Chemical industry war against MCS: Reprise
http://www.mindfully.org/Health/MCS-Under-Siege.htm>http://www.mindfully.org/Health/MCS-Under-Siege.htm.
Here is an excerpt:
The manufacturers of pesticides, carpets, perfumes, and other products
associated with the cause or exacerbation of chemical sensitivities
adamantly want MCS to go away. Even though a significant and growing
portion of the population report being chemically sensitive, chemical
manufacturers appear to think that if they can just beat on the illness
long enough, it will disappear. To that end, they have launched a
multipronged attack on MCS that consists of labeling sufferers as
"neurotic" and "lazy," doctors who help them as "quacks," scientific
studies which support MCS as "flawed," calls for more research as
"unnecessary," laboratory tests that document physiologic damage in
people with MCS as "unreliable," government assistance programs helping
those with MCS as "abused," and anyone sympathetic to people with MCS as
"cruel" for reinforcing patients' "beliefs" that they are sick. They
also have been influential in blocking the admission of MCS testimony in
lawsuits through their apparent influence on judges.
The full article:
Multiple Chemical Sensitivities Under Siege
Ann McCampbell, MD Chair, Multiple
Chemical Sensitivities Task Force of New
Mexico 30jan01 Originally published in Townsend Letter for Doctors and
Patients, issue
210, January 2001.
www.tldp.com
Movies like Erin Brockovich and A Civil Action depict the
true stories of communities whose members became ill from drinking water
contaminated with industrial waste. Their struggles clearly show how
difficult it is for people to hold corporations responsible for the harm
they have caused. Whether individuals are injured by exposures to
contaminated air or water, silicone breast implants, cigarettes, or
other chemicals, their quest for justice is usually a David versus
Goliath battle that pits average citizens against giant corporations.
When confronted with the harm they have caused, corporations typically
blame the victims, deny the problem, and try to avoid responsibility for
the harm caused. The corporate response to people with multiple chemical
sensitivities (MCS) has been no different. People with MCS are made sick
from exposures to many common products, such as pesticides, paints,
solvents, perfumes, carpets, building materials, and many cleaning and
other products. But the manufacturers of these products would rather
silence the messenger than acknowledge the message that their products
are not safe. To that end, the chemical manufacturing industry has
launched an anti-MCS campaign designed to create the illusion of
controversy about MCS and cast doubt on its existence. What has been
said about the tobacco industry could easily apply to the chemical
industry regarding MCS, that is, "the only diversity of opinion comes
from the authors with . industry affiliations (1)."
It is a credit to the chemical industry's public relations efforts that
we frequently hear that multiple chemical sensitivities (MCS) is
"controversial" or find journalists who feel obligated to report "both
sides" of the MCS story, or attempt to give equal weight to those who
say MCS exists and those who say it does not. But this is very
misleading, since there are not two legitimate views of MCS. Rather,
there is a serious, chronic, and often disabling illness that is under
attack by the chemical industry.
The manufacturers of pesticides, carpets, perfumes, and other products
associated with the cause or exacerbation of chemical sensitivities
adamantly want MCS to go away. Even though a significant and growing
portion of the population report being chemically sensitive, chemical
manufacturers appear to think that if they can just beat on the illness
long enough, it will disappear. To that end, they have launched a
multipronged attack on MCS that consists of labeling sufferers as
"neurotic" and "lazy," doctors who help them as "quacks," scientific
studies which support MCS as "flawed," calls for more research as
"unnecessary," laboratory tests that document physiologic damage in
people with MCS as "unreliable," government assistance programs helping
those with MCS as "abused," and anyone sympathetic to people with MCS as
"cruel" for reinforcing patients' "beliefs" that they are sick. They
also have been influential in blocking the admission of MCS testimony in
lawsuits through their apparent influence on judges.
Like the tobacco industry, the chemical industry often uses non-profit
front groups with pleasant sounding names, neutral-appearing third party
spokespeople, and science-for-hire studies to try to convince others of
the safety of their products. This helps promote the appearance of
scientific objectivity, hide the biased and bottom-line driven agenda of
the chemical industry, and create the illusion of scientific
"controversy" regarding MCS. But whether anti-MCS statements are made by
doctors, researchers, reporters, pest control operators, private
organizations, or government officials, make no mistake about it - the
anti-MCS movement is driven by chemical manufacturers. This is the real
story of MCS.
