Do You Live in a Disease Cluster? 42 Disease Clusters in 13 States Identified, page
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reply posted on 31-3-2011 @ 10:27 PM by MRuss
Does anyone on ATS live in one of these counties?

If so, do you know anyone who is sick? Here are the counties:

Arkansas: Location: Prairie Grove,
Washington County
Disease: Testicular cancer (which means a cluster of people have contracted this illness.)

California:
Location: Oroville, Butte County
Disease: Pancreatic cancer

Location: Kettleman City, Kings County
Disease: Birth defects


Location: Montecito, Santa Barbara County
Disease: Childhood leukemia and lymphoma

Location: Earlimart, Tulare County
Disease: Childhood cancer

Location: Neighborhoods around Santa Susana Field Laboratory, Los Angeles & Ventura Counties
Disease: thyroid and bladder cancer


Location: McFarland, Kern County
Disease: Childhood cancer

Location: Rosamond, Kern County
Disease: Brain, kidney, and muscle cancers

Location: Carlsbad, San Diego County
Disease: Childhood cancer

Location: Hinkley, San Bernardino County*
Disease: Breast cancer, hodgkin's disease,
miscarriages and spinal deterioration*


Delaware:
Location: Lower Christiana, New Castle County
Disease: Lung and all cancers

Location: Upper Christiana, New Castle County
Disease: Prostate cancer

Location: Central Pencader, New Castle County
Disease: All cancer


Location: Middletown-Odessa, New Castle County
Disease: Colorectal cancer


Location: Wilmington, New Castle County
Disease: All cancer, lung and prostate cancer

Location: New Castle, New Castle County
Disease: All cancer, lung and prostate cancer

Location: Kenton, Kent County
Disease: All cancer

Florida:

Location: Millsboro, Sussex County
Disease: Lung Cancer

Location: Loxahatchee (Acreage), Palm Beach County
Disease: Brain cancer


Location: Immokalee, Collier County
Disease: Birth defects


Location: Tallevast, Manatee County
Disease: Cancer


Louisiana:

Location: New Orleans, Orleans Parish
Disease: Breast cancer


Location: Amelia, St. Mary Parish
Disease: Neuroblastoma


Location: Coteau, Iberia Parish
Disease: Childhood leukemia

*Location: Mossville, Calcasieu Parish
Disease: Various


Michigan:

Location: Midland, Saginaw, and Bay Counties
Disease: Breast Cancer


Location: White Lake, Muskegon County
Disease: Cancers

Missouri:

Location: Midland, Saginaw, and Bay Counties
Disease: Breast Cancer

Location: White Lake, Muskegon County
Disease: Cancers

Montana:
Location: Libby, Lincoln County
Disease: Respiratory diseases

North Carolina:

Location: Bynum, Chatham County
Disease: Various cancers

Location: Camp Lejeune, Onslow County
Disease: Birth defects, childhood cancer, and male breast cancer

Ohio:

Location: Clyde, Sandusky County
Disease: Childhood cancer

Location: Wellington, Lorain County

Disease: Multiple sclerosis

Location: Marysville, Union County
Disease: Leukemia

Location: Marion, Marion County
Disease: Leukemia

Location:Middletown, Butler County
Disease: Brain cancer

Pennsylvania:

Location: Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne County
Disease: Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and lupus


Location: Schuylkill, Carbon and Luzerne Counties
Disease: Polycythemia vera

Tennessee:

Location: Dickson, Dickson County
Disease: Oral cleft birth defects

Texas:

Location: El Paso, El Paso County
Disease: Multiple sclerosis

Location: Houston, Harris County
Disease: Childhood leukemia

Location: Midlothian, Ellis County
Disease: Birth defects

Location: Nueces County
Disease: Birth defects

Location: San Antonio, Bexar County
Disease: Liver cancer



























edit on 31-3-2011 by MRuss because: Added States
edit on 31-3-2011 by MRuss because: (no reason given)




reply posted on 2-4-2011 @ 10:09 AM by desert
I'm familiar with the Kettleman City, Earlimart, McFarland, and Hinkley CA cancer clusters. The rest I'm not surprised. The first three are in the same geographical area (Central Valley or San Joaquin Valley, as it goes by both names in the news), with KC having the added distinction of the hazardous waste dump.

Undisturbed, the Earth doesn't offer much by way of cancer causing agents. When humans mine, refine/use certain products (such as coal or oil), or develop chemicals for widespread use (such as farm chemicals), or must find places to dispose of toxic chemicals/products, then we have problems.

When a friend developed a lymphoma cancer years ago, her oncologist used the term "insult" to describe the effects of our environment on our health. The more "insults" from outside our body, as from the above, the more likely cancer would occur. It seems our body's natural immune system breaks down/can no longer handle the insults.

Interestingly enough, I can remember when the McF case hit the news, it was said at the time, that homeowners who use chemicals on their lawns also had higher increases of childhood cancers. Maybe this was a way to exculpate the farmers whose farm workers were exposed to highly toxic chemicals.

Whenever I hear, such as the current radiation reports from the Japanese crisis or with pesticide use, news stories talk about "it's only" or "it's only this one product", I think back to the barrage of insults the human body takes/accumulates and that, no, a child/adult doesn't get JUST THAT ONE INSULT. If that were all, then, yes, the toxicity wouldn't matter (much) to individual or public health.

We can applaud all we want about cancer "cures", but maybe it would be better if we stop adding insult to insult. Maybe that is no longer possible at this stage of human society. Maybe our only resource is to acknowledge that cancers/other health effects of toxicity-pollution will increase and continue to research ways to alleviate/cure those effects.

A woman my age, who was a child when domestic nuclear testing was done and who was witness to the fallout, years later as a younger adult developed uterine cancer. She never thought about maybe a connection to what happened to her as a child and her adult cancer. Maybe there's no direct link, but, again, her childhood exposure was a pretty good insult.


reply posted on 2-4-2011 @ 04:12 PM by Emptiness Dancing
Originally posted by MRuss
Do you live in Arkansas, California or Delaware? How about Florida, Louisiana or Michigan? Pennsylvania? North Carolina, Ohio or Tennessee? Montana, Missouri? How about Texas?

www.nrdc.org...

And the news article is here:

www.huffingtonpost.com...&title=A rkansas



DELAWARE!!!!

oooooHHHHH CrAp! Spent the first 22 years of my life in the Newark, Wilmington, Glasgow area. THIS does not bold well for me but it's also something I have always suspected. Disease does seem to be more prevalent. Cancer especially.

I remember once living near Red Clay Creek where nothing lived and the neighbors would amusingly call it Rainbow Creek because it would turn so many different colors from all the chemicals in it. The Christiana River has always been known to be a dumping pool for the chem industry. The old DuPont paint & die factory in Newport would stink up the air and pollute the Christiana River with impunity many years ago. But rich corporations can break the law when they can control the $risk$ of doing so.
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