by Pesticide Action Network North America
A study published this summer in the Journal of
the American Medical Association underscores the risks of pesticide
use in and around the nation's schools. Analyzing 2,593 reported
pesticide poisonings in schools and childcare centers between
1998 to 2002, the study reported several troubling findings: incidence
rates among children increased significantly from 1998 to 2002;
drifting pesticides applied off site were responsible for 31%
of reported poisonings; and insecticides and disinfectants were
the pesticides most frequently at fault. Study authors note that
no federal requirement limits pesticide exposures at childcare
centers, elementary or secondary schools, and that their results
"should be considered low estimates of the magnitude of the
problem because many cases of pesticide poisoning are likely not
reported to surveillance systems and poison control centers."
The study, "Acute Illnesses Associated With Pesticide Exposure
at Schools," examined state surveillance data in the National
Institute for Occupational Safety and Health's Sentinel Event
Notification System for Occupational Risks pesticides program
and from the California Department of Pesticide Regulation, and
a national database of calls made to poison control centers in
the Toxic Exposure Surveillance Systems. The study reported incidence
rates of pesticide related illness of 7.4 cases per million for
students and 27.3 cases per million for employees, but emphasized
that individuals needed to seek medical care and be reported in
order to be counted in the study. Pesticide related illnesses
are grossly under-reported for a number of reasons: individuals
may not seek or be able to afford medical care, doctors are often
not trained to recognize pesticide related illness, and symptoms
of minor or even moderate pesticide poisoning can resemble those
of other common illnesses.
Children were the victims in 76% of the reported cases, and
insecticides alone or combined with other pesticides were most
often responsible-for 895 cases (or 35% of the total incidents).
Disinfectants caused 830 cases (32%), repellants were responsible
for 335 incidents (13%) and herbicides were the cause in 279 cases
(11%).
Organophosphates were the class of insecticides most frequently
responsible for poisonings. Children are more vulnerable than
adults to the effects of organophosphate pesticides, which have
been linked in animal studies to developmental delays, behavioral
disorders and motor dysfunction. In both laboratory animals and
humans, exposure to chlorpyrifos, one of the most commonly used
organophosphate pesticides, can cause delayed effects on the nervous
system, sometimes occurring years after exposure.
The study focused on acute pesticide exposure, but the authors
expressed considerable concern for long term effects, "Repeated
pesticide applications on school grounds raise concerns about
persistent low level exposures to pesticides at schools."
The authors continued, "The chronic long-term impacts of
pesticide exposures have not been comprehensively evaluated; therefore,
the potential for chronic health effects from pesticide exposures
at schools should not be dismissed. Unfortunately, the surveillance
methods used in our report are inadequate for assessing chronic
effects." The authors also noted that pesticides on school
grounds can be tracked inside school buildings. Once inside, pesticides
breakdown more slowly, with residues remaining for months or even
years.
Federal legislation to require safer pest control in schools
has been stalled in the U.S. House of Representatives for several
years. Introduced in 1999 and adopted twice by the Senate, the
School Environmental Protection Act requires schools to adopt
less toxic methods of pest control, and notify parents and staff
when pesticides are applied on school grounds. The legislation
is the product of years of work by parent coalitions working to
bring safer pest control practices to their schools. A 2003 report
by the School Pesticide Reform Coalition and Beyond Pesticides
provides models for parents and school districts of least toxic
pest control with profiles of 27 school districts avoiding use
of hazardous pesticides. The Coalition is now collecting pledges
to its School Pesticide Reform Protocol on its website, which
includes detailed arguments to present to school boards and administrators.
In the absence of a federal mandate, state policies on pesticide
use in schools are widely disparate and provide mixed protections.
Sixteen states require posting of signs for pesticide applications
indoors or outdoors, 25 require posting for applications on school
grounds. Twenty-one states require parents to be notified when
pesticides are applied, 10 restrict certain highly toxic pesticides
in schools, and 16 states recommend or require use of Integrated
Pest Management. Only seven states attempt to control pesticide
drift by restricting applications near schools.
Sources: Alarcon et al., "Acute Illnesses Associated With
Pesticide Exposure at Schools" Journal of the American Medical
Association, July 27, 2005, Vol. 294, No. 4; Press Release, July
27, 2005; Schooling of State Pesticide laws-2002 Update, Beyond
Pesticides, http://www.beyondpesticides.org; Chlorpyrifos Facts,
PANNA http://www.panna.org/resources/documents/factsChlorpyrifos.dv.html;
"Achieving A Healthy Learning Environment Through Integrated
Pest Management," 2003, School Pesticide Reform Protocol,
School Pesticide Reform Coalition, http://www.beyondpesticides.org/toxicfreeschools/index.htm.
Contact: PANNA