CHEMICAL INDUSTRY
In 1990, the Chemical Manufacturers Association (now the American
Chemistry Council) vowed to work to prevent the recognition of MCS out
of concern for potential lost profits and increased liability if MCS
were to become widely acknowledged (2). It specifically committed to
work through physicians and medical associations to accomplish this,
stating that it was critical to keep physicians from legitimizing MCS.
Unfortunately, this plan has been relatively successful. The industry
has enlisted the aid of vocal anti-MCS physicians who promote the myths
that people with MCS are "hypochondriacs," "hysterical," "neurotic,"
suffer from some other psychiatric disorder, belong to a "cult," or just
complain too much. Most of these physicians work for industry as
high-paid expert witnesses although their financial ties are usually not
disclosed in their journal articles, interviews, or speaking
engagements. Therefore, many people, including those in the health care
profession, are often led to believe that these physicians' opinions
reflect an honest appraisal of MCS rather than the chemical industry's
agenda. At least one industry expert witness has authored two anti-MCS
position papers for prominent medical associations. It is easy to see
why these papers are biased against MCS and how by helping to combat MCS
in the courts, these position statements are quite lucrative for
industry and expert witnesses alike.
PHARMACEUTICAL INDUSTRY
The pharmaceutical industry is also involved in the effort to
suppress MCS. Drug companies, which usually work with the medical
profession to try to help patients, are working to deny help for those
with MCS. This is extraordinary, but can be explained by the fact that
the pharmaceutical industry is intimately linked to the chemical
industry. That is, many companies that make medications also manufacture
pesticides, the chemicals most implicated in causing MCS and triggering
symptoms in people who are chemically sensitive. For example, Novartis
(formerly Ciba-Geigy and Sandoz) is a pharmaceutical company that makes
and sells the widely used herbicide atrazine (3). This helps explain why
a Ciba-Geigy lobbyist submitted material to a New Mexico legislative
committee in 1996 opposing all legislation related to MCS and declaring
that the symptoms of people with MCS "have no physical origins" (4). The
legislation being proposed would have, among other things, funded a
prevalence study of MCS, an information and assistance program and "800"
telephone number, hospital accommodation guidelines, and an
investigation of housing needs of people with MCS (5).
Novartis is also a large manufacturer of the organophosphate insecticide
diazinon (3), a neurotoxic pesticide currently being reviewed for its
safety by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (6). The EPA recently
banned a related organophosphate pesticide, chlorpyrifos (commonly sold
as Dursban), from household uses because of concern about its toxicity,
especially to children (7). The pharmaceutical company Eli Lilly used to
be a part of DowElanco (now Dow AgroSciences), the primary manufacturer
of chlorpyrifos (8). Aventis (formerly Hoechst and Rhone-Poulenc)
manufactures the allergy medicine Allegra as well as the carbamate-containing
insecticide Sevin (active ingredient carbaryl) (9). Monsanto, known for
making Roundup and other herbicides, is a wholly owned subsidiary of a
pharmaceutical company called Pharmacia (10, 11). Zeneca manufactures
pesticides (12) and pharmaceuticals (AstraZeneca), including drugs to
treat breast and prostate cancer, migraine headaches, and epilepsy (13)
-- illnesses whose cause or exacerbation have been linked to pesticide
exposures.
Pfizer and Abbott Laboratories make both pharmaceuticals (14) and
pesticides (15), while BASF makes pharmaceutical ingredients and
pesticides (16). Even Bayer, famous for making aspirin, manufactures the
popular neurotoxic pyrethroid insecticide Tempo (active ingredient
cyfluthrin) (17). Novartis, Ciba, Dow, Eli Lilly, BASF, Aventis, Zeneca,
and Bayer are all members of the American Chemical Council (formerly the
Chemical Manufacturers Association), as are other pharmaceutical
manufacturers, such as Dupont, Merck, Procter & Gamble, and Roche (18).
