Posts Tagged ‘Libby Amphibole Health Risk Initiative’

$8 million asbestos study in Libby

19 Jun 2008 by Wendi Lewis under News, Research/Treatment

After years of ignoring the dangers of , and the resulting nationwide epidemic of disease, including , there is a renewed interest in studying this deadly material. This week, the Billings Gazette announced the federal government will fund an $8 million study to understand the health effects of low-level exposure to . The study will be based in , Montana, where more than 200 people have died to date as a result of mining operations in the town, and hundreds more people suffer from related diseases.

The program, dubbed the Amphibole Health Risk Initiative, is funded by the and the Department of Health and Human Services’ Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry. The study is expected to span 5 years with a goal of expanding knowledge about the potential and real health issues of exposure.

already has proved a tragically rich source of knowledge about long-term exposure to high levels of , as the EPA’s initial examination and cleanup of the town focused on miners with direct exposure to the substance in their jobs, as well as people who handled mineral and were exposed to dust secondarily on a daily basis.

But, the Gazette reports, too little is know about exposure to lower levels of . EPA officials hope that results of the study will benefit not only the residents of , but people throughout the country.

In April, the Minnesota state legislature approved $4.9 million for its own five-year study, to be conducted under the direction of the University of , in connection with unusually high levels of affecting Iron Range mine workers. A large question in the area is whether dust from the taconite mined there - a fibrous mineral similar to - could also cause .

A key part of the research will be an examination of previous exposure among mine workers, which will expand the base of knowledge about the affect of on health, in addition to the new studies about the effect of taconite.

According to the Billings Gazette, among tests to be included in the study are a comparison of film and digital chest X-rays to determine which is best for assessing the lungs, a comparison of the health of people exposed to in childhood versus people who weren’t, an expanded evaluation of residents who were exposed to , an assessment of whether the health problems related to exposure extend beyond lung disease.

Researchers in also hope to make improvements to public health tracking systems and patient health record databases, to better link exposure information to health conditions, the Gazette reports.

, perhaps one of the best-known residents of for her early outcry about the health effects of on the people in her town, says she is happy to see an emphasis on research.

She was a charter member of the board of directors of the Center for Asbestos Related Disease (CARD), a not-for-profit clinic governed by a volunteer community board and devoted to healthcare, outreach, and research to benefit all people impacted by exposure to amphibole . She only recently retired from her position with that organization.

“This is something I’ve wanted from the onset - more study and more research,” she says. “I’ve been especially interested in how much or how little of the () fiber can cause meso, and I’ve been really concerned about the schools having been contaminated.”

The key, Benefield says, is to detect at its earliest stage, when there is still time for treatment to prolong life. When people around her in began being diagnosed, she says, their was so advanced that many died within days of the diagnosis.

“We all - everyone in - live under the threat of developing ,” she says. “They’re never going to get all that () fiber out of , or anywhere for that matter, homes with insulation, so the research is the big thing. Any and all research having to do with is fantastic. A dream come true.”