Archive for the ‘Housing’ Category

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Pesticides, Parkinsons, Healthy Homes

April 13, 2011

Dr. Al Sears is a holistic practitioner in the US, who, like a few others, has a national practice, a newsletter and daily e-bulletin, a line of specialized supplements and who also promotes the products of others when he approves of them. His bulletins on the health hazards of many pharmaceuticals, as well as other everyday chemicals, are well-reserached and presented. Here is a piece he sent out April 13, 2011 on pesticides and Parkinson’s disease. If you’re interested in alternatives to pesticides at home, read to the bottom.

PESTICIDES AND PARKINSONS and HOW I KEEP THE CRITTERS OUT

DR. AL SEARS      http://www.alsearsmd.com

When you think “organic,” you probably have a picture in your head of produce – organically grown fruits and vegetables.

But I want you to know about organic pesticides because of the growing evidence that chemical pesticides are linked to Parkinson’s disease.

In a study published by the journal Archives of Neurology, researchers were looking at people’s occupations, and how likely they were to get Parkinson’s disease.
What they found shocked them.

There was almost no increased risk for Parkinson’s regardless of what kind of work people did. But they did find that anyone who used at least one of eight different kinds of pesticides was more than twice as likely to get Parkinson’s.

And if you used the insecticide permethrin, you were three times more likely to develop the disease.1 Permethrin is a common insect killer widely sold for use on clothing. It’s also put in a pharmaceutical cream meant to be rubbed on the skin to kill mites.

Another study by the University of California at Berkeley found that people exposed to maneb, a common pesticide used in gardens, were 75 percent likelier to develop Parkinson’s.2

Then there are the findings of the huge Agricultural Health Study. Have you heard about it? They closely follow about 90,000 licensed pesticide applicators and their spouses, and monitor them for illnesses. Researchers published results showing that people who used commercial herbicides/pesticides like rotenone or paraquat developed Parkinson’s disease 2.5 times more often than non-users.3

These pesticides damage your cells. Rotenone, for example, impairs the ability of your mitochondria to make energy. And paraquat increases oxygen-induced damage to cells.
Some of the cells hardest hit by these pesticides are in an area of the brain that is also damaged by Parkinson’s.

ALTERNATIVES

If you’d like to avoid this kind of damage from pesticides and keep your brain working just as well as it does right now, here’s what I recommend:

•    Stay away from products that claim to be “eco-friendly” or “natural,” when they clearly are not. 

For example, avoid synthetic pyrethroids. They’re similar to pyrethrins, which are natural insect-killing extracts from the flower chrysanthemum. But pyrethroids are created in a lab. Permethrin, which I mentioned earlier, is one of them.

•    Also, stay away from “geraniol.” It’s billed as natural because it’s made from roses, lemons and geraniums, but it’s been banned in Europe because of its toxicity to humans.
Here’s what to use instead:

1.    In my garden, I use neem oil to keep out pests. This extract from the fruit of the neem tree has been used for pest control in parts of Asia and India for over 2,500 years. It’s completely non-toxic. When the Environmental Protection Agency went to test neem for toxicity, it found zero reactions, even at the highest exposure.

In fact, you can use any part of the tree for pest control – the twigs, the leaves or the berries. The tree will grow in Florida. In other places and colder climates, I’ve seen it grown indoors in pots. Even sitting in a pot, it’ll serve to keep the bugs out. You can take a couple leaves and put them in your cabinets to keep cockroaches out. Or you can fray up the ends of the stems (so that the twigs are like brushes) and leave those around to work, too.

2.    I also get rid of the critters that try to crawl into my house with a pesticide that uses diatomaceous earth. It causes the pests to wither up and die.

3.    For a bug spray that’s good for spot use if I do see bugs in the house, I like to use a mint and herbal oil spray. It kills bugs within a few minutes and even smells pleasant, unlike those chemical sprays.

4.    For hard-to-kill bugs, look for pesticides with natural pyrethrins, which are made from chrysanthemums. They act fast, aren’t toxic to pets and degrade within a day.

5.    There are also bug baits made with boric acid, from the mineral boron. These aren’t toxic to people or pets either, and are great for getting rid of ants.

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Sick Housing

February 5, 2011

Sweden has its own sickness

By Ritt Goldstein
DALARNA, Sweden – As shock waves continue to emanate from Stockholm’s recent terror bombing, such an event appearing all but unthinkable given the Sweden most people perceive, ongoing revelations highlight that Sweden has had some disturbing changes. In many ways, today’s Sweden faces the same problems as other countries, including corruption and the sometimes nightmarish impact of it.

Emphasizing Swedish corruption’s gravity, the vast bulk of cases that have come to light are occurring in municipal housing companies and the construction industry, with the substantive “human costs” of these scandals only beginning to be appreciated. So-called “sick houses”, the significant health issues they’ve meant, are a recognized problem in Sweden, with the ongoing scandals now suggesting why.

“This is something that really needs to be looked upon and looked into,” said Justice Chancellor Anna Skarhed of the scandals’ health impact, sternly observing for Asia Times Online that “there is even more of this [the effects of corruption] than we’ve already seen, which is quite enough, and too much as it is.”

China’s infamous melamine scandal is said to have affected 300,000 people, or about .024% of its populace. But over 10% of Sweden’s people are suffering varying degrees of ill health effects from badly constructed or maintained housing, with a not insignificant number suffering quite severely.

In 2008, Scandinavia’s largest paper, Aftonbladet, noted, “In a new study from [Sweden's] Umea University, it was found that 45% of those affected by sick buildings – and who received medical treatment at a hospital clinic – are unable to work. Of these, 20% receive a disability pension, and 25% are on sick leave.”

For much of its recent history, Sweden has represented what many consider the embodiment of governmental integrity and efficiency, with typical Swedes following rules so closely that virtually none even “jaywalk”. Decades of cradle-to-grave government benefits have created a deep-felt faith in the authorities, present events providing a decidedly rude awakening for most, though not all.