The pharmaceutical industry has been able to spread misinformation about
MCS and limit the amount of accurate information received by physicians
and other health care providers through its financial influence over
medical journals, conferences, and research. It is well known that
magazines containing cigarette ads are less likely to publish
anti-smoking articles. Similarly, because medical journals rely on
pharmaceutical advertisements for funding, they are not likely to
publish positive MCS articles. In fact, researchers supportive of MCS
have long complained that it is very difficult to get their studies
published in the medical literature. Pharmaceutical companies may also
influence medical organizations such as the American Medical
Association, whose funding relies in large part on the sales of drug
advertisements in its journals (19), and the American Academy of Family
Physicians, whose major donors are drug companies (20).
Corporate financing of medical conferences has also been shown to bias
the information presented (21). Since continuing medical education is
becoming increasingly reliant on corporate sponsorship, industry
influence over physician education is a growing concern in the medical
community (22). Other ways the pharmaceutical industry can influence
physicians are also of
concern. In a 2000 Journal of the American Medical Association article
(23), the author states that "physicians have regular contact with the
pharmaceutical industry and its sales representatives, who spend a large
sum of money each year promoting to them by way of gifts, free meals,
travel subsidies, sponsored teachings, and symposia" (p. 373). The study
concludes that "the present extent of physician-industry interactions
appears to affect prescribing and professional behavior and should be
further addressed . " (p. 373). This is especially true regarding the
effect that the pharmaceutical and chemical industries have had on
physicians' professional behavior in response to MCS. Because they do
not receive appropriate and accurate information on MCS during their
training or from medical journals and continuing education courses,
physicians have been largely unprepared to deal with chemically
sensitive patients. As a result, their responses to MCS patients have
tended to range from dismissive to blatantly hostile.
One example of the pharmaceutical industry's direct attempt to present
anti-MCS information at a medical conference was at the 1990 meeting of
the American College of Allergy and Immunology. Sandoz (now Novartis)
was scheduled to sponsor a one day workshop that characterized people
with MCS as mentally ill (24). This company was a large manufacturer of
pesticides and pharmaceuticals (25), including anti-psychotic,
anti-depressant, and sedative medications (14). Therefore, Sandoz stood
to benefit both from pesticides being exonerated as the cause of MCS and
from people with MCS being treated with psychiatric drugs. As it turned
out, people with MCS outraged by the workshop risked their health to
protest the event and were able to shut it down (26).
The pharmaceutical industry also influences research on MCS. First and
foremost, it is not pursuing research on MCS (other than to perhaps fund
a few studies to try to discount it), despite being a major source of
funding for medical research to help those with other diseases.
Secondly, as was evident when the Ciba-Geigy lobbyist opposing funding
for MCS research in New Mexico, the industry is not only refraining from
doing research on MCS itself but is attempting to block research by
others as well.
A recent editorial in the New England Journal of Medicine outlined a
myriad of ways that financial ties with the pharmaceutical industry may
influence physicians (27). "The ties between clinical researchers and
industry include not only grant support, but also a host of other
financial arrangements. Researchers serve as consultants to companies
whose products they are studying, join advisory boards and speakers'
bureaus, enter into patent and royalty arrangements, agree to be the
listed authors of articles ghost written by interested companies,
promote drugs and devices at company-sponsored symposiums, and allow
themselves to be plied with expensive gifts and trips to luxurious
settings" (p. 1516). In fact, some industries, including the tobacco
industry, have paid authors up to $10,000 to publish letters in
high-profile scientific journals (28, 29). The author
of another New England Journal of Medicine article wrote, "The practice
of buying editorials reflects the growing influence of the
pharmaceutical industry on medical care" (30). Since these conflicts of
interest are increasingly encroaching on the medical profession in
general, it is highly likely that some of them apply to physicians
opposed to MCS as well.
