ENVIRONMENT & HUMAN HEALTH, INC.

   

News and Updates

Studies and news reports that expand the scope of Environment & Human Health, Inc.'s (EHHI) research reports about health and the environment. Click here for full reports at www.ehhi.org.

The Dangers to Health from Outdoor Wood Furnaces

Most Pregnant Women Aren't Warned about Chemicals by Their Doctors
A University of California San Francisco survey of 2,600 obstetricians and gynecologists nationwide showed that most do not warn their pregnant patients about chemicals in food, consumer products or the environment that could injure their unborn children. More than half said they don't warn about mercury, while very few give advice about lead, pesticides, air pollution, or chemicals in plastics or cosmetics. Click here to read more.

Study Shows Smoke from Wood-Burning Heaters Damages DNA

Environmental Health News cites a new study showing that airborne particles in wood smoke can trigger gene changes and DNA damage .Researchers at University of Copenhagen, Denmark, report that wood smoke particulates generate reactive oxidants known to injure cells and damage DNA. They say wood smoke particulates can cause potentially cancerous cellular changes to DNA and activate genes linked to inflammation and oxidative stress. Click here for pdf.

Connecticut Attorney General, health advocates call for ban on outdoor furnaces
Former Attorney General Richard Blumenthal issued a press release asking Connecticut's General Assembly to ban utdoor wood-burning furnaces, which continuously emit toxic smoke that sickens neighbors and pollutes neighborhoods. The American Lung Association and Environment and Human Health, Inc. (EHHI), a nonprofit health advocacy group, joined Blumenthal in urging the legislature to impose a statewide prohibition on the furnaces. Click here for EHHI's press release.

EHHI's OpEd on the harmful health effects of wood smoke
The New Haven Register published Environment and Human Health, Inc.'s OpEd stating that homeowners have the right to be free of noxious wood smoke in their homes. Read the American Lung Association's position paper calling for a ban on outdoor furnaces. Environment and Human Health, Inc. has asked the Connecticut Legislature to help the many people in the state who are being made sick from breathing their neighbor's wood smoke on a continuous basis. Read more about wood smoke here.

Wood smoke can be a nuisance, says Connecticut Department of Public Health
The Connecticut Department of Public Health has declared that wood smoke—under certain circumstances—can be considered a public nuisance. This constitutes major progress on an issue that has become a problem for many people in Connecticut, as well as across the country.

For further information about woodsmoke, download EHHI's report or click here for additional news articles.

12 Steps to Reducing Carcinogenic Exposures

University of Minnesota study links indoor tanning to melanoma
Frequent use of tanning beds can triple someone's risk of developing the deadliest form of skin cancer—no matter how old they are when they start—according to a study published in May 2010 by researchers at the University of Minnesota. Click here for news story.

Tanning beds as deadly as cigarettes

The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) recently ranked ultraviolet-emitting tanning beds among the highest cancer risks, along with cigarettes, arsenic and asbestos. EHHI's pamphlet, 12 Steps to Reducing Carcinogenic Exposures, outlines ways to avoid cancer-causing threats to human health. Tanning beds used for cosmetic reasons are now classified as "carcinogenic to humans." Click here for news story.

Study links formaldehyde to more common cancers
Formaldehyde has long been linked to rare tumors of the nasopharynx, which includes the back of the throat, but new research links the chemical compound to cancers of the blood and lymphatic system. Click here for story.

For further information about cancer risks, download EHHI's brochure.

Artificial Turf: Exposures to Ground Up Rubber Tires on Athletic Fields and Playgrounds

EHHI's Op-Ed in response to ground-up used rubber tires in toddler playgrounds
Environment and Human Health Inc. (EHHI) remains remains extremely concerned about the ground-up rubber tire mulch that is being placed in our youngest children's environment––their playscapes. Some government scientists worry about the safety of using recycled tires for playgrounds. Click here for OpEd.

EHHI's Op-Ed in response to schools and towns installing artificial turf fields containing ground-up rubber tire in-fill
Environment and Human Health Inc. (EHHI) is concerned about synthetic turf fields that are being installed by schools and towns all over the United States. Many newspaper articles are reporting an increase of MRSA infections among football players playing on synthetic turf fields. According to a company website, "installation of a FieldTurf field eliminates the use of harmful pesticides, fertilizers and herbicides, while at the same time, removes over 40,000 tires from landfill sites." Because small crumbs of rubber tire are loosely spread over dyed green grass-like blades, they can be easily picked up by shoes, socks and even ears and hair. Click here for health risks.

For further information about artificial turf, download EHHI's report or click here for additional news articles.

Plastics That May Be Harmful to Children and Reproductive Health

Yale study explains how Bisphenol A (BPA) chemically modifies DNA
EHHI Board member Hugh S. Taylor, MD, director of the reproductive endocrinology and infertility section of the Yale School of Medicine, says plastics containing BPA cause permanent changes that can lead to cancer in mice. While the data on BPA in humans is less clear than with DES, adult animal models are clearly showing that in utero exposure to BPA can increase the risk of breast cancer. Click here for news story.

FDA relied on chemical industry lobbyists to discredit scientific studies
warning of BPA risks

Emails obtained by the Wisconsin Journal Sentinel show FDA asked chemical industry to study BPA.

Chicago becomes first municipality to ban BPA in baby bottles and cups
Chicago's ban on the sale of baby bottles and cups containing BPA will take effect in January 2010. Click here for story.

For further information about plastics, download EHHI's report or click here for additional news articles.

Risks from Lawn-Care Pesticides

Rats are fat after long-term exposure to lower levels of atrazine
Much of the water in the Midwest is contaminated with the agricultural pesticide atrazine. A new study in Environmental Health News suggests a mechanism to explain prior studies that found high prevalence of obesity in areas of the United States with heavy atrazine use. This study also shows that high-dose experiments do not predict low-dose results, which calls into question many federal safety standards presumed to protect human health. Click here for news story.

EPA announces plan to require disclosure of secret pesticide ingredients
Reversing its policy of the last decade, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency will now require pesticide manufacturers to publicly disclose inert ingredients in pesticide products. Nearly 4,000 inerts—including several hundred that are considered hazardous under other federal rulea—are used in agricultural and residential pesticides. Although some secret ingredients are toxic, manufacturers have not been required to identify them on pesticide labels. Click here for news story.

For further information about lawn-care pesticides, download EHHI's report or click here for additional news articles.

News items are not independently verified by EHHI and inclusion on this site does not constitute an endorsement.


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