DDT, Red Dye #2, Love Canal, Cell Phone scares
Date sent: Fri, 16 Jan 1998 04:05:11 -0500 (EST)
Subject: C-NEWS: Talking Points on the Environment
From: Amy Ridenour
To: "C-News"
Send reply to: Amy Ridenour
Talking Points on the Environment #35 and #36
We Have But One Thing to Fear: Fear Itself
Over the past several decades, the American people have been
manipulated by a handful of scientists outside the mainstream to fear
safe products that improve their quality of life. Products have been
removed from the market, banned, or heavily regulated due to
unfounded claims that they pose serious risks to human health.
Regulating and restricting such products comes at a high price:
Increased prices, fewer job opportunities, and fewer consumer
choices. Worse, focusing on unfounded or trivial risks frequently
means that real threats to public health go unnoticed. For example:
Love Canal: In 1976, reports of high rates of illness and birth
defects surfaced in Love Canal, a community near Niagara Falls.
During the 1940s, Love Canal was a site for industrial and chemical
waste disposal. In response to the complaints, the EPA conducted two
studies that suggested chromosome damage and peripheral nerve damage
among residents of Love Canal. But the studies were flawed as they
were not peer-reviewed, had errors in statistical analysis, included
very small sample sizes, and drew conclusions that were not
supported by the evidence. At the same, time, the Centers for
Disease Control (CDC) and the American Medical Association (AMA)
conducted studies of their own showing no abnormalities among Love
Canal residents. Despite the CDC and AMA studies, 2,500 residents
were "temporarily relocated" at a cost of over $3 million. The
temporary relocation became permanent and ultimately cost over $30
million. Worse yet, this scare led to the creation of Superfund, a
federal toxic waste site clean-up program. Over $16.3 billion has
been spent on the program, but only a small fraction of 1,500 waste
sites have been cleaned up. One third of Superfund expenditures have
been spent on legal fees and red tape.
Red Dye #2: For the better part of the 20th cen- tury, Red Dye #2
(RD#2) was the most widely used food coloring. Then in the 1970s,
the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) was prompted to study the
possible health effects of the dye after several studies with
questionable findings were released. Midway through the FDA's
study the test groups were mixed up, rendering the results
scientifically worthless. Nevertheless, because of intense political
pressure, the FDA attempted to draw conclusions from the botched
study and subsequently revoked RD#2's provisional approval.
Ironically, RD#2 was replaced by the more expensive Red Dye #40,
which had not undergone nearly the amount of rigorous testing RD#2
had.
Synthetic Estrogen: Diethylstilbestrol (DES) is a synthetic form of
estrogen that was used to prevent pregnancy complications for women
and as a growth hormone for cattle. In 1971, the New England Journal
of Medicine reported that a rare form of cancer was found in young
women whose mothers had taken high doses of DES during pregnancy. In
response, the FDA banned DES as a growth hormone for cattle in 1972.
But in banning the hormone for use in cattle, FDA failed to consider
that a woman would have to eat 62.5 tons of beef liver to consume the
amount of DES contained in the pills taken by the mothers who
ingested high doses of DES. Consequently, several tons of corn and
grain had to be reallocated for feeding cattle. This was corn and
grain that could have been used to feed under-nourished people
throughout the world.
Cellular Telephones: Two years after David Reynard of Tampa, Florida
gave his wife a cellular telephone, she was diagnosed with a
cancerous brain tumor, located just behind her right ear, the ear she
normally used while talking on her cellular phone. After her death,
Reynard sued the phone's manufacturer, alleging that
electromagnetic fields (EMFs) from the phone caused the tumor. His
subsequent appearance on CNN's Larry King Show led to a national
outcry against cellular phones and calls for new regulations and
mandates. The Cellular Phone Trade Association even pledged $25
million for safety research. Yet, Reynard's claim turned out to be
based on anecdotal rather than scientific evidence, and there has
yet to be a scientific study finding a link between cellular phones
and brain tumors.
DDT: During the 1940s, dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT) was
found to be an effective insecticide with no apparent effects on
humans. Then in 1970, the U.S. Department of Agriculture decided to
phase out most uses of DDT after a study was released showing that
mice fed DDT had higher rates of leukemia and liver tumors than mice
not fed the substance. Shortly after the ban, several new studies
were released showing no significant relationship between DDT
exposure and liver cancer and leukemia in animals. Unfortunately, it
turned out that instead of saving human lives, the DDT ban cost them.
For example, after DDT use ceased in Sri Lanka, malaria cases rose
from 17 in 1963 to 2.5 million in 1969, a whopping 147,000% increase
in just six years. According to the U.S. Agency for International
Development, malaria would have been virtually eliminated if DDT use
had continued.
(Information from the American Council on Science and Health's
Special Report, "Facts Versus Fears: A Review of the 20 Greatest
Unfounded Health Scares of Recent Times," May, 1997.)
Issue Date: January 1998
Talking Points on the Economy, Environment #35 and #36, published by
The National Center for Public Policy Research, 300 Eye St. NE #3,
Washington, D.C. 20002, 202/543-1286, Fax 202/543-4779, E-Mail
eptf@nationalcenter.org, Web www.nationalcenter.org.
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