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Living near pesticide-treated farms raises risk of childhood brain tumors


Living near pesticide-treated farms raises risk of childhood brain tumors
Published on Wednesday, March 31, in the 
Environmental Research journal, the study also revealed that the pregnant women did not have to be working in agriculture or in close contact with pesticides for health-harming exposures to occur.
Study co-author Christina Lombardi, a public health researcher at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, said there are large numbers of pregnant women and children living close to pesticide-treated farmlands. Both mothers and children could experience adverse health effects from their proximity to those farmlands.
The study is not the first to show that pesticide use poses a threat to pregnant women and their children. But it is unique in that it showed the specific pesticides linked to the development of different kinds of CNS tumors. ....

United States , Myles Cockburn , Los Angeles , Christina Lombardi , University Of California , Sinai Medical Center , Environmental Research , California Department Of Pesticide Regulation , International Journal Of Cancer , Cedars Sinai Medical Center , California Cancer Registry , California Department , Pesticide Regulation , Pesticide Use Reporting , Julia Heck , Cancer Causes , International Journal , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , மைல்ஸ் காக்பர்ன் , லாஸ் ஏஞ்சல்ஸ் , கிறிஸ்டினா லோம்பார்டி , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் கலிஃபோர்னியா , சினை மருத்துவ மையம் , சுற்றுச்சூழல் ஆராய்ச்சி , கலிஃபோர்னியா துறை ஆஃப் பூச்சிக்கொல்லி ஒழுங்குமுறை , சர்வதேச இதழ் ஆஃப் புற்றுநோய் ,

Childhood Brain Tumors Linked to Mother's Exposure to Pesticides | Jonathan and Karin Fielding School of Public Health


Research published in the peer-reviewed journal
Environmental Research suggests that exposure during pregnancy to a wide variety of pesticides may lead to the development of central nervous system tumors during childhood.
And the increased risk of these tumors – estimated as much as twice to 2.5 times higher for some pesticides – occurs even if the mother is not a farmworker, but lived as much as 2.5 miles (4000 meters) away from the field where the pesticides are sprayed, researchers found.
“Exposure to certain pesticides, simply through residential proximity to agricultural applications during pregnancy, may increase the risk of childhood central nervous system tumors,” said ....

University Of Southern California , United States , Myles Cockburn , Los Angeles , Beate Ritz , Christina Lombardi , Shiraya Thompson , Us Environmental Protection Agency , Environment Research , Sinai Medical Center , Us National Institutes Of Health , Samuel Oschin Comprehensive Cancer Institute At Cedars , University Of North Texas , Fielding School Of Public Health , California Department Of Pesticide Regulation Use , Environmental Research , University Of North Texas College Health , Public Service , Public Health , Pesticide Application , Risk Factor , Childhood Central Nervous System , Protection Agency , Julia Heck , North Texas College , Cedars Sinai Medical Center ,

Living near pesticide-treated farms raises risk of childhood brain tumors


Published on Wednesday, March 31, in the 
Environmental Research journal, the study also revealed that the pregnant women did not have to be working in agriculture or in close contact with pesticides for health-harming exposures to occur.
Study co-author Christina Lombardi, a public health researcher at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, said there are large numbers of pregnant women and children living close to pesticide-treated farmlands. Both mothers and children could experience adverse health effects from their proximity to those farmlands.
The study is not the first to show that pesticide use poses a threat to pregnant women and their children. But it is unique in that it showed the specific pesticides linked to the development of different kinds of CNS tumors. ....

United States , Myles Cockburn , Los Angeles , Christina Lombardi , University Of California , Sinai Medical Center , Environmental Research , California Department Of Pesticide Regulation , International Journal Of Cancer , Natural News , Cedars Sinai Medical Center , California Cancer Registry , California Department , Pesticide Regulation , Pesticide Use Reporting , Julia Heck , Cancer Causes , International Journal , Childrens Health , Infants Health , Pesticides Amp Herbicides , Brain Cancer , Brain Tumors , Childhood Brain Tumors , Toxic Chemicals , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் ,

Maternal exposure to pesticides may lead to central nervous system tumors during childhood


Maternal exposure to pesticides may lead to central nervous system tumors during childhood
Research published in the peer-reviewed journal
Environmental Research suggests that exposure during pregnancy to a wide variety of pesticides may lead to the development of central nervous system tumors during childhood.
And the increased risk of these tumors – estimated as much as twice to 2.5 times higher for some pesticides – occurs even if the mother is not a farmworker, but lived as much as 2.5 miles (4000 meters) away from the field where the pesticides are sprayed, researchers found.
Exposure to certain pesticides, simply through residential proximity to agricultural applications during pregnancy, may increase the risk of childhood central nervous system tumors. Policy interventions to reduce pesticide exposure in individuals residing near agricultural fields should be considered to protect the health of children. ....

University Of Southern California , United States , Myles Cockburn , Los Angeles , Beate Ritz , Christina Lombardi , Shiraya Thompson , Emily Henderson , Us Environmental Protection Agency , Environment Research , Sinai Medical Center , Samuel Oschin Comprehensive Cancer Institute At Cedars , Environmental Health Sciences , University Of North Texas , Fielding School Of Public Health , California Department Of Pesticide Regulation Use , Environmental Research , Public Service , University Of North Texas College Health , Public Health , Pesticide Application , Risk Factor , Childhood Central Nervous System , Protection Agency , Julia Heck , North Texas College ,