Leif Kavestad – author of the Swedish book Sick Houses, building engineer, and a former environmental inspector who was personally decorated by the prior prime minister – has charged that “when residents complain about health hazards and health problems in municipal housing, it’s not uncommon for the municipality to hire ‘consultants’ that will declare the property safe.” Kavestad pointedly told ATol that “in legal disputes, the environmental agency always accepts the word of the municipality’s ‘bought’ consultants. Tenants which complain over sick buildings with health complaints are sometimes threatened – the parties together can act like a mafia against the tenants.”

In Sweden, municipal housing provides the majority of the country’s rental apartments, some being “high-end” properties.

“It’s a big problem, and it’s a big problem for the trust in the authorities and the trust in the kommun [municipality] … it has to be dealt with, and seriously,” said Gustav Gellerbrant , spokesperson and political advisor for Justice Minister Beatrice Ask, regarding the human consequences of housing corruption.

Over the past months, increasing numbers of Swedes are examining their surroundings through new eyes. “Bribes are more common than we thought”, “Bribery cases in many municipalities”, “Corruption and abuse of power in Swedish municipalities” – these headlines representing but a few of the recent months’ revelations. Law-enforcement authorities have seen a change.

Prosecutor Gunnar Stetler, director of the Swedish prosecution authority’s National Anti-Corruption Unit (Riksenheten mot korruption), described for ATol the current level of municipal corruption complaints to his office as “at least 50% higher” than the same period last year. A new investigative group within the National Police to investigate corruption – including cross-border questions and financial crime – is also now being worked on, Stetler emphasized, describing expectations that the yet ongoing discussions would be finalized “during December, or during January”.

Both Stetler and Justice Chancellor Skarhed are among a handful of key contributors to the new police group’s formation, Chancellor Skarhed noting “the information I have from the prosecutor’s office and the Riksenheten mot korruption strongly indicates that the resources the police have given to these [corruption] investigations have not been adequate for quite some time.” The chancellor expects the new group to be formed in January.

Adding another dimension to the corruption problem, in September three rights groups filed a criminal complaint against Saab, alleging bribery was involved in the sale of Swedish fighter aircraft to South Africa. Prosecutor Stetler describes the status of this case as under “active consideration”, a determination on the opening of a preliminary investigation yet to be forthcoming. But Stetler’s unit has been busy.

Corruption revelations began detonating in April, with an investigative TV program resembling a Swedish version of 60 Minutes entitled Uppdrag Granskning (UG), exploding municipal corruption onto the national agenda. Their report centered on “bribery and corruption in Gothenburg”, Sweden’s second-largest city, and today a place where all four of the city’s municipal housing companies have come under the National Anti-Corruption Unit’s investigation.

Following the UG reports, charges ranging from aggravated corruption and fraud to breach of trust and embezzlement have become among those being investigated. Individuals focused on include local officials, municipal company executives, and construction industry figures.

Drawing considerable outrage, funds earmarked for construction and renovation of municipal housing appear to have gone to luxurious additions to officials’ private homes. “If you are ‘well-connected’ locally … there might be people then who are prepared to ‘bend the rules’ to give you favors, and maybe they get favors back. And we know that this happens in municipalities,” said corruption expert and political scientist Staffan Andersson of Sweden’s Linne University, cutting to the issue of so-called local “strongmen”, an issue well publicized as a key corruption problem.

This autumn, Swedish National Television (SVT) aptly kicked off a new comedy series about an inept and corrupt municipal politician,Strong Man (“Starke man”), parodying the kinds of corrupt behaviors that have been making headlines.

Over the past 20 years, Sweden privatized increasingly large segments of its public sector, particularly in municipalities. It set up hybrid companies that were owned by municipalities but operated as semi-independent firms, firms with far looser controls than when their work was done as an official municipal organ. “We have been so focused on productivity, efficiency, and cost savings … but there’s also another side,” Andersson explained. He added that when it came to effective controls within these new entities, events have “not been running as quick as we have done with productivity”, questioning whether today’s controls fit “the kind of administration we had 20years ago”.

Illustrating his point, Andersson emphasized for ATol that “there are a lot of instances where … municipalities are actually carrying out authority in a way which is regarded as illegal by courts, administrative courts, but they actually do it anyway”. Paralleling this, an October SVT news report had earlier revealed how some municipal auditors whitewashed wrongdoing, then received legal immunity from the municipality for their actions, leaving no one legally culpable.

Pockets of widespread and deeply entrenched municipal problems have been increasingly seen.

In Falun, the municipal housing company, Kopparstaden, is particularly noteworthy, first making national headlines in 2009 with a story about its chief executive officer (CEO) and pornography. Following this, the CEO violated company rules by purchasing property for Kopparstaden’s new headquarters from a close friend.

The transaction was first stated as approximately 3 million Swedish kronor (US$440,000), then later “revised” to about five million. Subsequent research revealed that the “revision” was due to debt which was acquired by Kopparstaden with its property purchase, though, according to the City of Falun’s accounting firm, KPMG, apparently no documents were presented to Kopparstaden’s board regarding that debt.

Kopparstaden’s new headquarters eventually cost a third over budget, KPMG reporting that the firm’s internal controls “had not worked”, and that its CEO had wanted a 295,000 kronor tennis court at the new office. Subsequently, the CEO was quoted by a local paper as claiming KPMG was in error on its cost figures, that the new headquarters was in reality “great business“.

When contacted, Kopparstaden refused to be interviewed for this article.

Prosecutor Stetler noted that the KPMG report indicated Kopparstaden violations of “law or regulation”, but he added that under current Swedish law, it was necessary to prove “intent” in order for a prosecution to occur. Wrongdoing in itself is not actionable.

Andersson blamed weak municipal scrutiny and weak legal sanctions as key corruption problems.

Beyond financial issues, Kopparstaden has made headlines regarding tenant health problems, some health issues being severe, one even life-threatening. Notably, similar to its pronouncements on KPMG’s “error”, in court documents the firm describes an apartment the local environmental authority condemned as uninhabitable to be without any serious damage; though, substantive injuries to the tenant had resulted, and tests revealed the apartment had “unusually high” levels of toxic chemicals such as chloroform and benzene, plus a “powerfully elevated” mold level.

Notably, a report published by Swedish corruption researchers in November 2008, “Public Corruption in Swedish Municipalities – Trouble Looming on the Horizon?”, did warn of potential problems with the municipal hybrid firms.

