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Dying from Dioxins

JoAnn Guest

Jul 24, 2006 15:26 PDT

--

Dioxin In Beef

Nov 3, 1997 mcli-

(McLibel Support Campaign) Jon Campbell

 

Letter from Jon Comments by Mike

Mike's site John's site

 

Hi I met Dave at the CCHW convention in Arlington, VA several weeks

ago. You might recall that I promised I'd send some info about

dioxin in beef. Sorry for the delay. Basic information about dioxin,

and recommendations regarding dioxin in diet can be found at:

 

http://www.cqs.com/edioxin.htm

(see below)

More detailed information can be found in the book Dying From Dioxin

by Lois Gibbs.

The long and the short of it is: 1. The EPA, in 1994, re-assessed

thetoxicity of dioxin, and confirmed the finding that it was the most

toxicorganic chemical known, with measurable health effects in our

bodiesat levels of as little as 10-15 ppt, cumulative over a

lifetime.

 

Based on this, the EPA set the " acceptable " dose of dioxin

to be .006 picograms (six million millionths of a gram) per kilogram

of body weight, or about 0.40 picograms for an adult (proportional

to body weight - much less for a child).

 

2. Beef is about the most dioxin-contaminated food, at about 1part

per

million million (or 1 picogram per gram of food). That means that a

single McDonald's hamburger in the U.S. has about 100 picograms of

dioxin (assuming a 100-gram patty).

 

(I don't know whether food testing for dioxin has

been done by the British govt; I assume it has...). That is 250

TIMES the EPA " acceptable daily dose " for an adult (and double that

for a child).

 

If people knew that by eating at McDonalds that threatening their

health

and the health of their children, rather

dramatically, they might be less inclined to eat there... You might,

if you have a chance, check out the rest of my website (www.cqs.com)

and let me know what you think... Regards Jon Campbell

 

Mike Ewall

 

D Briars Dave, I trust that Jon Campbell knows his stuff on

this. He's working on a book, actually. It's about personal ways to

reduce your exposure to dioxin and similar problems. Yes, 90% of the

dioxin you're exposed to is through meat and dairy products. Sadly,

while the main anti-toxics groups will admit this, they all but

refuse to recommend a vegan diet. Beef is the most dioxin-

contaminated food according to EPA.

 

There is a wonderful chart from their 94 report that I scanned and

put

on my dioxin website at

http://www.envirolink.org/issues/dioxin/ (see below) Mike

 

From Mike's page

 

What is dioxin? Dioxin is one of the most toxic chemicals known. A

report released for public comment in September 1994 by the US

Environmental Protection Agency clearly describes dioxin as a

serious public health threat.

 

The public health impact of dioxin may

rival the impact that DDT had on public health in the 1960's.

According to the EPA report, not only does there appear to be

no " safe " level of exposure to dioxin, but levels of dioxin and

dioxin-like chemicals have been found in the general US population

that are " at or near levels associated with adverse health effects. "

 

The EPA report confirmed that dioxin is a cancer hazard to people;

that exposure to dioxin can also cause severe reproductive and

developmental problems (at levels 100 times lower than those

associated with its cancer causing effects); and that dioxin can

cause immune system damage and interfere with regulatory hormones.

 

Dioxin is a general term that describes a group of hundreds of

chemicals that are highly persistent in the environment. The most

toxic compound is 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin or TCDD. The

toxicity of other dioxins and chemicals like PCBs that act like

dioxin are measured in relation to TCDD.

 

Dioxin is formed as an unintentional by-product of many industrial

processes involving

chlorine such as waste incineration, chemical and pesticide

manufacturing and pulp and paper bleaching.

 

Dioxin was the primary toxic component of Agent Orange, was found at

Love Canal in Niagara

Falls, NY and was the basis for evacuations at Times Beach, MO and

Seveso Italy.

 

Where does dioxin come from? Dioxin is formed by

burning chlorine-based chemical compounds with hydrocarbons. The

major source of dioxin in the environment (95%) comes from

incinerators burning chlorinated wastes.

 

Dioxin pollution is also

affiliated with paper mills which use chlorine bleaching in their

process and with the production of Polyvinyl Chloride (PVC)

plastics.

 

What health effects are related to exposure to dioxin and

dioxin-like compounds? Sperm count in men worldwide has dropped to

50% of what it was 50 years ago. The incidence of testicular cancer

has tripled in the last 50 years, and prostate cancer has doubled.

 

 

Endometriosis - the painful growth outside the uterus of cells that

normally line the uterus - -which was formerly a rare condition, now

afflicts 5 million American women.

 

In 1960, a woman's chance of developing breast cancer during her

lifetime was one in 20. Today the chances are one in eight.

