranks in our wayward war against mosquitoes, and the Rachels of today
are drowned out by a media rushing to sound the alarm, rather than report
the news.
And the news is - pesticides pose a much greater health
hazard than the West Nile virus.
DEET, Anvil, and other toxic pesticides are aggressively promoted to protect
the public from a mosquito bite that appears to be, statistically, less
dangerous than a dog bite or bee sting. And the CDC seems to agree. On
its website it says, "Human illness from West Nile virus is rare,
even in areas where the virus has been reported. The chance that any one
person is going to become ill from a mosquito bite is low."
Since 1999 only a handful of deaths per year have been associated with
West Nile, even though the virus has been found in 33 states.
The fact that this "health crisis" has been exaggerated,
and that chemical spraying is usually the least effective yet most toxic
way to control mosquitoes, has deterred some state officials, but not
others. The New York State Health Department backed away from recommending
wholesale spraying after finding that more people got sick from the pesticides
than from the virus. However, Louisiana has just asked for $17 million
in federal aid, and Mississippi is following suit. There's no word yet
on how the money is to be allocated, but rest assured the pesticide companies
stand to benefit.
Meanwhile, some citizen groups are taking matters into their
own hands. The No Spray Coalition is suing New York City to stop pesticide
spraying in their neighborhoods.
There's a
good deal of information on government and other websites about the toxic
effects of pesticides, but a comprehensive picture of the specific pesticides
and issues involved in the West Nile campaign is well laid out in a report
called "Overkill: Why Pesticide Spraying for West Nile Virus May
Cause More Harm Than Good" by the Maine Environ-mental Policy Institute
(MEPI) and the Toxics Action Center.
In short, they report that these pesticides offer a toxic leg-acy: short-
and long-term respiratory problems, immune and ner-vous system disruption,
cancer, and reproductive and learning dis-orders. That covers just about
everything you'd never want to get.
The "Overkill" report also emphasizes the association between
outdoor pesticide sprays and neurological damage, stating, "A report
of pesticides and childhood brain cancers published in Environmental Health
Perspectives (a publication of the National Institutes of Health) revealed
a strong relationship between brain cancers and pyrethroids used to kill
fleas and ticks." Anvil, a pyrethroid, is a popular pesticide used
by state agencies to control mosquitoes.
The use of DEET in mosquito repellents is extremely troubling. DEET has
been associated with seizures and several cases of toxic encephalopathy
(encephalitis) in children, including three deaths, according to the Extension
Toxicology Network at Cornell University.
The battle against West Nile is supposed to prevent a virus
that can cause encephalitis. It appears the cure can cause the disease.
That would be ironic, if it weren't so tragic.
Dr. Mohamed Abou-Donia, a research scientist at Duke University Medical
Center, whose studies have established a link between DEET and neurological
damage in animals, warns parents in a recent Environmental News Service
article, "Never use insect repellents on infants, and be wary of
using them on children in general. Never combine insecticides with each
other or use them with other medications. Even so simple a drug as an
antihistamine could interact with DEET to cause toxic side effects. Don't
spray your yard for bugs and then take medications. Until we have more
data on potential interactions in humans, safe is better than sorry."
Meanwhile, state and federal agencies, including the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) and the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), are encouraging
the public to use mosquito repellents containing DEET. Although the CDC
warns parents to avoid applying repellent on children less than 2 years
old, the EPA and other state agencies are not giving that caution. The
EPA instead advises, "Do not allow children to handle the products,
and do not apply to children's hands. When using on children, apply to
your own hands and then put it on the child."
Have these people ever met a child? Children touch everything and everybody,
including themselves. And then they put their pudgy little fingers directly
into their mouths.
While the battle plan's objective is to target the mosquitoes that carry
West Nile, the strikes won't be 'precision' and the collateral damage
could be vast. Pesticides and larvicides can impact fish, insects, animals,
and humans. And although the public has been told to lather up with DEET,
spray pesticides, and eliminate standing water, little has been said about
using select plants, birds, bugs, fish, and amphibians - gifts of nature
that help control mosquitoes.
It seems we're traveling in a deadly circle. Spraying for West Nile, while
we're gassing ourselves. Falling for a health scare, when the real scare
is the alleged cure. And the real cure can be found in the natural world
we're attacking.
Welcome to the 1950's. Rachel must be rolling in her grave.
Lynn Landes is a freelance journalist specializing in
enviro-n-mental issues. She is a weekly commentator on the BBC's Radio
Five Live and reports environmental news for DUTV in Phila-delphia, PA
(EcoTalk.org).
Links:
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