In subsequently explaining how Sweden’s municipal corruption grew, one of the report’s authors, political scientist Gissur Erlingsson of Linkoping University, placed blame on both the creation of “fast and loose” municipal hybrids, and an erosion of whistleblower protections beginning in the mid-1990s, saying “people got more and more wary and afraid of losing their job”.

Examining another aspect of events, Dr Daniel Burston (PhD Psychology, PhD Social and Political Thought), chair of Pittsburgh’s Duquesne University psychology department, observed a culture of corruption always contains a large “group of passive and increasingly indifferent people who simply ‘go along’ with the status quo”. “They try to avoid losing what they have by not opposing the strongmen and their agents, and offering them bribes or ‘cover’, when necessary”, Burston outlined for ATol, adding that such conduct “becomes the ‘new normal’, and so routinized, in many ways, that it becomes completely unconscious – a tacitly accepted part of prevailing social and cultural expectations.”

In societies where those in authority are particularly respected, Burston observed that public opinion, combined with the phenomenon of “group think”, might well enable “corrupt leaders to gather the mantle of respectability around their shoulders, and then operate unhindered as ‘wolves in sheep’s clothing’.”

“Prosecution has preventative effects,” law professor Claes Sandgren of Stockholm University emphasized, “you don’t just prosecute to put just one individual in prison, you also prosecute to deter others.”

Ritt Goldstein is an investigative political journalist whose work has appeared widely, including in the US’s Christian Science Monitor, Spain’s El Mundo, Austria’s Wiener Zeitung and Australia’s Sydney Morning Herald, as well as with other significant members of the global media.

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Front_Page/LL22Aa01.html

FAIR USE NOTICE: This may contain copyrighted (C ) material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. Such material is made available for educational purposes, to advance understanding of human rights, democracy, scientific, moral, ethical, and social justice issues, etc. It is believed that this constitutes a ‘fair use’ of any such copyrighted material as provided for in Title 17 U.S.C. section 107 of the US Copyright Law. This material is distributed without profit.

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Hormone Disrupting Hand Cleaners

February 5, 2011

Antibacterials Q&A: Dr. Sarah Janssen on the Hazards of Hormone Disrupting Hand Cleaners

By Paul McRandle
Published: April 1, 2010
http://www.simplesteps.org/health/infants-children/antibacterials-qa

The use of “antibacterial” hand soaps is so widespread that we hardly give it another thought. Yet as a result almost 75 percent of Americans have been exposed to chemicals that may affect their health. And particularly worrisome is the fact that the most vulnerable of us, our children, are frequently exposed. NRDC staff scientist, Sarah Janssen, PhD, MD,  spoke with us about better practices and how to avoid “antibacterial” soaps and other products.

PM: How can you keep yourself safe from germs without using antibacterial products?

SJ: It’s impossible to keep your hands germ-free, but washing your hands frequently can help limit the transfer of bacteria, viruses and other germs and prevent illness.  Using regular soap and water is the most effective way to clean your hands and regular soap doesn’t carry any potential health risks like the so-called “antibacterial” products.

Hand washing is a skill, which requires vigorously rubbing your hands together for 20 seconds. Children can be encouraged to do this by singing a song such as “Row, Row, Row Your Boat.” Be sure to wash around the fingernails, in the web spaces between fingers and at the base of the wrists. These zones are often missed and germs can hide there.

Be sure to wash your hands before preparing or eating food, before applying or removing contact lenses and before touching small children or sick people. Always wash your hands after preparing food, especially raw meat, going to the bathroom or changing a diaper, coughing or sneezing into your hands and leaving a public place such as public transit, a park or even the doctor’s office!

PM: Washing your hands with antibacterial soap is no more effective than using regular soap and water, but is soap and water good enough when handling babies or sick children?

SJ: Yes, good hand washing techniques using regular soap and water is preferable to using so-called “antibacterial” soaps because regular soap and water are just as effective at eliminating “germs”. So called “antibacterials”, like triclosan or triclocarban are no more effective and carry potential health risks, so we advise avoiding their use.

When you’re on the go, alcohol-based hand sanitizers are also effective, but check the label for ingredients. All of the added “antibacterial” chemicals added to products must appear on the label as an active ingredient.

PM: So what are triclosan and triclocarban and why are you concerned about them?

SJ: Triclosan and triclocarban are chemicals added to personal care products, such as liquid and bar soaps, body washes, toothpaste and other personal care products for their so-called “antibacterial” properties. Triclosan is found in 75 percent of liquid hand soaps and triclocarban is used primarily in deodorant bar soaps. The widespread use of triclosan has resulted in the widespread exposure of the U.S. population—almost three-quarters of Americans carry residues of this chemical in their bodies. Triclosan and triclocarban are hormone disrupting chemicals and we are concerned that exposure to these chemicals could be causing harmful effects in humans.

PM: Are there any differences in the suspected health effects between triclosan and triclocarban–or, to put it simply, are they both just as bad?

SJ: Both of these chemicals are hormone disrupting chemicals, but they interfere with different hormone systems and though their toxicity is not fully understood, what we do know about these chemicals is deeply concerning. Triclosan interferes with thyroid hormone. We know that other thyroid disrupting chemicals have been shown to alter development of the brain and nervous system causing problems with learning or behavior later in life and we are concerned that triclosan could have similar effects.

Triclocarban is a unique type of hormone disrupting chemical which has not been found to have any hormone disrupting properties on its own but has been shown to enhance the activity of other hormones, such as the sex hormones, estrogen and testosterone. Boosting your sex hormones isn’t necessarily a good thing! For someone with a hormonally dependent cancer, that could mean more hormonal stimulation of cancer cell growth.

Furthermore, within our homes, there are many chemicals that interfere with both thyroid and sex hormones including flame retardants, BPA, and phthalates . Hormone disruptors are found in our electronics, furniture, carpeting, food packaging, drinking water, and cosmetics and personal care products. We are bombarded on a daily basis with dozens of different chemicals from many different places. While one chemical by itself may not pose a big health risk, it’s this cumulative exposure that we’re concerned about because all of these chemicals can act together as a group to cause greater harm than one alone.

PM: Triclosan is also used in towels and cutting boards–are there any environmental concerns about this widespread use in consumer products?