 

How are we exposed to dioxin? The major sources of dioxin are in our

diet. Since dioxin is fat-

soluble, it bioaccumulates up the food chain and it is mainly

(97.5%) found in meat and dairy products (beef, dairy products,

milk, chicken, pork, fish and eggs in that order... see chart

below).

 

Dioxin will find animals to go in to,

working its way to the top of the food chain. Men have no ways to

get rid of dioxin other than letting it break down according to its

chemical half-lives.

 

Women, on the other hand, have two ways which

it can exit their bodies: It crosses the placenta... into the

growing infant; It is present in the fatty breast milk, which is

also a route of exposure which doses the infant, making breast-

feeding for non-vegetarian mothers quite hazardous.

 

This is where you get dioxin from Total exposure/injestion = 119

pg/day

Beef 38.0

Dairy 24.1 Milk 17.6 Chicken 12.9 Pork 12.2Inhalation 2.2 Soil .8

Water

Negligible Chart from EPA Dioxin

Reassessment Summary 4/94 - Vol. 1, p. 37 (Figure II-5. Background

TEQ exposures for North America by pathway) EPA's reports on dioxin.

 

Much of this new research into the health effects of dioxin was

undertaken in response to industry challenges to EPA's findings on

the toxicity of dioxin in 1991.

 

Now, 3 years later, dioxin was found to be more dangerous than ever.

Copies of the EPA Health Assessment

report may be obtained by contacting: CERI/ORD Publications Center

USEPA 26 W. Martin Luther King Drive Cincinnati, OH 45268 (513) 569-

7562; fax (513) 569-7566. EPA's Scientific Advisory Board has

completed its reassessment of dioxin.

To get copies of the dioxin

report, contact Sam Rondberg at the EPA at (202) 260-2559. The final

final report issued by the Health and Exposures Panels of the

Science Advisory Board regarding the dioxin reassessment is now

available. Get your copy by calling the SAB at: 202-260-8414, or

fax: 202-260-1889. Environmental Research Foundation's RACHEL's

Environment & Health Weekly Issues (many links follow)

 

Jon's site

 

What Is Dioxin? Dioxin is the name generally given to a class of

super-toxic chemicals, the chlorinated dioxins and furans, formed as

a by-product of the manufacture, molding, or burning of organic

chemicals and plastics that contain chlorine.

 

 

It is the nastiest, most toxic man-made organic chemical; its

toxicity

is second only to

radioactive waste. Dioxin made headlines several years ago at places

such as Love Canal, where hundreds of families needed to abandon

their homes due to dioxin contamination, and Times Beach, Missouri,

a town that was abandoned as a result of dioxin.

 

Dioxin - An Unprecedented Threat We now know that dioxin exhibits

serious health

effects when it reaches as little as a few parts per trillion in

your body fat.

 

Dioxin is a powerful hormone disrupting chemical. By

binding to a cell's hormone receptor, it literally modifies the

functioning and genetic mechanism of the cell, causing a wide range

of effects, from cancer to reduced immunity to nervous system

disorders to miscarriages and birth deformity.

 

Because it literally changes the functioning of your cells, the

effects

can be very

obvious or very subtle.

 

Because it changes gene functions, it can

cause so-called genetic diseases to appear, and can interfere with

child development.

 

There is no " threshold " dose - the tiniest amount

can cause damage, and our bodies have no defense against it.

 

Unfortunately, according to the EPA, much of the population of the

U.S. is at the dose at which there can be serious health effects.

 

How did this happen? For about 40 years we have seen a dramatic

increase in the manufacture and use of chlorinated organic chemicals

and plastics.

 

For chemicals, it was insecticides and herbicides

(weed killers). For plastics, it was primarily polyvinyl chloride

(PVC). From phonograph records to automobile seat covers to wire

insulation to shampoo bottles to handbags to house siding to

plumbing pipes to wallpaper, we are literally surrounded by PVC.

 

When these chemicals and plastics are manufactured or burned, dioxin

is produced as an unwanted (but inevitable) by-product. Dioxin had

been a little-known threat for many years near factories that

produce PVC plastic or chlorinated pesticides and herbicides, and

where those pesticides and herbicides have been heavily used, such

as on farms, near electric and railway lines, apple orchards, paper

company forests.

 

It became better known when Vietnam War veterans

and Vietnamese civilians, exposed to dioxin-contaminated Agent

Orange, became ill. It has been a hazard downstream of paper mills

(where chlorine bleach combines with natural organics in wood pulp

and produces dioxin).

 

Several towns and cities have become

contaminated as a result of chemical spills or manufacturing

emissions, some that needed to be evacuated. Love Canal (Niagara

Falls, N.Y), Seveso (Italy), Times Beach (Missouri), Pensacola

(Florida), and the entire city of Midland, Michigan have high

concentrations of dioxin.

