03 May 2005
http://www.ledevoir.com/2005/05/03/80830.html
The
number of new cancer cases is growing twice as fast as population in Canada That's
ostrich vision, which anachronistically obscures the exposure to
environmental and professional risk factors.
Of
course, we all need to sweep our own doorstep, but the links between
pollution and many illnesses, including cancer, are better and better
documented, and the evolution is very worrying, not only in Canada. In
this context, a significant growth in the number of cancers throughout
the industrialized world has been observed for several decades (+35%
between 1980 and 2000 among the same age groups in France, with very
significant differences according to the type of cancer: 50% increase in
lung cancers, a doubling of breast cancers, a quadrupling of prostate
cancers).
It's
important to note: these increases have occurred across the board for
people of all ages. Some doctors are talking about an
"epidemic," even a "pandemic" of cancers.
"The
Human Race Is in Danger"
Dr.
Dominique Belpomme, cancer specialist and author of the book, Ces
maladies créées par l'Homme [Man-Made Illnesses], (Albin Michel,
2004), deems that 70% of all cancers are of environmental origin in the
largest sense of the term. He asserts that the norms set by governmental
regulations as thresholds for doses of toxic products "are, in
fact, too high to avoid the outbreak of cancers."
It
must be emphasized that our knowledge is highly fragmented with regard
to the toxic effects of the chemical cocktail conveyed in the air, the
water, and food. In this regard, 150,000 industrially-used compounds are
recorded in the Chemical Abstracts. Only several thousand of them have
even been tested for toxicity. It goes without saying that the
synergistic effects of these thousands of compounds are not generally
studied before they are marketed.
The
healthcare situation is so alarming that a hundred of the most renowned
scientists, including two Nobel Prize winners in medicine, launched an
international appeal against the danger of chemical pollutants through
UNESCO on
Some
substances that accumulate in our bodies are hormone disruptors; they
are carcinogenic, mutagens or reprotoxins. More and more men suffer from
fertility problems: the number of spermatozoa per ejaculation has
decreased by 50% in 50 years among Westerners. In
Given
the combination of chemical products, the Paris Appeal emphasizes that
"it has become extremely difficult to establish the absolute proof
of a direct link between exposures to one or another of these
manufactured substances and the development of diseases on an
epidemiological level."
Nonetheless,
the signatories have no doubt that "the development of many current
diseases is consequent to the degradation of the environment" and
that "chemical pollution constitutes a serious threat for the child
and for the survival of Humanity."
Lung
Cancer: The Québécois' Worst Record
In
Québec, a study by the National Institute for Public Health (2003)
compared the evolution of causes of death during the last twenty-five
years with 20 other countries, including the rest of
Yet
Québec is only around average in this sample of countries for the
proportion of regular smokers. Consequently, there are probably factors
other than tobacco that intervene in this carnage due to diseases and
tumors of the respiratory system (20% of deaths).
The
industrial fabric of Québec, with its asbestos scoria, wood dust and
aromatic polycyclic hydrocarbons (products notably of aluminum
refineries) certainly induces a significant part, all the more so as the
real conditions of work - pressure to produce - too often incite company
management, and workers, to neglect preventative measures.
And
what about the acid rain and photochemical smog imported in large part
from the United States? What of
air pollution and its cortege of carcinogenic particles? Why doesn't the
Canadian Cancer Society count these risk factors?
It
is obvious that, for any given population, several of these factors are
likely to interact and to empower the cancer- producing process in the
cells. Up until now, the neo-liberal thinking that favors a form of
laissez-faire with respect to the environment, health, and workplace
safety, by depending exclusively on individual initiative and companies'
good will, is demonstrably completely out of step with the actual public
health and biosphere preservation stakes involved.
The
prevention of cancers and other diseases of civilization, symptoms of an
unsustainable society, must start with a systematic vision of the stakes
involved and a global policy of reduction in environmental and
professional risk factors. Unfortunately, people have trouble in Ottawa
and in
Québec,
as in other world capitals, developing an awareness that the health of
the individual, the nature of social relations, and the health of the
Earth are indivisible.
Alain Brunel is an organizational sociologist, hygiene, security, and
work conditions consultant for the Paris firm Technologia as well as a
co-founder of the "Association québécoise de lutte contre les
pluies acides" (AQLPA) [Québec Association to Fight Acid Rain] in
1982.
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/050305I.shtml
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()