On May 6, the President's Cancer Panel released the results of its two-year investigation into "the impact of environmental factors on cancer risk." The 240-page report did not mince words: "The nation still has much work to identify ... and eliminate carcinogens ... from our workplaces, schools and homes."
The examination focused on key areas such as ". industrial, occupational and agricultural exposures as well as exposures related to medical practice, military activities, modern lifestyles and natural causes."
The panel, appointed by President George W. Bush in 2008, offered its overarching point in one hammer blow: "The true burden of environmentally induced cancer has been grossly underestimated." A sampling of facts gleaned from the report (http://deainfo.nci.nih.gov/advisory/pcp/pcp.htm) show:
. Although cancer incidence and deaths are falling, 41 out of every 100 Americans "will be diagnosed with cancer at some point in their lives, and about 21 percent will die from cancers."
. Some cancers, "including some most common among children," continue to increase "for unexplained reasons."
. "The entire U.S. population is exposed on a daily basis to numerous agricultural chemicals. Many of these chemicals are known or suspected of having either carcinogenic or endocrine-disrupting properties."
. "Chemical exposure levels of agricultural families (and in some cases, other rural residents) tend to be higher than the general population ... [T]hese substances often are introduced into the home on shoes and clothing, and when work clothes are washed with other family laundry."
. "Pesticide levels in carpet dust in the homes of agricultural workers and non-farming families can be 10- to 200-fold higher than levels in the air outside the same home, increasing exposure risk to children who ... crawl and play directly on the carpet."
. The Agriculture Health Study that now tracks 89,000 men, women and children in the "agricultural population," shows that "Farmers and pesticide applicators have significantly higher prostate cancer risk, and female spouses have a significantly higher incidence of melanoma."
. "Nearly 1,400 pesticides have been registered by the Environmental Protection Agency. Approximately 40 chemicals classified by the International Agency for Research on Cancer as known, probable, or possible human carcinogens, are used in EPA-registered pesticides now on the market.
. "An average of 18 new pesticides are introduced every year. In the aggregate, the registered pesticides contain nearly 900 active ingredients, many of which are toxic. Many of the inert ingredients in pesticides also are toxic, but are not required to be tested."
None of these facts, the report makes clear, are meant to condemn our chemical-dependent lifestyles. Instead, it "urges" the president to "use the power of your office to remove the carcinogens and other toxins from our food, water, and air."
At the same time, "[I]ndividual small actions can drastically reduce the number and levels of environmental contaminants," the panel notes. It suggests simple, mostly cheap actions like filtering tap water, storing and microwaving food in glass containers, removing shoes before entering the home and washing "work clothes separately from other family laundry."
And, it recommends, "... choosing, to the extent possible, food grown without pesticides or chemical fertilizers and washing conventionally grown produce to remove residues. Similarly ... eating free-range meat raised without medications if it is available."
Want to debate those latter panel suggestions? Great, get the facts and get going because cancer doesn't care if you're a farmer or a factory worker, a man or a woman, a Republican or Democrat. Nor should we.
We should, however, agree that we can - like the panel urges - "strongly support environmental cancer research and measures that will reduce or remove from the environment toxins that are known or suspected carcinogens or endocrine-disrupting chemicals."
...
Alan Guebert's "Farm and Food File" is published weekly in more than 75 newspapers in North America. Contact him at agcomm@sbcglobal.net.
Farm & Food File
Farm and Food File: Ag highlighted in new cancer report
Originally published in the May 21, 2010, print edition.
- Farm & Food File
-
-
Farm and Food File: Trade talks stuck in past
The surest way to confirm if anyone in Washington, D.C. is telling you the truth about trade is to watch their lips: if they move, they're stretching the blanket one way or the other.
-
Farm and Food File: June was cultivator month; time for Uncle Honey show
I don't know where the term originated but I do know two things about laying-by corn. First, it never meant the weeds laid down; Dad always followed the last cultivator pass with a 2,4-D soaking a week or so later.
-
Farm and Food File: Alabama fried chicken - antitrust chief taking your calls
In a morning session of the May 21 U.S. Department of Justice-Department of Agriculture workshop on ag and antitrust enforcement, Alabama poultry grower Garry Staples told officials he expected "retaliation" from the firm he grows chickens for because of his participation in that event's discussion of poultry contracts.
-
Farm and Food File: Suppose you support farm bill reform; it could be cheaper
Suppose the House ag committee asks you to come to Washington to offer your ideas on how to improve the farm bill for its 2012 update.
-
Farm and Food File: Ag highlighted in new cancer report
The Agriculture Health Study that now tracks 89,000 men, women and children in the "agricultural population," shows that "Farmers and pesticide applicators have significantly higher prostate cancer risk, and female spouses have a significantly higher incidence of melanoma."
-
Farm and Food File: Elbow-deep in atrazine review politics
Forty-five years may have dimmed a frame or two of memory but I can still see my father emptying small bags of flour-like powder into a five-gallon bucket and, then, slowing stirring in a trickle of water until the two ingredients combined to make a chalky, white cream. The bags contained the still-new, pre-emergent herbicide atrazine.
-
Farm and Food File: Facts, figures and fools with money
What diesel fuel is to tractors, facts are to journalists. Diesel is expensive; facts, for the most part, are free. Moreover, facts are all over.
-
Farm and Food File: Main Street banks want reform
Rare is the day when the U.S. Senate ag committee lands on the front page of the New York Times. That day, however, came April 20 when the Times, in its running coverage of financial reform in the Senate, highlighted the aggies' role in that effort: regulation of casino-like derivatives.
-
Farm and Food File: I'm not making this up; it was in the newspaper
Asked once for the source of his best material, American humorist Will Rogers quickly replied that "Everything I know I get from the newspaper."
-
Farm and Food File: No more beautiful spring capital than Washington, D.C.
With the possible exception of Paris, none other of the world's great capital cities is more beautiful in early spring than Washington, D.C.
- More Farm & Food File Headlines
-





