An Important Health Message from The President's Cancer Panel
Cancer panel: 'Grievous harm' posed by unchecked chemicals in U.S.
By Lyndsey Layton
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, May 6, 2010; 1:46 PM
An expert panel that advises the President on cancer said Thursday that Americans are facing "grievous harm"
from chemicals in the air, food and water that have largely gone unregulated and ignored.
The President's Cancer Panel called for a new national strategy that focuses on such threats in the environment and
workplace. It called those dangers "underestimated."
"With the growing body of evidence linking environmental exposures to cancer, the public is becoming increasingly
aware of the unacceptable burden of cancer resulting from environmental and occupational exposures that could
have been prevented through appropriate national action," the panel wrote in a report released Thursday.
Currently, federal chemical laws are weak, funding is inadequate and regulatory responsibilities are split among too many
agencies, the panel found.
Children are particularly vulnerable because of their smaller bodies and fast physical development, the panel
found. The report noted rising rates of cancer in children, and it referred to recent studies that have found
industrial chemicals in umbilical-cord blood, which supplies nutrients to developing fetuses.
"To a disturbing extent, babies are born 'pre-polluted,' " the panel wrote.
Health officials lack critical knowledge about the health impact of chemicals on fetuses and children, the report said.
In addition, the government's standards for safe chemical exposure in the workplace are outdated, it said.
In 2009, about 1.5 million American men, women and children had cancer diagnosed, and 562,000 people died from the
disease.
The panel found that the country needs to overhaul existing chemical laws, a conclusion that has been supported
by public health groups, environmental advocates, the chemical industry and the Obama administration.
The current system places the burden on the government to prove beyond a doubt that a chemical is unsafe before it can be
removed from the market. The standards are so high the government has been unable to ban chemicals such as asbestos, a
widely recognized carcinogen that is prohibited in dozens of countries.
About 80,000 chemicals are in commercial use in the United States, but federal regulators
have assessed only about 200 for safety.
A bill filed last month by Sen. Frank Lautenberg (D-N.J.), the Safe Chemicals Act of 2010, would shift
the burden to manufacturers to prove the safety of new chemicals before they can be used. It would
also require companies to give federal regulators safety data for chemicals already on the market. The
cancer panel called that bill a good starting point.
Still, the panel said, when the government evaluates the safety of a chemical, it needs to
look beyond individual chemicals to consider the cumulative effect on humans from exposure
to multiple chemicals, and it must consider how small amounts of a chemical can cause
subtle changes in the human body that can result in cancer years later.
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