 

Bizarre health effects, such as cancer,

spina bifida (split spine) and other birth defects, autism, liver

disease, endometriosis, reduced immunity, chronic fatigue syndrome,

and other nerve and blood disorders have been noted.

 

But in the last

20 years we have begun to burn household and industrial trash and

medical waste in mass-burn incinerators. The result - given that we

have disposable vinyl plastic all around us - has been a dramatic

increase in dioxin contamination everywhere in the U.S.

 

Dioxin, formed during burning, is carried for hundreds of miles on

tiny

 

specks of fly-ash from the incinerators.

 

It settles on crops, which

then get eaten by cows, steers, pigs, and chickens. It contaminates

lakes, streams, and the ocean.

 

Like the pesticides such as DDT,

dioxin accumulates in the fat cells of the animals, and re-appears

in meat and milk.

 

Dioxin is virtually indestructible in most

environments, and is excreted by the body extremely slowly.

 

How To Avoid Dioxin

 

Do not eat beef or pork, which have some of the largest

concentrations of dioxin of all food sources. Chicken has the lowest

dioxin content of all meats, but is still significant.

 

Vegetarian meat substitutes such as organic tofu, beans, and rice

have

essentially no

contamination.

 

If your family drinks milk, drink only organic skim milk,

since dioxin is carried in the butterfat.

 

Avoid all full-fat dairy

products, such as butter, cheese and ice cream.

 

Use non-fat skim-

milk products or non-dairy substitutes.

 

Do not breast-feed infants,

as human milk contains more dioxin than any other food (in relation

to an infant s body weight), unless you have eaten a non-dairy, low-

fat vegetarian diet for several years.

 

Avoid all organic chemicals

that have " chloro " as part of their names (such as the wood

preservative pentachlorophenol, which is probably the most dioxin-

contaminated household chemical).

 

Avoid chlorine bleach (sodium

hypochlorite) and products containing it. (Use oxygen bleach

instead).

 

Use unbleached paper products. Do not use weed killers or

insecticides that contain chlorine. Especially avoid the

chlorophenol weed killers, such as 2,4-D, found in most

fertilizer/weed killers and used by commercial lawn services.

Avoid " Permethrin " flea sprays for pets.

 

Avoid household or personal

products and toys made of or packaged in polyvinyl chloride - PVC -

labeled V or #3 plastic. (For example, Beanie Babies are filled with

PVC beads, which often produce cancer-causing vinyl chloride fumes

and are often contaminated with dioxin.)

 

Avoid using Saran Wrap and

similar " cling-type " plastic wraps (unless they are clearly

identified as non-chlorinated plastic.).

 

Wash all fruits and

vegetables carefully to remove chlorophenol pesticide residue.

 

Avoid

grapes and raisins unless they are clearly labeled as organic (grown

without pesticides).

 

Avoid all products which have cottonseed oil as

an ingredient (such as potato chips),

 

since cotton is often sprayed

with chlorophenol insecticides.

 

Do not use soaps containing tallow

(most soaps), as it is made from animal fat. Avoid " deodorant " soaps

and deodorants containing " triclosan, " a chlorophenol.

What You Can Do The way to reduce the dioxin threat is to stop

burning

trash and to stop producing PVC and other chlorinated chemicals.

 

If your town sends its trash to an incinerator, tell your town

officials

to institute comprehensive recycling.

 

Write to companies that use vinyl

and ask them to use the known safe substitutes.

 

Ask your supermarket and office supply stores to sell Totally

Chlorine

Free (TCF)

products.

 

Learn more about the dioxin threat. Read the books Dying

From Dioxin by Lois Gibbs, and Our Stolen Future by Theo Colborn.

 

Talk to your friends and neighbors about dioxin and what you can do

to reduce the threat. Join a community environmental organization,

or form one if there are none in your town. Call a state or national

organization to get help.

 

Download a copy of a Microsoft Word

Version 6-compatible version of this document for a community

information leaflet.

U.S. McLibel Support Campaign Email dbri- PO Box 62

Phone/Fax 802-586-9628 Craftsbury VT 05826-0062

http://www.mcspotlight.org/

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Mitchell B. Stargrove,

N.D., L.Ac.

Integrative Medical Arts Group, Inc. 503/526-1972 4720 SW Watson

Avenue, Beaverton, OR 97005 fax: 503/643-4633

Integrative Medicine, Natural Health and Alternative Therapies

IBIS Medical Software: Interactive BodyMind Information System

http://www.HealthWWWeb.com http://www.Integrative-Medicine.com

 

JoAnn Guest

mrsjo-

http://www.topica.com/lists/Melanoma

http://www.geocities.com/mrsjoguest/FreeRadicals.html

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