News
Breaking: New Study Links Mountaintop Removal to 60,000 Additional Cancer Cases
Wednesday, July 27th, 2011
by Jeff Biggers, cross posted from Alternet.org
Among the 1.2 million American citizens living in mountaintop removal mining counties in central Appalachia, an additional 60,000 cases of cancer are directly linked to the federally sanctioned strip-mining practice.
That is the damning conclusion in a breakthrough study, released last night in the peer-reviewed Journal of Community Health: The Publication for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention. Led by West Virginia University researcher Dr. Michael Hendryx, among others, the study entitled “Self-Reported Cancer Rates in Two Rural Areas of West Virginia with and Without Mountaintop Coal Mining” drew from a groundbreaking community-based participatory research survey conducted in Boone County, West Virginia in the spring of 2011, which gathered person-level health data from communities directly impacted by mountaintop mining, and compared to communities without mining.
“A door to door survey of 769 adults found that the cancer rate was twice as high in a community exposed to mountaintop removal mining compared to a non-mining control community,” said Hendryx, Associate Professor at the Department of Community Medicine and Director of West Virginia Rural Health Research Center at West Virginia University. “This significantly higher risk was found after control for age, sex, smoking, occupational exposure and family cancer history. The study adds to the growing evidence that mountaintop mining environments are harmful to human health.”
Bottom line: Far from simply being an environmental issue, mountaintop removal is killing American residents.
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July 27th, 2011 at 11:22 pm
Cancer, birth defects, bad water, bad air, deforestation, flooding, loss of jobs, economy in the tank, mountains to moonscapes… what more is needed to expose mountaintop mining for what it is. Our ostrich leaders need to pull their heads out of the hole and look around at the real world and pass the Clean Water Protection Act.