Thousands Sign Up for Teflon Health Test

By BRIAN FARKAS
The Associated Press
Saturday, November 12, 2005; 11:04 PM

BELPRE, Ohio -- Ted Johnson worked 35 years for a DuPont Co. chemical plant and believed what company officials said about the safety of the operation. Now, he's not so sure. Johnson and his wife, Barbara, are among more than 43,000 people in the mid-Ohio Valley who have signed up for tests to find out if a chemical used to make Teflon might harm their health.

"At first I thought 'What I don't know, won't hurt me,'" said Barbara Johnson. "We're 69 and I thought we've been doing pretty good."


Chris Hendricks, 22, of Little Hocking, Ohio has blood taken Friday, Oct. 7, 2005, at a C8 screening center in Belpre, Ohio. Hendricks is among the more than 43,000 Mid-Ohio Valley residents who have signed up for tests that could determine if a chemical used to make Teflon at the nearby Dupont Co. in Washington Works, W.Va. has affected their health. (AP Photo/Jeff Gentner)
Chris Hendricks, 22, of Little Hocking, Ohio has blood taken Friday, Oct. 7, 2005, at a C8 screening center in Belpre, Ohio. Hendricks is among the more than 43,000 Mid-Ohio Valley residents who have signed up for tests that could determine if a chemical used to make Teflon at the nearby Dupont Co. in Washington Works, W.Va. has affected their health. (AP Photo/Jeff Gentner) (Jeff Gentner - AP)

The Johnsons don't have health problems and Ted Johnson never worked in the Teflon section of the plant.

But on a recent rainy afternoon, the couple yielded to pressure from their four grown children and drove from their home in Cutler to the Ohio River town of Belpre, 17 miles away, to have their blood tested and to answer questions about their health. Getting answers about their long-term health could take years.

DuPont is paying for the survey and testing as part of its settlement of a class-action lawsuit over the chemical ammonium perfluorooctanoate, also known as C8. The chemical is used to produce Teflon at the plant in Washington, W.Va., along the Ohio River.

Area residents sued DuPont in 2001, claiming the chemical used at the Washington Works plant contaminated drinking water.

Since August, more than 17,000 residents of the six Ohio and West Virginia water districts covered by the settlement have taken part in the study. The project has a waiting list of about 26,000 people, and it's expected that up to 60,000 will eventually take part.

Though used since World War II, the long-term effects of C8 on people are unknown. The screenings and analysis will try to determine if there is a link to cancer, heart disease and birth defects. The chemical has produced liver cancer in lab rats, and earlier this year a federal scientific review panel concluded C8 is "likely" to be carcinogenic to humans.

DuPont disputes that, citing its own studies on about 1,100 employees at its Washington Works plant. The company said its research has found higher cholesterol levels among employees who worked closest to C8 but no overall health problems.

DuPont also points to a recent University of Pennsylvania Medical School study of about 380 people who live near the plant. It found the residents had up to 80 times more C8 in their blood than the general population, but the researchers couldn't find a link to increased liver, kidney, thyroid or cholesterol problems. They said more study was needed.

Answers will begin to come next year when a court-appointed panel of three epidemiologists reviews the latest screening results.

Some findings will come quickly, said panel member Kyle Steenland, an epidemiology professor at Emory University. But others _ such as links to cancer and heart disease _ may take up to four years.


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