| GOV. STUDY SAYS NO
DISEASE LINK FROM LEJEUNE WATER
Contaminated drinking water at Camp
Lejeune can't definitively be linked to health problems among
people who lived at the Marine base over three decades.
by Larry Scott, VA Watchdog
dot Org
This is what veterans and
military members have come to expect from the
National Academies
... the good folk who bring you the Institute of Medicine (
IOM ) ... and, in the case of
this study, the National Research Council (
NRC
).
Most readers are familiar with
the
veteran-unfriendly assessments coming from IOM. Now, we
can add one from NRC.
The
complete
NRC report is here ... and is explained in the article below.
Use our search engine to find
out more about
contamination at Camp Lejeune.
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Lejeune water study finds no definite disease link
AP
RALEIGH, N.C. – Contaminated drinking water at Camp Lejeune can't
definitively be linked to health problems among people who lived
at the Marine base over three decades, according to a government
report released Saturday.
Former residents of the base in eastern North Carolina don't have
diseases different from the general population and the industrial
solvents that tainted well water there between the 1950s and 1985
were at concentrations that don't cause obvious harm to human
health, according to the report ordered by Congress and released
by the National Research Council.
But the 341-page report, which reviews past studies of the base's
water and health issues there, said there are severe challenges in
trying to connect the contaminants to any birth defects, cancer
and many other ailments suffered by people who lived and worked on
base.
It "cannot be determined reliably whether diseases and disorders
experienced by former residents and workers at Camp Lejuene are
associated with their exposure to contaminants in the water
supply," the report states.
"Even with scientific advances, the complex nature of the Camp
Lejeune contamination and the limited data on the concentrations
in water supplies allow for only crude estimates of exposure,"
David Savitz, chairman of the committee that wrote the report,
said in a statement.
The study says the Marines and Navy shouldn't wait for more
scientific studies before deciding how to deal with health
problems reported by former base residents. And it calls into
question the value of further studies.
"It would be extremely difficult to conduct direct epidemiologic
studies of sufficient quality and scope to make a substantial
contribution to resolving the health concerns of former Camp
Lejeune residents. Conduct of research that is deficient in those
respects not only would waste resources
but
has the potential to do harm by generating misleading results that
erroneously implicate or exonerate the exposures of concern," it
states.
A Marine Corps spokesman, 1st Lt. Brian Block, said the service
would study the report before making a statement.
"After a thorough review of the report, we will determine what the
next appropriate steps are," he said.
One longtime critic of the military's handling of the issue said
he wanted to question the study panel, which he said didn't have
all the information it needed about contaminants.
"This is a whitewash of the facts," said Jerry Ensminger, a
retired Marine whose daughter was conceived on Camp Lejeune and
died of childhood leukemia in 1985 at age 9.
Water was contaminated by dry cleaning solvents and other sources
at the base's major family housing areas — Tarawa Terrace and
Hadnot Point, the report said. Health officials believe as many as
1 million people may have been exposed to the toxins
tricholorethylene (TCE) or perchloroethylene (PCE) before the
wells were closed 22 years ago.
But the sizeable number of people in those housing areas did not
suffer more than "common diseases or disorders," said the study by
the working arm of the National Academy of Sciences.
"The lowest doses at which adverse health effects have been seen
in animal or clinical studies are many times higher than the
worst-case (highest) assumed exposures at Camp Lejeune. However,
that does not rule out the possibility that other, more subtle
health effects that have not been well studied could occur,
although it somewhat diminishes their likelihood," it states.
North Carolina's senators have said they will seek details about
the contamination from the military. Calls to the offices of
Senators Kay Hagan, D-NC, and Richard Burr, R-NC, were not
immediately returned Saturday.
Hagan said last month she and Burr were asking the Navy for
details about gaps in information.
Federal health officials withdrew a 1997 assessment of health
effects from the contamination at Camp Lejeune because of
omissions and scientific inaccuracy. The assessment said the
chemicals posed little or no cancer risk to adults who were
exposed to the past water contamination at Camp Lejeune.
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TOPICS:
veterans, veterans' benefits, VA, Department of Veterans' Affairs,
Camp Lejeune, contaminated drinking water |