ENVIRONMENTAL SENSITIVITIES RESEARCH INSTITUTE
Several nonprofit organizations and trade associations sponsored by
the chemical industry are particularly active in opposing MCS. For
example, lobbyists for RISE (Responsible Industry for a Sound
Environment), a pesticide trade association, and the Cosmetic, Toiletry,
and Fragrance Association testify against MCS each year in the New
Mexico legislature. The Chemical Specialties Manufacturing Association,
which represents companies who manufacture and distribute home, lawn and
garden pesticides, antimicrobial and disinfectant products, automotive
specialty products, waxes, floor finish products, and many types of
cleaners and detergents, has also submitted anti-MCS comments to the NM
legislature (31). And individuals from a lesser-known organization
calling itself the Advancement of Sound Science Coalition published an
opinion-editorial in two New Mexico newspapers several years ago that
was critical of the positive steps being taken by the New Mexico
legislature on MCS (32, 33).
The leading opponent of MCS, however, is unquestionably the
Environmental Sensitivities Research Institute (ESRI). This
corporate-financed nonprofit organization was founded in 1995
specifically to combat MCS. According to MCS Referral and Resources,
ESRI was founded to "serve the needs of industries affected by MCS
litigation" (34). But since ESRI tends to be
secretive about its membership, board members, and activities, it is
hard to know exactly who is involved with ESRI and what the organization
does. However, it is known that ESRI is primarily supported by its
member companies and trade associations, who pay $5000 or $10,000 a year
in annual dues (35, 36). It is also known that the past board of
directors have included representatives or employees of DowElanco,
Monsanto, Procter and Gamble, RISE, the Cosmetic, Toiletry and Fragrance
Association, and other chemical companies and trade associations (36).
Although ESRI has in the past claimed to be a scientific and educational
organization dedicated to the open exchange of scientific information
(37), this is belied by its decidedly anti-MCS views. ESRI's bias
against MCS is evident in its fact sheet that claims that MCS is a
"phenomenon" that "defies classification as a disease" (38). It appears
that this organization's main work consists of disseminating anti-MCS
literature, holding anti-MCS conferences, intervening in legal and
government affairs, and otherwise trying to impede progress on MCS. And
despite its name as a research institute, ESRI has only recently begun
to award small MCS research grants. It will be a great surprise,
however, if the majority of these studies do not support a psychological
basis for MCS.
Besides lacking objectivity, some of ESRI's activities demonstrate
questionable ethics. For example, ESRI published an "advertorial,"
advertisements made to look like legitimate news stories, in newspapers
around the country that stated that MCS "exists only because a patient
believes it does and because a doctor validates that belief." Then,
according to Albert Donnay of MCS Referral in Resources, ESRI
anonymously tried to get the American Academy of Family Physicians
Foundation (AAFPF) to endorse its anti-MCS brochure (36). Fortunately,
the AAFPF withdrew its support for the brochure when ESRI would not put
its name on it.
One of the more flagrant misrepresentations in the brochure (39) was the
answer "No" to the question, "Is MCS listed as a disability under the
Americans with Disabilities Act?" One might consider this an honest
mistake if it were not for the fact that an article published at almost
the same time by ESRI's then executive director clearly demonstrated he
knew better. In the article, he states that "although not categorically
noted to be a disability in the body of the law, the ADA [Americans with
Disabilities Act] does allow for the consideration of MCS as a
disability on a case-by-case analysis that is applied to all other
physical and mental impairments" (40). And he also writes that "in 1991,
the Department of Housing and Urban Development stated that people
suffering from MCS can seek protection under federal housing
discrimination laws." It appears that ESRI was attempting to mislead
physicians and the public into believing that MCS is not a covered
disability, while its executive director was warning an
industry-oriented audience that MCS was a covered disability and
offering suggestions for how to defend themselves against a claim.
New Mexico has had direct experience with ESRI representatives and
tactics. In 1996, ESRI mailed anti-MCS literature to a state disability
agency that was developing a report to the legislature on MCS. Among
other things, this material included advice on how to avoid
accommodating chemically sensitive employees (41). Then, ESRI staff
visited New Mexico in person. The ESRI manager attended a Town Hall
Meeting on MCS at which she offered to help the state epidemiologists
develop a prevalence study protocol. Shortly thereafter, however, she
reportedly told another member of the prevalence study working group
that MCS can't be studied because it doesn't exist. This circular
reasoning, that you can't prove MCS exists without more study and you
can't study it because it doesn't exist, is commonly used by industry
lobbyists. A corollary to this is the lobbying strategy of calling for
more research on MCS while attempting to block it at the same time.
