Analysis Finds Toxic Levels Of Formaldehyde In FEMA Trailer Units Provided To Gulf Coast Area Residents, CDC Says
Main Category: Public HealthAlso Included In: Aid / Disasters
Article Date: 15 Feb 2008 - 9:00 PDT
An analysis of the air quality of trailer units provided to Gulf Coast area residents after Hurricane Katrina found toxic levels of formaldehyde, which can cause respiratory and other health problems, CDC officials said on Wednesday, the AP/New York Times reports.
For the analysis, Bureau Veritas North America -- an independent contractor hired by CDC and the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which purchased the trailer units in August 2005 -- tested the air quality of 519 units in Louisiana and Mississippi between Dec. 21, 2007, and Jan. 23. The analysis found average levels of formaldehyde of 77 parts per billion in the air of the trailer units, with levels as high as 590 parts per billion in some units. The air in new homes has average levels of formaldehyde of 10 to 17 parts per billion. Mike McGeehin, director of the Division of Environmental Hazards and Health Effects at CDC, said that the analysis found the highest levels of the formaldehyde in the air of smaller and less ventilated trailer units (Stobbe, AP/New York Times, 2/14).
CDC and FEMA officials on Thursday plan to begin meeting with the estimated 100,000 residents of the 38,000 trailer units in the Gulf Coast area to discuss immediate relocation measures. According to federal researchers, the agencies should first relocate residents with chronic health problems, such as asthma, elderly residents and families with children (Hsu, Washington Post, 2/14). McGeehin said that, because higher indoor air temperatures significantly contribute to the high levels of formaldehyde found in the trailer units, CDC hopes to relocate residents before summer (AP/New York Times, 2/14).
CDC Director Julie Gerberding said that the results of the analysis indicate the need "to move people who have been reluctant to move and to move us in government to do more to find reliable housing" for Gulf Coast area residents affected by the hurricane. In addition, she said, "If levels are high today, that means people in housing vulnerable to formaldehyde could be exposed to health effects now," adding, "We're also concerned because they've been in there 18 months, and even a low level could result in large cumulative exposure." Gerberding said, "We know less about effects of chronic exposure. It's very important we reduce it as much and as quickly as we can, and the way to do that is to get people out of these homes" (Washington Post, 2/14).
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (1)
Note On Trailers And Other Formaldehyde Sources: Rich Murray 2008.02.23
posted by Rich Murray on 23 Feb 2008 at 7:30 pmnote on trailers and other formaldehyde sources: Rich Murray 2008.02.23
So far, I haven't seen anyone else connect these black dots, and ask, "Since
formaldehyde is formaldehyde, whether from trailers, dark wines and liquors,
tobacco or wood smoke, faulty stoves and heaters, or aspartame, then all
these sources have to be discussed publicly, vigorously, accurately, now,
since it is neurotoxic and carcinogenic, impairing fertility and increasing
birth defects -- right to life issues, anyone? ---
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/aspartameNM/message/1455 --- FEMA slow to
safety test Katrina toxic trailers, Charles Babington of Associated Press --
1 ppm formaldehyde in air is about half the daily dose from 3 cans aspartame
diet soda and ten times the 1999 EPA alarm level for drinking water: Murray
2007.07.23 --- Rich Murray rmforall@comcast.net 505-501-2298 1943 Otowi
Road, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87505
formaldehyde in FEMA trailers and other sources (aspartame, dark wines and
liquors, tobacco smoke): Murray 2008.01.30
http://rmforall.blogspot.com/2008_01_01_archive.htm
Wednesday, January 30, 2008
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/aspartameNM/message/1508
The FEMA trailers give about the same amount of formaldehyde daily as from a
quart of dark wine or liquor, or two quarts (6 12-oz cans) of aspartame diet
soda, from their over 1 tenth gram methanol impurity (one part in 10,000),
which the body quickly makes into formaldehyde -- enough to be the major
cause of "morning after" alcohol hangovers.
Methanol and formaldehyde also result from many fruits and vegetables,
tobacco and wood smoke, heater and vehicle exhaust, household chemicals and
cleaners, cosmetics, and new cars, drapes, carpets, furniture,
particleboard, mobile homes, buildings, leather... so all these sources add
up and interact with many other toxic chemicals.
BN Ames and LS Gold, 1998, have presented detailed information that there is
no increase in recent decades for most cancers, and that common carcinogens
do not result in significant exposures to the average human population.
However, individuals are not average -- each person has a unique genetic
makeup, resulting in a huge range of variation of vulnerability to specific
chemicals, as is well evidenced in the case of methanol, formaldehyde, and
formic acid, especially with regard to behavioral effects.
Each is subject to very wide ranges of exposure levels.
Many are in especially vulnerable groups, depending on diet, obesity, sex,
exercise, life stress, age from conception to very old, unusually severe
toxic exposures, injuries, and diseases.
It is clear that a variety of multiple chemical sensitivity syndromes do
exist, often with remarkable hypersensitivity.
Methanol, formaldehyde, and formic acid toxicity are unusual, in that humans
are far more vulnerable than any other mammal, as much as ten to sixty-fold,
which complicates the utility of animal data.
The unusually long human life span also increases the role of long-term
chronic low-level exposure.
Rich Murray Santa Fe, New Mexico 87505 USA
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