Camp Lejeune Toxic Water. After more than a decade, a report that minimized the cancer threat of toxic water at Camp Lejeune has been discredited by the federal government. According to the Associated Press, the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) is withdrawing its report on Camp Lejeune’s water because of omissions and scientific […]
Camp Lejeune Toxic Water. After more than a decade, a report that minimized the cancer threat of toxic water at Camp Lejeune has been discredited by the federal government. According to the Associated Press, the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) is withdrawing its report on Camp Lejeune’s water because of omissions and scientific inaccuracy.
Camp Lejeune Lawsuits seeking $33 billion in damages have been filed by veterans who say the water at Camp Lejeune made them sick, the Associated Press said. These veterans and their advocates had long disputed the ATSDR’s conclusion that chemicals in Camp Lejeune’s water posed no health risks to adults.
According to a report on WaterTechOnline, chlorinated hydrocarbons as well as the chemicals tetrachloroethylene (PCE), a dry-cleaning solvent, and trichloroethylene (TCE), a degreaser, were detected in the water which served housing, schools, other buildings, and swimming pools at Camp Lejeune. The 1997 ATSDR report found that the contamination began in the 1950s and continued until wells were shut down in 1987. Health officials now are saying that as many as 1 million people may have been exposed to water toxins.
The discredited report significantly downplayed the risk of cancer faced by people living on the base, the Associated Press said. A table included in the document said adults faced no increased cancer risk from the water, while another portion of the report said the risk was “unlikely”. In regards to children, the report states the cancer risk as being “unknown”.
According to the Associated Press, ATSDR is pulling the report because:
According to the Associated Press, ATSDR has pulled the report from its website. The agency will redo its analysis with the new science that is now available.
Health officials are also continuing a separate study into whether fetuses might have been harmed by the water, the Associated Press said.
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