ESRI's then executive director also visited Santa Fe in 1996. Among
other things, he went to a Medicaid Advisory Committee meeting and urged
that Medicaid benefits be denied for the diagnosis and treatment of
chemical sensitivities, spoke against MCS at a continuing medical
education (CME) conference for physicians where he failed to disclose
his industry affiliations as required by CME guidelines, and berated the
staff at an independent living center for providing a support group for
people with MCS.
Another ESRI project involved paying a medical journal to publish the
proceedings of an anti-MCS conference in its supplement (42). This
conference was organized, in part, by a consulting firm that was owned
by ESRI's then executive director and supplied expert witnesses to
testify against MCS. Later these papers were cited as references to
support anti-MCS statements in material ESRI gave to the Ciba-Geigy
lobbyist, which she submitted to the legislature. In keeping with its
attempts to keep a low profile, however, ESRI did not put its name on
the documents that were submitted.
A ROSE BY ANY OTHER NAME
Even though MCS has gone by that name for over a decade, industry
associates would have you believe that it goes by a myriad of other
names, so many that it must not be describing anything legitimate. In
fact, if an article starts out with a long list of possible names for
MCS, you can be almost positive it is going to be critical of MCS.
Referring to MCS as a "phenomenon" rather than an illness and using the
term "multiple chemical sensitivity syndrome" also tend to be code for
"it doesn't really exist" or if it does, "it's all in people's heads."
Articles using these names are usually accompanied by other myths and
put-downs, such as MCS has no definition, no objective findings, and no
known prevalence, and is "only symptom-based," a "belief system," or "chemophobia."
People with MCS are also frequently dismissed as having an "unexplained
illness," as if they, rather than their physicians, were to blame for
not adequately "explaining" it.
Since 1996, however, the chemical industry has taken a bold new approach
to the name for MCS. It has made a concerted effort to rename MCS
"idiopathic environmental intolerances (IEI)." It is quite clear that
its motivation is to get the word "chemical" out of the name. This would
be analogous to the tobacco industry trying to change the name of
"smokers cough" to "idiopathic respiratory paroxysms." Anything to try
to distance the disease from its products.
But despite frequent claims to the contrary by its users, the term IEI
has not replaced the name for MCS. Its use, however, has slowly
increased over the years in anti-MCS journal articles, industry
propaganda, and medical association position papers. Fortunately, the
use of the term IEI is like a tracer dye that immediately alerts the
reader, patient, or constituent that the person or organization using
the term is biased against MCS. The most frequent users of the name IEI
are doctors who work for industry as expert witnesses or allegedly
"independent" medical examiners, industry-sponsored organizations, and
allergy or occupational medicine organizations that have long been
critical of environmental doctors who treat people with MCS. While there
may be some individuals who innocently use the term IEI, the
overwhelming majority who use it appear to be connected to industry in
some way.
One of the more outrageous claims that the chemical industry and its
associates make is that the World Health Organization (WHO) supports the
name change from MCS to IEI. The WHO was one of the sponsors of an
International Programme on Chemical Safety (IPSC) workshop on MCS held
in Germany in February 1996. This workshop was dominated by
industry-associated participants and had no representatives from
environmental, labor, or consumer groups. Instead, the non-governmental
participants were individuals employed by BASF, Bayer, Monsanto, and
Coca Cola (43). It was at this meeting that the decision was made to try
to change the name of MCS to IEI.
Besides getting the word "chemical" out of the name, the workshop
participants chose to add the term "idiopathic," apparently because they
thought it meant the illness was "all in someone's head" rather than of
unknown etiology (cause) (44). But lots of "real" illnesses are
considered idiopathic, such as idiopathic epilepsy (i.e., epilepsy not
resulting from trauma, surgery, infection, or other obvious cause).
Still, implying that MCS has no known cause helps the industry. They do
not want to be held responsible for their products causing MCS, or for
that matter, triggering symptoms in people sensitized to them. It's hard
to understand, however, how IEI is much of an improvement over MCS,
since the term MCS does not address the cause of the illness either. It
is just a good description of the condition, that sufferers are
sensitive to multiple chemicals, which is not that different from having
multiple "environmental intolerances."