SJ: There is concern that the widespread use of these “antibacterial” chemicals is promoting antibiotic resistance, which is a looming public health crisis. Rather than using towels or other products impregnated with “antibacterials”, wash towels and other surfaces regularly with regular soap and water.

In addition, when applied to your skin or your kitchenware, these chemicals don’t just stay there but eventually are washed down the drain, flowing to water treatment plants where they end up in very high concentrations in sewage sludge. Triclosan and triclocarban are highly persistent in the environment, resisting breakdown for decades. This sludge is spread on agricultural fields as fertilizer and one study has shown that earthworms in fields recently treated with sludge contained high levels of triclosan compared to earthworms from organic fields, which did not have any detectable triclosan. This is deeply concerning since worms are indicators of contaminants that are entering the food web.

PM: Who is responsible for the regulation of these chemicals and why aren’t they doing more to protect our health and the environment?

SJ: The regulation of the “antibacterial” chemicals is confusing because depending on the use, it is regulated by different federal agencies. The FDA regulates uses of these chemicals in personal care products whereas EPA regulates non-cosmetic uses of them, such as in cutting boards, clothing, shoes. So we need both the FDA and the EPA to take action.

Senator Edward Markey is pushing for action from both agencies and hopefully we’ll see progress soon.

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Household Cleaning Sprays and Adult Asthma

February 4, 2011

The Use of Household Cleaning Sprays and Adult Asthma
An International Longitudinal Study

Abstract

Rationale: Cleaning work and professional use of certain cleaning products have been associated with asthma, but respiratory effects of nonprofessional home cleaning have rarely been studied.

Objectives: To investigate the risk of new-onset asthma in relation to the use of common household cleaners.

Methods: Within the follow-up of the European Community Respiratory Health Survey in 10 countries, we identified 3,503 persons doing the cleaning in their homes and who were free of asthma at baseline. Frequency of use of 15 types of cleaning products was obtained in a face-to-face interview at follow-up. We studied the incidence of asthma defined as physician diagnosis and as symptoms or medication usage at follow-up. Associations between asthma and the use of cleaning products were evaluated using multivariable Cox proportional hazards or log-binomial regression analysis.

Measurements and Main Results
: The use of cleaning sprays at least weekly (42% of participants) was associated with the incidence of asthma symptoms or medication (relative risk [RR], 1.49; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.12−1.99) and wheeze (RR, 1.39; 95% CI, 1.06−1.80). The incidence of physician-diagnosed asthma was higher among those using sprays at least 4 days per week (RR, 2.11; 95% CI, 1.15−3.89). These associations were consistent for subgroups and not modified by atopy. Dose–response relationships (P < 0.05) were apparent for the frequency of use and the number of different sprays. Risks were predominantly found for the commonly used glass-cleaning, furniture, and air-refreshing sprays. Cleaning products not applied in spray form were not associated with asthma.

Conclusions: Frequent use of common household cleaning sprays may be an important risk factor for adult asthma.

Complete article:
http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?tool=pubmed&pubmedid=17585104

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Sick Building Syndrome

January 29, 2011
Published on Monday, March 30, 2009 by CommonDreams.org

 

Sick Building Syndrome: Floods, Mold, Cancer, and the Politics of Public Health

by Ritt Goldstein

It’s spring, and flooding is again making headlines, although the ‘sick building’ and mold dangers following in flooding’s wake are becoming better appreciated. But disturbingly highlighting the imperatives of such awareness, recently published research has – for the first time – shown the high cost of what the sickness that comes of ‘sick buildings’ can mean, with the potential for long-lasting disability now being a documented fact.

According to a ground breaking Swedish study appearing in The International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health, 45% of so-called ‘Sick Building Syndrome’ (SBS) victims – treated at hospital clinics – no longer have the capacity to work. Twenty percent of these sufferers are receiving disability pensions, 25% are “on the sick-list”. Emphasizing SBS’s devastating potential, the study warned that the possibilitiy “of having no work capabilities at follow up was significantly increased if the time from (SBS) onset to first visit at the hospital clinic was more than 1 year. This risk was also significantly higher if the patient at the first visit had five or more symptoms.”

It’s unfortunate that knowledge of the serious nature of SBS has not emerged sooner. But, as highlighted by the US Department of Veteran’s Affairs during last Fall’s revelations upon Gulf War Illness, sometimes political and economic considerations affect health policy, leading to a serious health issue long being “denied” or “trivialized”.

‘Sick Building Syndrome’ (more precisely termed ‘non-specific building-related illness’) is typically a product of breathing indoor-air contaminated by mold and/or chemical toxins. Things such as flooding, or poor building contruction, design, or ventilation, can bring on the problem.

SBS’s symptoms have been known to include: mucus-membrane irritation, neurotoxic effects, respiratory symptoms, skin symptoms, gastrointestinal complaints, and chemosensory changes. And while the malady has been increasingly seen since the 1970′s, when energy concerns led to the reduction of indoor ventilation by as much as two thirds, the Swedish study is thought to be the first where the problem has been demonstrated as a chronic condition sparked by environmental causes.

The study was performed by scientists at the Academic Hospital of the University of Umeå, in Northern Sweden, and was based upon locally derived data. But while differences in disability laws and culture may exist between any two nations, as the study strongly observed: “symptoms aggravated by environmental factors exist within this group of patients”.

Providing an interesting parallel, in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina the New Orleans area saw the phenomenon of ‘Katrina Cough’ occur; a phenomenon marked by a number of SBS symptoms. Though Louisiana health authorities have been dismissive of the ‘Cough’, at present Tullane University School of Medicine has received funding for a five-year study, Tullane’s newspaper headlining: “Researcher Seeks Truth About ‘Katrina Cough’”.

Unfortunately, even problems more serious than SBS can occur through mold, the US Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) website explicitly warning that the inhalation of mycotoxins (toxins naturally occurring in some species of molds) has been reported to cause maladies that include cancer. Illustrating what this can mean, recent Swedish headlines shocked the Scandinavian Peninsula with news of just such a cancer outbreak.

Strömbackaskola, a high school in the Northern city of Piteå, was the scene of the cancer cluster. In the worst affected area, about 40% of the employees have been stricken with the disease, with the local paper headlining “The mold in the school is cancer causing”, a national headline reading “Mold in school gives teachers cancer”.

