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EPA PAYS FAMILIES TO EXPOSE THEIR INFANTS
TO PESTICIDES: Joint
Study With Chemical Industry to Measure Exposure in the Home;
Agency Removes Study Protocol From Its Web Site
For Immediate Release: Monday, November 1, 2004
Contact: Chas Offutt (202) 265-7337
Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER)
See the flyers for parents to participate in CHEERS http://www.peer.org/EPA/cheersad.pdf
Read the EPA Desk Statement on CHEERS http://www.peer.org/EPA/deskstatement.pdf
View excerpts from the CHEERS protocol removed from the EPA website
http://www.peer.org/EPA/epastudydesign.pdf
A complete copy of the protocol is available upon request
Washington, DC The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
is paying selected Florida families who spray or have pesticides
sprayed inside your home routinely to study their infant
children, according to agency documents released today by Public
Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER). When agency
scientists started questioning the ethics of the study, EPA removed
the study protocol from its website and distributed a short Desk
Statement that the scientists say is misleading.
Conducted with funding from the American Chemistry Council, which
represents 135 companies including pesticide manufacturers, the
Childrens Environmental Exposure Research Study (CHEERS)
will monitor developmental changes in babies, from birth to age
3, who are exposed to pesticides in their homes. Set in Jacksonville,
Florida (Duval County), the study looks at 60 infants and toddlers.
Agency scientists not connected with the study are expressing
concerns about
· Financial Incentives. The study makes payments to families
totaling $970 for participating throughout the entire two-year
period. Families who complete the study also get to keep the camcorder
they are provided to record their babies behavior. In addition,
families are given bibs, t-shirts and other promotional items.
Families are recruited from public clinics and hospitals;
· Lack of Treatment. The study makes no provision for
intervening if infants or toddlers show signs of developmental
problems or register alarmingly high exposure levels in their
urine samples. Instead, families continue in the study so long
as researchers are notified when each pesticide application occurs;
and
· Lack of Education. Unlike other EPA programs in this
area, the study does not provide participants information about
the safe or proper ways to apply or store pesticides around the
home. Nor does the study furnish participating families with information
about the risks of prolonged or excessive exposure to pesticides.
EPA scientists began raising these concerns and questioning the
value of the study itself. Farm workers or others who have pesticide
exposure outside the home are not excluded, nor are children with
pre-existing health issues. In fact, the study protocol declares
It will not be possible to draw inferences to a larger population
from the results of the study.
EPA reacted to these questions by removing the study protocol
from its website. The agency then began distributing a two page
Desk Statement that claims, Participants are not required
to use pesticides. While 10 percent of the participants
are the control group with no or low pesticide exposure in their
homes, the remaining 90 percent are eligible to enter and remain
in the study only if they spray routinely. Indeed, the infants
are selected based upon pesticide residue levels detected in a
surface wipe sample in the primary room where the child spends
time.
If EPA is going to engage in experimentation on human subjects,
especially infants, it should go the extra mile to be aboveboard
and protective of the subjects health, stated PEER
executive Director Jeff Ruch, noting the Bush Administration has
been pushing to liberalize rules on using human testing of pesticides
and other chemicals. Removing the study design from the
EPA website and then issuing defensive, weasel-worded statements
is hardly confidence inspiring.
In its Desk Statement, EPA claims that the study protocols
have been reviewed and approved by four Independent Institutional
Review Boards for the protection of Human Subjects but does
not make copies of those reviews available.
The American Chemistry Council, which contributed $2 million
to CHEERS, also successfully lobbied to include exposure to flame
retardants and other household chemicals in the study. EPA defends
the industry involvement, pointing to 80 similar research agreements
it has with industry.
The danger of these arrangements is that, in order to win
industry support, EPA tailors its research to serve the objectives
of corporate R & D first and public health second, Ruch
added.
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