[ RadSafe ] Fwd: Asbury Park Press article on TFP
Frey, Steven R.
sfreyohp at slac.stanford.edu
Thu Feb 17 21:06:56 CET 2005
At least the anti-nuclear cabal is being honest this one time: They're in it for the money.
Steve Frey
Any comments made by me are my own and are not to be construed to be representative of those of my employer, whatever they have been in the past, may be now, or will be.
-----Original Message-----
From: radsafe-bounces at radlab.nl [mailto:radsafe-bounces at radlab.nl] On Behalf Of Norm Cohen
Sent: Thursday, February 17, 2005 10:49 AM
To: radsafe at radlab.nl
Subject: [ RadSafe ] Fwd: Asbury Park Press article on TFP
Scientist seeks endorsement of research on cancer near reactors
Hopes backing will lead to funding
Published in the Asbury Park Press 02/17/05 By NICHOLAS CLUNN MANAHAWKIN BUREAU WHAT'S NEXT The state Commission on Radiation Protection will consider testimony provided by Joseph Mangano, national coordinator of the Radiation and Public Health Project, and studies published by his group. It will then formulate an opinion about the health project's work. A favorable assessment could help the group obtain state grants.
A scientist well-known for collecting baby teeth at the Jersey Shore and testing them for cancer-causing radiation touted his group's studies on Wednesday before a top radiation-protection official who has been skeptical of the research.
In testimony during a state Commission on Radiation Protection meeting, Joseph Mangano, national coordinator for the Radiation and Public Health Project, tried to convince commission Chairwoman Julie Timins and other commissioners to endorse his work, which attempts to link cancer with emissions from nuclear power plants.
Mangano's request coincides with a push by the federal government to extend the lives of nuclear reactors and to build new ones.
In July, the Oyster Creek nuclear power plant in Lacey is expected to seek permission to extend its life by 20 years.
Support from the nine-member volunteer commission, made up of radiation experts, would improve the research group's chances of receiving state grants, Mangano said.
Ultimately, Mangano wants to reveal what causes childhood cancer and bring peace of mind to parents of children with cancer, such as Brick resident Marie Crescenzo.
Her 15-year-old daughter, Katie, was diagnosed with thyroid cancer nearly two years ago.
Crescenzo said she asked her doctors what caused her daughter's cancer.
She also combed the Internet searching for answers but found none.
Mangano's
work offers Crescenzo hope, she said, though she does have reservations about his group's research.
"I wish he could come up with an answer," she said. "That would be wonderful."
But the independent research group that brought actor Alec Baldwin and supermodel Christie Brinkley to Toms River in May 2000 to promote its Tooth Fairy Project could have difficulty convincing the commission that it is legitimate.
About a month after the state mailed its first check - part of a $25,000 grant - to the health project in December 2003, Timins expressed serious concerns about the group's research methods in a letter to then-Gov. James E.
McGreevey.
Skepticism continued Wednesday following Mangano's presentation before six commissioners and other top state radiation officials from the Department of Environmental Protection.
Some commissioners suggested that Mangano revise his approach. Commissioner John J. Mauro said Mangano could obtain solid results by taking a completely different route: Pull data related to radiation released by reactors.
"There's a world of analytical material out there," he said.
Commissioners seemed most concerned with the number of teeth that Mangano tested.
They said scientists would require a much larger sample to regard the work as statistically sound.
The research group used 52 teeth in its latest study, which was funded by the state grant.
It linked children with cancer and strontium-90, a radioactive isotope emitted in small doses from reactors.
The study showed children with cancer have more of the isotope in their baby teeth than children without cancer.
Mangano acknowledged the sample-size problem and welcomed commissioners'
suggestions.
He said after the meeting that he would like to produce more credible research, but he needs funding, which is why he addresses the commission.
The commission plans to review Mangano's comments and the health project's studies. Once it finishes, the commission will draft an opinion on the group.
Timins said she did not know how long it would take the commission to make a decision.
Donald B. Louria, professor and chairman emeritus of the department of preventive medicine and community health at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, Newark, said the state should invest in Mangano.
"I think his hypothesis should be played out," he said. "Has Mangano proved anything? Absolutely not. But he deserves support."
Oyster Creek officials disagree. Plant spokeswoman Gina Scala said the commission should look at the many studies refuting the connection among strontium-90, reactors and cancer before reaching a decision about Mangano's work.
"We would hope that they would look at the entire picture and come to the same decision as they came to when they wrote to Governor McGreevey," she said.
Mangano said he received an opportunity to appear before the commission after Edith Gbur, president of Jersey Shore Nuclear Watch, a citizens group that wants Oyster Creek closed immediately, asked state officials to hear him.
Gbur told commissioners Wednesday that they should support the health project.
Livingston resident Jane Furst and her 14-year-old son, Cory, also urged commissioners to see value in Mangano's research.
Doctors diagnosed Cory with lung and liver cancer when he was 19 months old.
Chemotherapy treatments caused him permanent hearing loss.
Dressed in a black suit, white shirt and tie, Cory asked the commission to help find out what caused his sickness by backing Mangano.
"If there is a relationship between strontium-90 and cancer, then we must shut down the nuclear power plants producing it," he said.
--
Coalition for Peace and Justice
UNPLUG Salem Campaign; 321 Barr Ave, Linwood NJ 08221; 609-601-8583; cell 609-742-0982 ncohen12 at comcast.net; http://www.unplugsalem.org http://www.coalitionforpeaceandjustice.org
"A time comes when silence is betrayal.
Even when pressed by the demands of
inner truth, men do not easily assume
the task of opposing their government's
policy, especially in time of war.
Nor does the human spirit move without
great difficulty against all the apathy of conformist thought, within one's own bosom and in the surrounding world."
- Martin Luther King Jr.
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