Though the cancer cases began appearing years ago, and its cause was earlier investigated, it was only recently that ‘toxic black mold’, Stachybotrys, was found in the affected areas.

Perhaps even more disturbing, while some claim tragedies like this are unforeseeable, others see them born of a misguided defense of past mistakes, with indifference, and even occasional tactics of intimidation, nurturing tragedy. No land is immune to the temptations of politics and economics…and no land is immune to cancer.

As early as 1999, findings of an association between inhaled mycotoxins (such as aflatoxin) and cancer were reported by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), their study noting: “Several studies have provided evidence for the association of cancer in humans with inhalation of aflatoxin contaminated dust, e.g., lung cancer or colon cancer…elevated risks for liver cancer and cancers of biliary tract”. Similar to the EPA, the NIOSH study further warned: “Diseases associated with inhalation of fungal spores include toxic pneumonitis, hypersensitivity pneumonitis, tremors, chronic fatigue syndrome, kidney failure, and cancer.”

It is regrettable that one can only speculate upon what the true incidence of mold-related cancer, and other mycotoxin-related illness, may be, both in the US and abroad.

While an American, I live in Sweden and have for the last twelve years. Perhaps because Sweden isn’t a large nation, Swede’s social activism, their relationship with their government, communities, and each other, is considerably stronger than that I once knew. But, despite this…

In an article published this summer upon Sweden’s ‘sick schools’ – in Scandinavia’s largest daily, Aftonbladet – I had emphasized that mold can indeed cause maladies ranging from asthma to cancer. But as early as 1997, Stockholm’s papers were already broaching questions of ‘sick building’ related cancers, questions which seem to have been ignored.

At that time, Swedish toxicologist Tony Kronevi was widely quoted as warning of a potential “cancer explosion” resulting from “sick buildings in Sweden”. He specifically warned of problems with “sick schools”, urging that people take “this problem seriously. Now.”

It’s unfortunate that, despite such warnings, this past summer a Swedish government report revealed that those at the national level had yet to take sick schools “seriously.” Just months later, in December, news of the cancer cluster broke.

Was this an instance of political and economic considerations affecting health policy? Was a serious health threat long “denied” or “trivialized”?

Further highlighting what some here have termed ‘indifference’, Swedish parliamentarian Jan Lindholm (Green Party) observed that, for him, it’s “totally inconceivable that the government shows no interest in finding out how over 20 people in a workplace (Strömbackaskola) came to be smitten by cancer”. He added, “this Government is the landlord’s government.”

Approximately a week before news of Strömbackaskola’s cancer outbreak broke, the Swedish Minister for Public Health told Swedish National Radio that she believed the link between poor indoor air and poor health was too weak to act upon.

Reflecting the Minister’s position, Sweden’s governmental websites lack the kind of mold and ‘sick building’ warnings provided by entities such as the EPA and NIOSH, despite the recent SBS findings from Umeå and similar pronouncements from other scientists. Given this, it’s particularly unfortunate that the very young are those most at risk from indoor air problems.

Last Fall I interviewed one of America’s leading authorities on mold – Dr. Dorr Dearborn, Chairman of the Department of Environmental Health Sciences at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine. Dearborn came to national attention in 1997, The New York Times headlining “Infants’ Lung Bleeding Traced to Toxic Mold”, a revelation he was instrumental in bringing forward. Though his findings and those of his equally courageous colleague, Ruth Etzel, became the subject of considerable debate, the EPA’s “Children’s Health Initiative on Toxic Mold” continues to warn: “A cluster of cases of acute pulmonary hemorrhage/hemosiderosis was reported in Cleveland, Ohio, where 27 infants from homes that suffered flood damage became sick (nine deaths) with the illness starting in January 1993.”

In the interim since his and Dr. Etzel’s findings, animal studies continue to provide ever added confirmation of their conclusions upon toxic mold’s dangers.

During the course of my interview with Dearborn, I asked what had occurred that took the momentum from the ‘sick building’ and mold reforms which many then saw on the horizon. Emphasizing he could just speculate upon what factors had earlier impacted America’s ‘mold debate’, Dearborn spoke of “pressure from industrial sources – insurance companies, etc – to ‘back off’ this problem.”

In Sweden, people have spoken of the “gigantic costs” which addressing ‘sick buildings’ would entail, and this has led many to rationalize away inaction accordingly. Of course, the costs of the widespread illnesses and property damage associated with ‘sick buildings’ is thought to be even more substantive, though, far less visible and borne mainly by individuals, not business or government.

I won’t point out that discussion of isolated cancer cases associated with sick buildings has barely begun here. Nor will I speculate upon the fate of those living in places like Herrgården, a large housing complex in Sweden’s southern city of Malmö’s Rosengård area, where – contrary to the Country’s ‘squeaky clean’ image – recent news stories revealed that half of the apartments are mold infested.

An interview with a number of Rosengård’s healthcare workers recently appeared in local media. The ongoing tragedy they described isn’t pretty.

Within the last twelve months, this nation of nine million has had at least three major residential housing scandals, each involving large numbers of families. And while roach infested slums have sadly now come to Sweden, two of the three scandals involved upscale developments – one was a community of villas on the Country’s west coast, the other was waterside condos in Stockholm.

Of course, in the US, comedic icon Ed McMahon won a $7 million dollar judgment following his Beverly Hills home’s mold problems. But just this March, the TV news program ‘Inside Edition’ ran a story titled: “Did Mold Cause Ed McMahon’s Life-Threatening Cancer?”

In Sweden, the widespread failure to adequately enforce safe-housing laws has been described as an ‘open secret’. In The States, the phrase ‘managed debate’ is used to describe the process through which better regulation of ‘sick buildings’ and mold is kept from even becoming law.

Both circumstances have a cost, and public health has paid dearly. Is Sweden’s mold-associated cancer unique, or rather, is it unique only in that this instance of mold-associated cancer was so large that it could not be rationalized away, dismissed and ignored?

In a November article of mine – which was also published in Aftonbladet – I compared Sweden’s ‘sick building’ scandal to that of China’s melamine. Both scandals are the product of what have been described as ‘open secrets’, but according to a 2003 Swedish survey, sick buildings are sickening a vastly higher population percentage than melamine did.

