TOXICS INFORMATION PROJECT (TIP)
Liberty
Goodwin, Director
P.O. Box 40572, Providence, RI 02940
Tel. 401-351-9193, E-Mail:
TIP@toxicsinfo.org
Website: www.toxicsinfo.org
(Lighting
the Way to Less Toxic Living)
Subject: Report Links Environmental and Occupational
Exposures to Cancers
“The sum of
the evidence makes an airtight case for reconsideration of chemicals policies
in the U.S.,” said Dr. Richard W. Clapp, lead epidemiologist for the report and
adjunct professor at UMass Lowell. “We need to follow the example of the
European Union’s REACH program, which prevents the use of known or suspected
carcinogens when suitable substitutes are readily available.” www.cheforhealth.org
N E W S R E L E A S E
September 19, 2005
Contact: Patti McCafferty, 978-934-3238, patricia_mccafferty@uml.edu
UMASS LOWELL
REPORT LINKS ENVIRONMENTAL
&
OCCUPATIONAL EXPOSURES TO CANCERS
LOWELL – The University of Massachusetts Lowell today
released a report that links dozens of environmental and occupational exposures
to nearly 30 types of cancer.
The
new study by the University’s Lowell Center for Sustainable Production reviewed
scientific evidence documenting associations between environmental and
occupational exposures and certain cancers in the United States – marking the
first time this massive body of material has been summarized in one, accessible
document.
“We
need to pay attention to environmental and occupational risk factors,” said
Molly Jacobs, project manager. “Known and preventable exposures are clearly
responsible for tens of thousands of excess cancer cases each year. It is
unconscionable not to implement policy changes that we know will prevent
sickness and death.”
“Environmental
and Occupational Causes of Cancer: A Review of Recent Scientific Evidence”
shows that many cancer cases and deaths are caused or contributed to by
involuntary exposures. These include: bladder cancer from the primary solvent
used in dry cleaning, breast cancer from endocrine disruptors like bisphenol-A
and other plastics components, lung cancer from residential exposure to radon,
non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma from solvent and herbicide exposure, and childhood
leukemia from pesticides.
“The
sum of the evidence makes an airtight case for reconsideration of chemicals
policies in the U.S.,” said Dr. Richard W. Clapp, lead epidemiologist for the
report and adjunct professor at UMass Lowell. “We need to follow the example of
the European Union’s REACH program, which prevents the use of known or suspected
carcinogens when suitable substitutes are readily available.”
Despite
notable gains in reducing incidence and mortality rates for certain cancers,
the authors lament that cancer constitutes a growing burden on society. They
note that the mortality rate for all cancers combined (excluding non-melanoma
skin cancer) is the same today as it was in the 1940s and the annual rate of
new cases increased by 85 percent over the past 50 years.
“Major
cancer agencies have largely avoided the urgency of acting on what we know to
prevent people from getting cancer in the first place,” said researcher
Genevieve Howe.
The
report disputes the often-cited, 25 year-old analysis by Sir Richard Doll and
Richard Peto that attributes only 2 to 4 percent of cancers to involuntary
environmental and occupational exposures. “Our review makes it clear that new
knowledge about multiple causes of cancer, including involuntary exposures,
early-life exposures, synergistic effects, and genetic factors, renders
making such estimates not just pointless, but counterproductive,” Clapp said.
The
nearly 50-page report was produced as part of the Lowell Center for Sustainable
Production’s Environmental Health Initiative and sponsored by the Collaborative
on Health and the Environment. It is available at www.sustainableproduction.org
and www.cheforhealth.org.
The
Lowell Center for Sustainable Production at UMass Lowell uses rigorous science,
collaborative research, and innovative strategies to promote communities,
workplaces and products that are healthy, humane and respectful of natural
systems.
UMass
Lowell, a comprehensive university with special expertise in applied science
and technology, is committed to educating students for lifelong success and
conducting research and outreach activities that sustain the economic,
environmental and social health of the region. UML offers its 11,000
undergraduate and graduate students more than 80 degree programs in the
colleges of Arts and Sciences, Engineering and Management, and the School of
Health and Environment and the Graduate School of Education. Visit the website
at www.uml.edu.
FOR MORE
INFORMATION ON THIS AND OTHER CONCERNS ABOUT
ENVIRONMENT
AND HEALTH, CONTACT: Liberty Goodwin,
Director,
Toxics
Information Project (TIP), 401-351-9193 or liberty@toxicsinfo.org