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TOP TWENTY

Power lines double
risk of leukaemia

Death by chocolate

Killer bras

Cancer on the lawn

Cordless phones
also fry


Bugs drop out
of the air


Children's bones
fizzed away


Organic milk just
oozes health

Animals give GM
the thumbs down


Out of the frying pan
- Teflon 'flu


More trees no answer to
global warming


Fluoride dumbs
down children


Ultrasound
- just looking can hurt


Short mobile calls affect
children's brains
for 50 minutes

Mum's fillings - why there
are four times more
autistic boys


Pot plants hoover
up pollution


Am I a girl or a boy?

Margarine brings fourfold
risk of blindness

Leave the sunscreen at home

Elderberry knocks out 'flu

 
Cancer on the lawn
Children from houses where hanging insecticidal strips are used are at almost twice the risk of developing leukaemia. This rises to three times the risk if the strips were used in the last three months of pregnancy. Dichlorvos, the main insecticide used in hanging strips is classified by the US Environmental Protection Agency as a human carcinogen.

The researchers* also found that children living in houses with gardens treated with chemicals were almost four times more likely to contract soft tissue sarcomas, a type of cancer.

* from the North Carolina State Center for Health and Environmental Studies

Ed.- (i) Another study showed that dogs were twice as likely to develop cancers if their owners treated their lawns with 2,4-D.

(ii) Dichlorvos, the main insecticide used in hanging strips is classified by the US Environmental Protection Agency as a human carcinogen. 2,4-D, the main weedkiller used in gardens, has been linked with cancer in farm workers by several studies.

(264) Independent on Sunday

 


Dichlorvos in fly sprays and strips

Two UK Government expert committees have called on the Government to continue to pursue a ban on any products containing the organophosphate dichlorvos (DDVP). A ban would already be in force were it not for a vigorous legal campaign by DDVP’s manufacturer Amvac (Boots has decided not to wait for a ban and has already removed the two products containing dichlorvos from their shelves).

The pesticide, a highly toxic organophosphate designed to disrupt the nervous system, has been linked to skin, liver and possibly breast cancer. “A precautionary approach should be adopted and no (safety) threshold could be assumed for the mutagenic and carcinogenic effects of dichlorvos”, stated the UK Department of Health’s Committee on Mutagenicity.
As well as being the key ingredient in many branded insect sprays and traps, it is often used by gardeners and farmers to control pests. In the past, hundreds of tonnes were also deployed by salmon farmers to kill lice.

The problem, according to environmental researcher Don Staniford, is that the chemicals that are now replacing dichlorvos may be even worse. Azamethiphos, for instance, is said to be ten times more toxic than dichlorvos, and is already under investigation as a possible carcinogen.

Ed.- In the past Amvac paid British students to eat the chemical in order to test its effects on health!

(8815) Daily Mail