Health Dangers of Fracking Revealed in a Study
Published on by Water Network Research, Official research team of The Water Network in Academic
A new study from Johns Hopkins University published in Environmental Health Perspectives revealed associations between fracking and various health symptoms.
Those symptoms include nasal and sinus problems, migraines and fatigue in Pennsylvanians living near areas of natural gas development.
The study suggests that residents with the highest exposure to active fracking wells are nearly twice as likely to suffer from the symptoms.
This is the third study released by Hopkins in the past year that connects proximity to fracking sites with adverse health outcomes.
Last fall, researchers found an association between fracking and premature births and high-risk pregnancies, and last month, found ties between fracking and asthma.
What's more, a 2014 investigation revealed how health workers in Pennsylvania were silenced by the state Department of Health (DOH) and told not to respond to health inquiries that used certain fracking "buzzwords."
Documents obtained by Food & Water Watch last year indicate the DOH was inundated with fracking-related health concerns ranging from shortness of breath and skin problems to asthma, nose and throat irritation, which were ignored or pushed aside.
While the industry will no doubt continue to refute the expanding science about the dangers of fracking, we can't afford to ignore it.
The public health and climate impacts of extreme fossil fuel extraction requires bold leadership to keep fossil fuels in the ground and transition swiftly to renewable energy.
Source: Eco Watch
Media
Taxonomy
- Fracking
- Hydrology
- Geo-hydrology
- Fracking Technology
1 Comment
-
Interesting they can tell all of that without a doctor ever having actually seen a single person. The study was based on self administered questionnaire ( http://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/wp-content/uploads/advpub/2016/8/EHP281.acco.pdf ). They admit there was bias, saying "...survey participants had poorer health (measured by the Charlson comorbidity index) than non-responders." And the lead researcher works with the Post Carbon Institute ( http://www.postcarbon.org/ ), one of their stated goals being "Busting the Shale Hype". All in all not exactly unbiased research. And let us not forget, correlation is not causation.