In any case, the WHO issued a statement to the workshop participants
after the meeting to try to put a stop to claims that WHO supported the
name change from MCS to IEI. It stated that "A workshop report to WHO,
with conclusions and recommendations, presents the opinions of the
invited experts and does not necessarily represent the decision or the
stated policy of WHO." It goes on to say that "with respect to 'MCS,'
WHO has neither adopted nor endorsed a policy or scientific opinion"
(45). Despite this explicit disclaimer, claims that the World Health
Organization
supports IEI continue to be made by MCS opponents.
MCS IN COURT
Perhaps the area where the chemical industry is most aggressively
fighting MCS is in the courts. This is not surprising considering the
fact that ESRI was founded to assist industries involved in MCS
litigation. MCS cases commonly involve workers compensation, social
security, toxic tort, disability or health insurance, and disability
accommodations. MCS can also arise in divorce proceedings, child custody
battles, and landlord-tenant and other disputes. In lawsuits where
chemical manufacturers are directly involved, for example, when they are
being sued for harm caused by their products, it is clear that attacks
on the plaintiff's credibility and medical condition, including MCS,
come from the manufacturers. It is often unrecognized, however, how much
the chemical industry is also involved in suppressing MCS in other
lawsuits, through filing of briefs, supplying "expert" witnesses, and
distributing anti-MCS literature to attorneys and witnesses.
The chemical industry also seems to have been influential in convincing
many judges that MCS testimony should not be allowed in court. They
argue that MCS does not satisfy the Daubert criteria for the admission
of scientific testimony established by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1993.
This ruling eliminated the requirement that expert testimony be
"generally accepted" in the scientific community to be admissible and
replaced it with the requirement that the reasoning or
methodology underlying any proposedtestimony merely be scientifically
reliable and relevant (46). Thus, the intent of the ruling was to allow
testimony on emergent theories of disease even if they had not yet been
generally accepted by the medical community. But in the case of MCS,
this has backfired. The Daubert ruling, which was intended to make it
easier to admit scientific testimony in court, has increasingly been
used to block testimony on MCS.
Some judges have ruled that MCS does not satisfy the Daubert criteria,
despite the fact that it clearly satisfies at least three of the four
factors specified in the Daubert ruling to assess proposed testimony.
The Daubert ruling states that the following considerations will bear on
admissibility of expert testimony: 1) whether the theory or technique in
question can be (and has been) tested, 2) whether it has been subjected
to peer review and publication, 3) whether the reasoning or methodology
has a known or potential error rate, and 4) whether it has widespread
acceptance within a relevant scientific community (46). According to
these criteria, testimony on MCS should be admitted because, it "can"
and "has" been tested (47), has been subjected to extensive peer review
and publication (48), and is widely accepted in the environmental
medicine community. The factor regarding potential error rates is
largely irrelevant because MCS is a clinical diagnosis that does not
rely on tests.
But whether an illness or theory satisfies the Daubert criteria is
obviously in the eye of the beholder. A judge in New Mexico, for
example, ruled there was not enough published literature on MCS to
fulfill the Daubert criteria (49). Yet there are over 600 articles on
MCS and related conditions in the published literature, the majority of
which support a physiological rather than psychological basis for MCS in
a ratio of two to one (48). The judge rejected testimony on MCS even
though he thought there would be enough literature in 5 to 10 years for
it to satisfy the Daubert requirements. But if a judge is convinced MCS
will be well established in the future, then testimony on MCS is
credible and ought to be admitted now. After all, the intent of the
Daubert rule is to admit testimony on just such valid emerging theories
of disease as this one. In addition, it is unclear how much this judge
was swayed by the anti-MCS opinions of the defendant's expert witness,
who admitted she relied on material sent by ESRI for her testimony and
did not know who funded the organization (50). It is, indeed,
unfortunate that the subjective nature of the Daubert criteria has
allowed judges to misinterpret them in favor of the chemical industry.