While our globe is currently witnessing the havoc which lax regulation and unconscionable behavior meant for the financial markets, is this but one indicator of something ‘deeper’? America’s ongoing prescription drug and food scandals, China’s melamine, and Sweden’s ‘sick building’ scandal – all suggest that our ‘crisis’ may be considerably broader than merely one of finance.

History has long demonstrated the high price of blind, ruthless ambition, a price which our world has perhaps only begun to realize it is now paying. Quoting Swedish parliamentarian Jan Lindholm, “totally inconceivable” well describes present circumstances.

We have a problem, a bad problem, and it has its causes. In example, Kronevi told me of a Swedish book he participated in on building issues, a book which might have started vigorous ‘sick building’ debate years ago. He also provided copies of correspondence highlighting how the text had been effectively suppressed.

Of course, a passage from that book noted that a number of Swedish cities, “have noticed an unusually high number of cancer cases connected to SBS symptoms”, with other passages equally interesting. What is also ‘interesting’ are others who have described abuses of power, the efforts to stifle critical voices.

In 2004 I interviewed a number of leading US scientific figures, doing so while writing an exposé series on the drug industry. One article, “Intimidation, Politics and Drug Industry Cripple U.S. Medicine”, contained several interviews worth revisiting.

Kathleen Rest, executive director of the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS) – whose membership is comprised of much of the cream of America’s scientific community, including a number of Nobel laureates – told me of a “pattern”, a pattern of “politicizing or manipulating scientific advisory boards.” She also noted the UCS had found “evidence and cases of agencies manipulating or suppressing scientific analysis.”

Dr. David J. Graham, the courageous Associate Safety Director of the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), separately added that “intimidation of scientists who threaten the status quo at FDA is routine.”

It was just this summer when a Swedish environmental researcher – who spoke only under condition of anonymity – told me that challenging the Swedish status quo on ‘sick building’ issues was almost like challenging the mafia. Other Swedes, from different perspectives, have spoken similarly. Leif Kåvestad – a former environmental inspector who received a personal award from the then Swedish Prime Minister, Göran Persson – is one of these.

Both Kåvestad and the researcher indeed described efforts aimed at intimidation, efforts sometimes undertaken by those pursuing self-serving denials of Swedish indoor-environment problems.

On a local level, Kåvestad spoke of how “community Health Departments often cooperate with the community housing companies and their consultants. Tenants which complain over sick buildings with health complaints are threatened…the parties together act like a mafia against the tenants.” And while speaking generally, he added he’s aware of this pattern at some of Stockholm’s ‘sick buildings’, and as an ombud has just taken the question before the Environmental Court.

There is good reason to believe that such circumstances are not limited to Sweden.

An SBS victim myself, I have just filed a civil suit against my landlord, Kopparstaden, a housing firm within the Swedish county of Dalarna. In 2007, my community’s health department declared the apartment Kopparstaden had recently rented me to be uninhabitable.

To this day, my health remains shattered – I suffer a particularly nasty form of SBS.

When I arrived here, as a newcomer to the community, the local ‘Integration Authority’ had offered me the flat. Though it had an unusual odor from the first time I saw it, I was told the odor would ‘disappear’ when I used the plumbing.

When I asked to see other apartments, I was told by the Integration Authority that the apartment was ‘fine’, that there were no others, and, if I didn’t accept it, I wouldn’t be offered another and would likely not find any apartment on my own. Given the circumstances, and that I had no reason to then disbelieve the assurances I was given, I took the flat accordingly.

Later, laboratory analysis revealed “powerfully elevated” mold levels and “unusually high levels” of chemical toxins – such as chloroform – were in every breath I took. According to my physicians, virtually all of my belongings must be disposed of because of contamination, and my insurance policy – as with most insurance policies today – does not cover this kind of claim. However, Kopparstaden’s only compensation offer for my ruined property and shattered health was about $1,000. I refused it.

It is difficult for me to reconcile the many instances I’ve witnessed demonstrating Swedish society’s honesty and integrity with the circumstances I describe.

While the US civil court system has awarded a number of ‘sick building’ and mold sufferers millions of dollars in damages, such things do not exist in this country – there are no punitive damages in this legal system, court awards are ‘minimal’. And, despite such circumstances accentuating the need for robust enforcement of safe housing laws, the opposite appears to have occurred. But, this does well illustrate how the costs of ‘sick buildings’ – though extremely substantive – are today borne mainly by individuals, not the businesses which provide ‘sick’ properties, nor the governmental entities which allow them to continue doing so.

Is today’s ‘crisis’ far broader than merely finance? Has Public Health been sacrificed for political and economic motives?

While many have indeed called the widespread compromising and failure of regulatory authorities an ‘open secret’, perhaps ‘national catastrophe’ may well prove itself a far better term.

LINKS YOU MAY CARE TO USE
© 2009 Ritt Goldstein

Ritt Goldstein (ritt1997@hotmail.com) is an American investigative political journalist based in Stockholm. His work has appeared in broadsheets such as Australia’s Sydney Morning Herald, Spain’s El Mundo and Denmark’s Politiken, as well as with the Inter Press Service (IPS), a global news agency.

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Mold: Katrina Aftermath

January 29, 2011

Just Breathing in Katrina-Flooded Homes Poses Health Risks

 

http://www.ens-newswire.com/ens/feb2009/2009-02-11-092.asp

BATON ROUGE, Louisiana, February 11, 2009 (ENS) – Homes flooded by Hurricane Katrina in 2005 may contain harmful levels of airborne contaminants in addition to polluted sediment deposits, finds new research from scientists at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge. Indoor gases, mold films, and aerosols may have exposed residents, first responders, and demolition crews to dangerous contaminant levels without the need for direct skin contact, according to the modeling study published in the April 2009 issue of “Environmental Engineering Science,” a peer-reviewed journal published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.

