Fear no more
Editorial
Copyright 1999 Washington Times
March 16, 1999
BODY:
They were linked to cancer, birth defects and wildlife
contamination. They were 
PCBs, and lawmakers hastily passed legislation in the mid-1970s to
limit their 
production and use.
On Wednesday the peer-reviewed Journal of Occupational and
Environmental 
Medicine is scheduled to publish a study showing that as a matter
of fact, 
PCBs aren't such 
a big risk after all.  
"This is the largest cohort of male and female workers exposed
to 
PCBs," the study says. 
"The lack of any significant elevations in the site-specific
cancer mortality of 
the production workers adds important information about human
health effects of 
PCBs." 
PCBs, or polychlorinated biphenyls, were attractive to
industry for a variety of 
reasons.  They could serve as insulation in large transformers, and
they were 
nonflammable, which reduced the risks of fire.  At one time
insurance companies 
and building codes actually required the use of 
PCB-friendly electrical equipment.
But when the chemical began 
turning up in landfills and rivers, panic set in.  In 1975 the
Centers for 
Disease Control found that rats fed large doses of a certain kind
of 
PCBs over an extended period developed liver cancer, and that was
all lawmakers 
needed to know; the stuff had to 
go.
But because 
PCBs lingered in the environment, questions have arisen about how
to clean them up. 
 General Electric Co., for one, faces possible costs in the
hundreds of 
millions of dollars for removing 
PCBs discharged into the Hudson River from its factories. 
Activists are concerned 
that 
PCB-tainted 
fish may eventually cause cancer in the humans who eat them.
The latest study findings should ease those concerns. 
Focused on some 7,000 
men and women who worked in two GE plants between 1946 to 1976 who
were exposed 
to 
PCBs on the job, the research did 
find high levels of the chemical in their blood.  But it did not
find 
correspondingly higher numbers of cancer-related deaths.  It found
fewer.  Some 
400 cancer deaths is what one would predicted in the 1,195 workers
who had 
died, given average rates of cancer.  The study 
found just 353.
"The bottom line," said the study's author,
Renate Kimbrough, 
"is looking at all of these workers and doing all of these
analyses, we did not 
find any significant health effect" from 
PCBs.  Government regulators should keep that in mind when they
order 
PCB cleanup and disposal.
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