This has resulted in many people with MCS being denied disability
benefits, compensation for toxic injuries, and reasonable accommodations
under the ADA, among other things.
A case in point is a recent ruling by the Massachusetts
Supreme Court that rejected MCS testimony in a work-related injury case
because the physician's testimony was not based on "reliable
methodology, that is, because he did not use a test to diagnose MCS
(51). This conclusion was reached even after stating that "a new theory
or process might be so 'logically reliable' that it should be
admissible, even though its novelty prevents it from having attained
general acceptance in the relevant scientific community" and that "in
many cases personal observation will be a reliable methodology to
justify an expert's conclusion." This is another example of a biased
interpretation of the law against MCS. And again we find the chemical
industry involved. Though not a defendant in the case, the American
Chemical Council (formerly the Chemical Manufacturers Association) filed
a "friend of the court" brief and expressed delight with the court's
anti-MCS decision (52).Finally, there are growing attempts to get
medical licensing boards to revoke the licenses of physicians who
diagnose and treat chemically sensitive patients. One physician is in a
legal battle with the California Medical Board to keep his license, in
part, for this reason (53). In an anti-MCS booklet, an author who is
known as an industry sympathist, has called for state licensing boards
to "scrutinize" the activities of doctors who treat MCS patients. He
also stated that he thought "most of them should be delicensed" (54).
Trying to put physicians who treat MCS out of practice or harassing them
until they quit on their own is an extremely insidious way of trying to
get rid of MCS. It is also a threat to the independent practice of
medicine by everyone.
IMPACTS OF MCS
The impact of MCS on
individuals and society is huge, both in terms of its potential severity
and the number of people affected. Many people with MCS have lost
everything - including their health, homes, careers, savings, and
families. They are chronically ill and struggle to obtain the basic
necessities of life, such as food, water, clothing, housing, and
automobiles, that they can tolerate. Finding housing that does not make
them sicker, that is, housing that is not contaminated with pesticides,
perfume, cleaning products, cigarette smoke residues, new carpets or
paint, and formaldehyde-containing building products, is especially
difficult.
Many people with MCS live in cars, tents, and porches at some time
during the course of their illness. In addition, people with MCS usually
have financial difficulties. One of the most unjust aspects of the
anti-MCS movement is that many expert witnesses are paid $500 per hour
to testify against people disabled with MCS who are seeking that much
money to live on per month.
The impact on society is no less severe. An increasing number of
physicians, lawyers, teachers, computer consultants, nurses and other
skilled workers who were once productive members of society can no
longer support themselves or contribute their skills to society. Their
loss of earning power also translates into less money spent in the
marketplace and less tax revenues. Deputy state epidemiologist Ron
Voorhees of New Mexico estimated in a letter to the governor that the
state may be losing 15 million dollars a year in tax revenues due to the
decreased earning capacity of those with MCS (55).
And this medical condition is not rare. Prevalence studies in
California (56) and New Mexico (57) found that 16% of the respondents
reported being chemically sensitive. Additionally, in New Mexico 2% of
the respondents reported having been diagnosed with MCS -- the more
severe form of chemical sensitivities -- and in California, 3.5%
reported having been diagnosed with MCS and being chemically sensitive.
Although women report being chemically sensitive twice as often as men,
which contributes to its "hysteria" label, those reporting chemical
sensitivities are otherwise evenly distributed with respect to age,
education, income, and geographic areas. Chemical sensitivities are also
evenly reported among ethnic and racial groups, except for Native
Americans, who reported a higher prevalence in both studies.
It should be of great concern to everyone that this devastating and
potentially preventable illness is affecting an increasing percentage of
the population and disabling a significant portion of the work force. It
is affecting people in all walks of life throughout the country and
around the world. It is vitally important, therefore, that MCS be
squarely addressed and not swept under the rug as the chemical and
pharmaceutical industries are trying to get the medical profession and
government to do. But ignoring MCS is not only ill-advised, it is
inhumane.