The model published by Nicholas Ashley, Kalliat Valsaraj, and Louis Thibodeaux, from Louisiana State, details the possible types and levels of volatile and semi-volatile organic pollutants that might be present inside the flooded homes.
When made landfall on the Louisiana and Mississippi Gulf Coasts on August 29, 2005, failure of protective levees around the city of New Orleans resulted in floodwaters inundating numerous residential areas to a depth of six to nine feet for nearly two weeks.
The floodwaters carried with them suspended sediments from Lake Pontchartrain, along with other contaminants accumulated in the submerged neighborhoods, the authors say.
When floodwaters were later pumped from residential areas back into Lake Pontchartrain, sediment remained behind.
“Because the houses sat unoccupied for weeks and months after the storm, volatile and semivolatile sediment pollutants partition into the vapor space inside the home, where they present a gas-phase exposure to persons entering the home,” the study states. 

This New Orleans resident searches for salvageable items in her home following Hurricane Katrina. Many of the homes were like this one with mold damage to the ceiling. (Photo by Andrea Booher courtesy FEMA)

The warm, damp conditions inside the flooded homes led to the growth of mold on walls, furniture, and other interior surfaces, which may have absorbed contaminant gases. These mold films in turn emit contaminated spores into the air inside the home.
The authors conclude that these mold spores may represent a significant sink for polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, or PAHs; pesticides and esters such as phthalates, which are plasticizers.
They also mention aldehydes and organic acids as contributors to the airborne contaminants inside the flooded houses.

“An exposure assessment that only considers exposure to gas-phase materials of these classes may under predict the total mass of pollutant which a person may be inhaling,” the authors write.
These newly identified inhalation exposure routes could present a significant health risk to people who walk inside and breathe the air in contaminated homes, even if there is no skin contact with the sediment covering the floors or the mold growing on the walls and other surfaces, concludes the paper, entitled, “Multiphase Contaminant Distributions Inside Flooded Homes in New Orleans, Louisiana, after Hurricane Katrina: A Modeling Study.”
Finally, the authors warn, the PAHs detected in the sediment and mold films may be cause for concern when contaminated housing materials are disposed of.
“This may represent a special problem for waste incinerators where products of incomplete combustion may release partially oxidized PAH or other species to the air,” they advise. “In landfills or other disposal facilities, regular monitoring of run-off effluents or waste streams may be needed.”
“This is an excellent and important study by one of the top research teams in the nation,” said Domenico Grasso, PhD, editor-in-chief and dean and professor in the College of Engineering and Mathematical Sciences at the University of Vermont-Burlington, who was not involved in the study. “It will help us better prepare first responders for the additional risks that may be posed by such events.”
“Results indicate that prolonged contact with contaminated sediment, vapor-phase organics, and pollutant-laden aerosolized mold spores, may result in a significant exposure of New Orleans area residents and recovery workers to toxic materials,” the authors write. “Future research efforts should further probe the effects of mold as a transport and partitioning medium for volatile and semivolatile materials, because experimental data in this area are severely lacking.”
The Federal Emergency Management Agency warns that exposure to mold can cause respiratory tract infections, especially for infants, children, immune-compromised patients, pregnant women, the elderly and individuals with existing respiratory conditions, allergies, multiple chemical sensitivity, and asthma.
Copyright Environment News Service (ENS) 2009. All rights reserved. 

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“Does mold make you sick?”

February 9, 2009

[You might think "well, duh" after reading the title, but keep in mind that this is the popular press. And at least a genetic connection has been made. Quote from a doctor:  "This is almost certainly a genetic issue."]

Does mold make you sick? Doctors seek answers

By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Editor

http://www.reuters.com/article/healthNews/idUSTRE49R7A720081028

Tue Oct 28, 2:40 pm ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Fungus expert Joan Bennett did not believe in so-called toxic mold — the cause of “sick building syndrome” and many lawsuits — until her New Orleans home was flooded during Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

When she got a whiff of the foul air that the black goo had created in her home, she decided to change her research focus and try to find out how and if the fungi that took over most of the flooded homes on the Gulf Coast might make people ill.

“The overwhelming obnoxiousness of the odor and of the enveloping air made me start to believe in something that I had never believed in before — sick building syndrome,” Bennett, of Rutgers University in New Jersey, told a news conference.

But it has been more difficult than she thought.

Bennett believes that molds could potentially cause illness in certain susceptible people via volatile organic compounds — gassy versions of chemicals produced as the organisms metabolize food.

She has been unable to show this in the lab so far. But she told a joint meeting of the American Society for Microbiology and the Infectious Diseases Society of America.

She has tested various molds on the laboratory roundworm C. elegans. “Sometimes the worm swims away and sometimes the worm does nothing and sometimes the worm eats the fungus,” Bennett said.

“I am actually looking for something that has never been discovered by methods that have never been worked out.”

Yet hundreds of lawsuits have been filed — and some won — by people claiming mold in their homes or workplaces has made them ill.

Dr. David Denning of the University of Manchester in Britain said it is plausible that molds and fungi would emit volatile organic compounds.

GENETIC SENSITIVITY

If these can be found, they could form the basis of diagnosing fungal illness as well — perhaps using a breath test. People with fungal infections of the lungs, such as aspergillosis, would release these chemicals when they breathed.

“A certain group of severe asthmatics — about a million people — are sensitive to a number of different fungi,” Denning told the news conference. These include Aspergillis and Candida.

“This is almost certainly a genetic issue,” he added. “If you have (a) predisposition (to asthma), you probably have an additional predisposition to fungal sensitization.”

Dr. David Goldman, a pediatrician in the Bronx, New York, said asthma rates in his borough are disproportionately high, and he blames in part Cryptococcus neoformins, a microbe found in pigeon droppings that causes disease in immune-compromised people.

“We believe this fungus contributes to asthma by modulating the immune response,” Goldman told the news conference.

Both Goldman and Denning said treating patients with antifungal drugs such as itraconozole and fluconazole helped relieve the symptoms of patients with severe asthma. This supports evidence that fungi are contributing to symptoms.

All three experts agreed it would likely take a combination of factors — including a person genetically susceptible to molds and unusual fungal activity — to cause any disease.

“It is probably a relatively temporary disease, not a life-threatening disease,” Denning said.

“As we sit here we are probably breathing in hundreds of spores,” Bennett added. “Usually we only get sick if our immune systems are compromised or if we have this genetic susceptibility to allergy.”

