1999


From: University of Washington

Screening programs find health problems among former Hanford workers

A press conference to outline the results of medical screenings of former Hanford workers will be held at 11 a.m. PST on Tuesday, Nov. 2, in the Columbia Room of the Richland Red Lion (formerly the DoubleTree).

The conference is sponsored by the University of Washington, The Coalition to Protect Workers' Rights, and the Department of Energy.

The conference will include representatives of those groups, plus former workers who will be available for interviews. Media unable to attend the conference can obtain information about the results, after the briefing, by calling the number above.

The two projects involved have screened about 600 workers so far, with plans to screen an additional 20,000 for health problems related to their work at the Hanford nuclear site in southeastern Washington state. These evaluations are the most extensive of former Hanford workers to date.

Undiagnosed lung disease and hearing loss are the most common ailments noted thus far.

The conference comes at the beginning of the third annual "Health of the Hanford Site" conference sponsored by the University of Washington. The data on former workers will be presented in full along with other topics related to human and ecological health at Hanford. The conference gives scientists, contractors, workers, residents, tribal representatives and others an opportunity to exchange information and discuss past, present and future research regarding the site.

Members of the media are welcome to cover some or all of the conference, also held at the Red Lion. For more information, call the number above or visit the conference Web site at http://depts.washington.edu/cresp2/hos. Besides worker health, other topics at the conference will include contaminated high-level waste tanks, beryllium exposure and evaluation of human and ecological health risks.

Among the scheduled topics:

    - The two new studies that quantify the number of health problems that have affected a sample of former Hanford production and construction workers.
    - A complete session on beryllium exposure and medical monitoring of former workers.
    - The status of storage tanks that hold Hanford's high-level nuclear waste.
    - Efforts to reconstruct the amount of radioactive exposure in the area.
    - Discussion about the "Hanford Openness Workshops," to foster open decision-making at Hanford and across the Department of Energy.
    - Transportation of nuclear waste.
    - The condition of local insects and elk.
    - How to assess Hanford's effects on the Columbia River.
    - The new Office of River Protection. Congress created the office to do something about high-level radioactive waste that's leaking toward the Columbia River. The conference will look at how ORP may differ from previous efforts, how it can ensure success, and how its progress should be measured.

The meeting is supported through funding from the Consortium for Risk Evaluation with Stakeholder Participation (CRESP) and the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, along with many co-sponsors.




This article comes from Science Blog. Copyright � 2004
http://www.scienceblog.com/community