CONCLUSION MCS is
under siege by a well-funded and widespread disinformation campaign
being waged by the chemical and pharmaceutical industries. Their goal is
to create the illusion of controversy about MCS and cast doubt on its
existence. These industries feel threatened by this illness, but rather
than heed the message that their products may be harmful, they have
chosen to go after the messenger instead. While corporations are only
beholden to their stockholders, medicine and government need to be
responsive to the needs of their patients and citizens. Unfortunately,
industry has convinced many in the medical and legal professions, the
government, the general public, and even loved ones of people with MCS,
that this illness doesn't exist or is only a psychological problem. As a
result, people whose lives have already been devastated by the illness
itself frequently are denied appropriate health care, housing,
employment opportunities, and disability benefits. On top of this,
people with MCS often have to endure hostility and disrespect from the
very agencies, professionals, and people who are supposed to help them.
For example, an elderly woman with MCS was forced out of public
housing and became homeless when staff insisted on remodeling her
apartment, even though she warned them ahead of time that the new carpet
and cabinets would make her too sick to continue living there. The
physician of a woman, hospitalized because she was having anaphylactic
reactions to all foods, tried to transfer her to the psychiatric ward
for "force feeding." A school district fired a chemically sensitive
teacher for excessive absenteeism after it failed to provide her with
the accommodations she had requested and needed in order to work. A
former airline attendant had to camp in the desert and a mother and her
small child had to live in their car because they could not find housing
that did not make them severely ill. And a man disabled with MCS is
unable to obtain vocational rehabilitation services even though he wants
to work.
Countless others have failed to find tolerable housing, including a
former marathon runner who has lived in her car for 7 years and
struggles to fight off frostbite every winter. In another case, a
chemically sensitive woman living in her trailer was forced to leave a
state park when hostile staff insisted on spraying pesticides while she
was there. The park supervisor said that he had seen a television show
on MCS which convinced him that he did not have to make accommodations
for people claiming to have MCS because it did not exist. The show had
featured ESRI's then executive director and portrayed people with MCS as
freeloaders and misfits.
Despite the chemical industry's disinformation campaign, however, and
its influence over doctors, lawyers, judges, and government, incremental
progress is being made with respect to MCS. This is a testament to the
strength, courage, dedication, and sheer numbers of people with MCS. In
fact, there are so many people becoming chemically sensitive that
attempts to ignore or silence them are ultimately doomed to fail. But
even though it is just a matter of time before MCS gets the recognition
it deserves, each day it is delayed prolongs the suffering of millions
of people with MCS and puts millions more at risk of developing it.
Therefore, it is essential that those in medicine, government, and
society begin to see past the industry disinformation campaign in order
to recognize the true nature of MCS and the urgent need to address this
growing epidemic.
Health-report comment.
Well once again folks here we go again.
It's not enough the vast bulk of the population is being poisoned
but to deny that the condition MCS even exists is a travesty against
individuals that have been crippled and unable to operate as normal
human beings. The unfeeling attitudes of these giant corporations
beggars belief. It is all in the name of profit and they don't care as
long as they can make the almighty dollar at any expense. To hell with
the consequences of their actions. What do they care about people who
have suffered irreparable damage to their immune systems? Zilch!
As long as they can report ever increasing profits to their
shareholders then what other reason have they to exist except for the
almighty dollar. Too bad their own children or they themselves may
also become MCS sufferers too. Will they exhibit the same lack of
empathy towards their own children as they now display to children and
adults struck down with this terrible affliction?
Or will they just dismiss their own children as freaks or
malingerers like they are currently doing to hundreds of thousands of
people who are severely affected by MCS.
I say what goes around comes around! Sooner or later many of these
people in powerful positions that have the capacity to change the course
we are taking, will have it all come back on them tenfold. Perhaps it
will be too late for the world to change.
Wake up NOW and start telling people to get the toxic chemicals
out of their lives. If everyone just convinced one person per month of
the dangers of toxic chemicals we are in everyday contact with, then we
would have a massive movement occurring in no time! It is only when a
massive groundswell of public opinion has occurred, will they take
notice.
This groundswell is already occurring in the Certified Organic
industry.
Vote NO to CHEMICALS by supporting the ethical Certified Organic
industries and companies as much as you possibly can!
When will this toxic world wake up?
Geoff Goldie

WARNING
These toxic chemical products may contaminate your children!
CLICK
HERE
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