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Asbestos Exposure is prevalent in mining community
A new study of the
residents of Libby, Mont., confirms that even people who don't work with
asbestos can have lung abnormalities caused by the mineral. The "striking,
very disturbing" findings indicate that asbestos released from mining or
manufacturing operations may pose health threats to entire communities, says
Christopher P. Weis of the Environmental Protection Agency in Denver.
Research in the late 1970s linked high rates of the lung cancer mesothelioma
among miners working for W.R. Grace & Co. in Libby to their inhalation of
asbestos from the town's vermiculite mine. Studies elsewhere found that
workers who processed Libby's vermiculite, a mineral used in insulation and
potting soil, also have high rates of mesothelioma and other lung problems.
The government subsequently issued warnings and regulations to reduce
occupational asbestos exposures.
In the early 1980s, the Reagan administration halted investigations of
asbestos-related health problems in Libby. The data available at that time
didn't indicate to environmental regulators that nonoccupational exposures
to asbestos could be dangerous.
Renewed investigations, spurred in part by newspaper reports about health
problems among Libby residents, have "changed our perspective on that
completely," says Weis. Libby residents, he says, "have clearly been exposed
to high concentrations of asbestos and [consequently] are at higher risk for
both non-cancer and cancer-related disease."
Since 1999, Weis and his colleagues with the Agency for Toxic Substances and
Disease Registry in Atlanta and other government agencies have X-rayed the
lungs of 6,668 people who had lived in Libby for at least 6 months before
1991, by which time vermiculite mining had ceased there. The volunteers also
answered questions about whether they had participated in any of 29
activities that might have exposed them to asbestos. These included working
in the town's mine, living with a miner, using vermiculite insulation, and
playing on a ball field near a vermiculite plant.
The researchers found that the more asbestos-linked activities a volunteer
reported, the more likely that person was to have abnormalities in the
pleura, or lining, of the lung. Scientists consider pleural abnormalities
indicative of asbestos exposure. Ten percent of residents with one reported
route of exposure showed pleural abnormalities on their X rays, while nearly
20 percent of those with six or seven routes of exposure--and 35 percent of
those with 12 routes or more--showed similar abnormalities.
Even residents who couldn't recall participating in any activities that
might have exposed them to asbestos had a 6.7 percent chance of having
pleural abnormalities, the researchers report in an upcoming Environmental
Health Perspectives. That incidence is the highest reported to date among
people who don't work with asbestos.
The study confirms that dangerous asbestos exposure in Libby extended beyond
workplaces, says William S. Beckett, who studies environmental medicine at
the University of Rochester in New York. Precisely how much disease resulted
or is likely to develop from community exposure to asbestos isn't yet
certain because most pleural abnormalities don't actually interfere with
lung function, Beckett adds.
"Community exposures can't be ignored' says Philip Harber of the University
of California, Los Angeles. What's more, since threats from asbestos may
linger in an environment long after mining or processing of
asbestos-containing material ceases, Harber says the new findings imply that
"asbestos concerns are not just a thing of the past."
Science News, 7/12/2003, Vol. 164 Issue 2, p21, 1p
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