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Greetings,

I am cross-posting a message from another list that is concerned
with environmental toxins...

I lost my mother to pd 2 years ago
and both of us always wondered
if the hospital environment she had worked in for 30 years
had somehow contributed to her developing  Parkinson's Disease.

I post it here FYI...
Joan U on a mild, grey day in southern Ontario, Canada.
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----- Original Message -----
From: [log in to unmask]
To: Undisclosed-Recipient:;
Sent: Monday, November 17, 2003 3:15 AM
Subject: [Gasslist-L] Hospital - harmful pesticides
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Date:    Wed, 12 Nov 2003 12:39:39 -0500
Subject: New survey: many hospitals use harmful pesticides; report shows how
to manage pests safely

Press Release
November 12, 2003

NEW SURVEY FINDS 100% OF RESPONDING HOSPITALS USE HAZARDOUS PESTICIDES
IN OR AROUND FACILITIES Report shows how hospitals can manage pests
without harmful pesticides

Contact: Jay Feldman, 202-543-5450
Stacy Malkan, Health Care Without Harm, 202-234-0091, ext.14
Ann McCampbell, HCWH/MCS Task Force of New Mexico, 505-466-3622

(Washington, DC, November 12, 2003) A first-of-its-kind survey of top
U.S. hospitals finds that many major hospitals are regularly spraying
toxic pesticides, unnecessarily risking the health of patients, staff
and visitors. The survey results are detailed in a new report, Healthy
Hospitals: Controlling Pests Without Harmful Pesticides.

The report, released today by health advocate groups Health Care Without
Harm (HCWH) and Beyond Pesticides, offers tips and resources for how
hospitals can manage pests while also protecting the health of people
and the environment. It is available at
<http://www.beyondpesticides.org/main.html>http://www.beyondpesticides.or=
g/main.html.=20

Hospitals are intended to be places of healing, yet many are using
hazardous pesticides unnecessarily in a spray and pray approach to pest
management, when safer and more effective methods are available, said
Ann McCampbell, M.D., of HCWH.

"Obviously patients and staff should be protected from pests, but they
also need to be protected from pesticides," said Ted Schettler, M.D., a
practicing physician in Boston and science director of the Science and
Environmental Health Network.

"Pesticides can cause an array of health problems, particularly in
developing children, people with asthma, chemical sensitivities or with
compromised immune systems. Some pesticides being used on hospital
grounds are linked to cancer and birth defects, as well as neurological
and reproductive disorders," Dr. Schettler said. "Alternative approaches
that reduce or eliminate exposures can and should be used.

The survey also offered good news: Some hospitals are having great
success managing pests with no or very few hazardous pesticides by using
proven, safer Integrated Pest Management (IPM) techniques.

A good IPM program includes reducing pests' sources of food, water and
shelter; proper maintenance of buildings, lawns and landscapes; using a
least-hazardous pesticide only when other options have failed; and
notifying patients and staff of any pesticide use.

"There is an urgent need for more hospitals to protect people's health
by using safer pest management practices, in keeping with the medical
profession's commitment to "First, do no harm." said Jay Feldman,
executive director of Beyond Pesticides. "Our report gives hospitals all
the necessary tools to implement a successful IPM program."

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