Understanding the BP oil spill’s health impacts (video)

A scientific study underway along the Gulf Coast is looking at toxic components of crude oil in seafood in order to understand the BP oil disaster‘s impacts on human and ecosystem health.

The five-year study, funded by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, is known as Gulf Coast Health Alliance: Health Risks Related to the Macondo Spill, or GC-HARMS. It involves scientists from the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston, Texas A&M University at Galveston, Louisiana State University and the University of Pennsylvania.

It also involves community groups throughout the region, including Bayou Interfaith Shared Community Organizing (Thibodaux, La.), Center for Environmental and Economic Justice (Biloxi, Miss.), Louisiana Environmental Action Network (Baton Rouge, La.), Mississippi Coalition for Vietnamese Fisherfolk (Gulfport, Miss.), South Bay Community Alliance (Coden, Ala.), United Houma Nation (Houma, La.) and Zion Travelers Cooperative Center (Phoenix, La.).

In the following Louisiana Environmental Action Network video by Jason Berry, scientist John Sullivan of UTMB collects seafood samples in Louisiana’s Lake Borgne on a boat operated by fisherman George Barisich while Bryan Parras of Texas Environmental Justice Advocacy Services photographs the work.  The researchers are looking at levels of toxic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons or PAHs — components of crude oil known to cause cancer — in popular seafood species including shrimp, blue crab, oysters and various fin fish. They hope to better understand and communicate the potential health effects for humans eating the tainted seafood.

As Barisich hauls in oysters, one of the fishermen working alongside him jokes, “After the spill, you don’t have to put any oil in the pan when you fry them.”

Ex BP cleanup worker speaks: people are sick and dying in the Gulf

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Notes from a Facebook buddy:

This young woman, Jennifer Rexford, BP-hired oil cleanup worker, is documenting her illness from the toxins in the gulf with her video camera. If you think it’s just headaches or something like that, watch this. Severe neurological damage. Doctors and hospitals refuse to acknowledge this with anyone there who’s sick.  And there are apparently tens of thousands now.

Paul Doomm is mentioned twice in this video.  He is a 22 year old who swam in and ate from the Gulf all summer, against his grandmother’s advice.  He has been hospitalized after seeing 94 doctors who don’t know what to do for him.  His  blood had the highest amount of PAH’s ever documented.  You can see Paul in this video (he’s the one in the wheelchair).

In this 2/21/11 video, Jennifer’s eye is swollen shut. She shows the results of a blood workup for Gulf chemicals and she is loaded with them. She also shows her hospital record, where she was diagnosed for stroke. The hospitals will not admit people are sick and dying from the chemicals in the gulf.

Jennifer Rexford on Youtube

Update on Jennifer Rexford

“BP Crud” makes local news ~ interview with Paul Doomm & Wilma Subra

Related Articles

Truth Out for the Gulf Forum ~ Q & A with Dr Wilma Subra

Question & Answer Sessions with Dr. Wilma Subra
& Forum participants
Cherri Foytlin – Co-founder, Gulf Change, based in Grand Isle, Louisiana
Dennis Rednour – Resident, Longbeach, Mississippi
C.J. Troxler – Unemployed Shrimper, Lousiana Shrimpers’ Association
Robin Young – Guardians of the Gulf, Orange Beach, Alabama

References to “you saw it here”, “that young man” etc are referencing Paul Doom’s on camera seizure during the event.

Toxic Legacy – BP Gulf Disaster

The oil may have stopped pouring into the Gulf of Mexico. Yet the devastation continues as hundreds of people begin to suffer the medical consequences of the toxic dispersant used to clear it up.

Gary Burris was one of the many fishermen who volunteered to clean up his home after the spill. However, what many people don’t know is that he and many others were forced to sign a compensation waiver. Renowned environmental scientist Wilma Supra is not only taking BP to court for this compensation waiver but has also collected over 600 medical complaints so far. BP’s oil dispersant of choice Corexit 9500 is the most toxic in the market and is banned in the UK. Gary was sprayed by Corexit – “the next day I was burned in the back of my throat”, things went from bad to worse “I could not breathe, I couldn’t get up”. Wilma says the BP compensation fund will not fix these long-term – “What about all the people who are being made sick?” she demands. “This is not something that goes away.”

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