(Reporting by Maggie Fox; Editing by Julie Steenhuysen and Philip Barbara)

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‘Reasonable’ accommodations?

February 9, 2009

Quote: “You don’t become disabled because of your illness. You become disabled because of poverty. You lose everything to this disease.”

‘Reasonable’ accommodations?
Palo Alto woman, housing corporation battle over disability, responsibility

Friday, May 9, 2008
http://www.paloaltoonline.com/news/show_story.php?id=7981

by Sue Dremann
Palo Alto Weekly Staff

A disabled woman is being evicted from her apartment by the Palo Alto Housing Corporation after 15 years of battling over what constitutes “reasonable accommodation” for her disability.

Beth Bradach, 53, has three conditions — chronic fatigue and immune dysfunction (CFIDS) myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME), and combined immune deficiency — that cause her to become ill when exposed to tiny amounts of chemicals.

Everything from molds to pesticides to laundry soap make Bradach’s throat close down and could lead to lung infections, diarrhea and sores, she said. Her caregivers must wash their clothes and themselves in water free of detergents before visiting her.

But years of accommodating her disability have created an unreasonable administrative and financial burden on the Housing Corporation, which provides affordable rental and ownership housing, according to its staff.

They have put in natural-fiber rugs without toxic glues in adjacent apartments and used paints low in volatile organic compounds when refurbishing other units at the Plum Tree Apartments on Emerson Street, they said. When they needed to spray for pesticides, they found a place for Bradach to move to until the work was completed. And they have refrained from renting out units adjacent to Bradach’s for the past two years.

But adjusting to her needs has created an unreasonable accommodation to other tenants, staff now say, and it is time for Bradach to move out.

The controversy illustrates the difficult dilemma individuals with chemical sensitivities, such as Bradach, have in getting housing — and housing providers have in accommodating them without creating significant hardship for themselves and their other tenants.

The dividing line between what is “reasonable” and what is not is not that easy to define, according to experts.

Reasonable accommodation law was created to give people with disabilities equal access to employment and housing. But there are limits, the experts say.

In general, reasonable accommodation is defined as any changes in rules, policies, practices or services that may be necessary to afford a person with a disability an equal opportunity to use and enjoy a dwelling, according to Bill Branch, deputy director of communications for the California Department of Fair Employment and Housing.

“A request for accommodation made by a tenant with a disability is presumptively reasonable unless a housing provider can demonstrate that it would result in an undue administrative or financial burden. In that instance the law requires that the tenant and the landlord engage in an ‘interactive process’ in an attempt to arrive at a mutually acceptable conclusion,” he added.

But reasonable accommodation is decided on a case-by-case basis, according to Stanford Law School Professor Richard Thompson Ford.

“There are limits even when there is no doubt that a plaintiff needs accommodation. It’s not as if a landlord is required to spare no expense,” he said.

Advocates for people with CFIDS say that housing accommodations are among the hardest cases to resolve, according to Gail Kansky, president of the National CFIDS Foundation.

“We’ve encountered this over and over again,” she said.

Bradach alleges the housing corporation has repeatedly violated her legal rights, even though she notified staff of her disability when she moved in in 1992. When the apartments were sprayed for pesticides that year, Bradach developed ocular and rectal sores and her hair fell out two weeks afterward.

“I was in so much pain, I was just looking for a cold, dark place to hide,” she said.

In February 2002, a California Department of Fair Employment & Housing investigator concluded, and another investigator agreed, that housing corporation officials had violated her reasonable accommodation through inconsistent and vague notices or accounts of the substances to be used at the apartments.

Bradach proposed in 2005 that the housing group could dedicate the five units in her building to “green housing” for the chemically sensitive, similar to Ecology House in San Rafael.

But housing corporation officials said they don’t see their role as supporting such housing <0×2014> particularly since there are so many other tenants in need.

The final straw for the housing group involved building repair and termite control.

Staff wanted to spray orange oil and other chemicals they said a pest-control company deemed safe to eradicate the insects. But Bradach’s doctor, Randy S. Baker of Soquel, Calif., said the oil and other chemicals would not be safe alternatives for Bradach.

Bradach pushed for a super-heating method to eradicate the insects, but housing corporation officials said it is not effective and could risk setting the building on fire.

On May 1, the housing corporation sent Bradach a 90-day notice to vacate her apartment.

“We have tenants in need of housing, and we have an obligation to provide it. We’re risking the welfare of other tenants — we can’t let our building fall apart. We’ve exhausted our resources with trying to find her other housing,” Candice Gonzalez, the corporation’s executive director said. “We don’t know what else to do at this point.”

The group, which rents out 600 units, also claims it has lost $75,000 by not renting out the neighboring apartments.

Bradach says she has nowhere to go.

“They’ve always got me between a rock and a hard place,” Bradach said, her voice reedy and rattling on the phone. “I’m supposed to find my own place but most days I’m too sick to even get up off my couch.”

Ann Marquart, executive director of Project Sentinel, a Palo Alto fair-housing agency that has been trying to help Bradach, said the only viable solutions are to find a stand-alone unit that meets Bradach’s needs or to create a building for the chemically sensitive.

Kansky said her organization has a donor who has offered to pay the difference above reasonable costs to use “fully green” alternatives in the building’s renovations. She estimated the costs above the housing corporation’s share to be $5,000 to $8,000.

“The problem is she shouldn’t really have to get out. Yes, it’s difficult, but it isn’t insurmountable,” Kansky said.

The question of reasonable accommodation is almost a question in itself, according to Marquart.

“Do we have a question of reasonable accommodation if this is a person’s life?” she said.

Bradach recalled when she was a vibrant, contributing member of society with a degree in botanical taxonomy and a potential job at the Smithsonian Institution. Then, people didn’t find her annoying. On good days, she is a better advocate for others than she is for herself, she said. She has helped people with bipolar disorder get the treatment and benefits they need.

“It’s easier to get what you need if someone else is an advocate for you. People don’t want to hear it — and they don’t want to hear it from the person who’s asking for help for themselves. We’re shrill. People think you are crazy.

“I got sick with the disease, but the way I got disabled is that I lost all my money to this disease. You don’t become disabled because of your illness. You become disabled because of poverty. You lose everything to this disease,” she said.

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