
Last week, however, the University of Michigan published their findings from a recent health study they conducted in Aamjiwnaang. The study tested the blood and urine of 42 mother-child pairs from the reserve for chemical exposure. While this study was not done on the scale that the community is asking the federal government to perform, it did find that “mothers and children in the Aamjiwnaang region are exposed to a number of environmental pollutants.” It also points out that 60 percent of the Valley’s emissions occur within three miles of Aamjiwnaang—where about 850 people live today. And it concluded that the exposures of the test subjects are higher than the average Canadian for organochlorine pesticides and previously banned manmade chemicals known as PCBs, like cadmium, mercury, perfluorochemicals.The most alarming discovery appears to be the presence of PCBs in the bloodstreams of Aamjiwnaang residents. To clear up the ramifications of this, we spoke to Jim Brophy, an activist and scientist who has been studying the health risks in the Sarnia area for a large part of his career. He called the University’s findings “very disturbing.”“We don’t know exactly what the health implications are when you find PCBs in a person’s blood or urine when it’s sampled like this. We don’t know, they can’t tell you ‘well this number means you’ll get cancer’ or ‘this number means you’ll have neurological problems or you’ll have attention deficit.’ What we do know is that these chemicals are very powerful agents. PCBs mimic hormones that are either estrogenic or anti-estrogenic. And hormones, specifically in young children and in pregnant women, can have huge implications for a person’s lifetime health history. They set you up and make you susceptible for a whole host of problems. So if you find that chemical in your system, the first thing it means is that you have been exposed. The second thing is that these exposures carry risks to them.”
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