Longer Looks: Overcrowded Morgues, Miners’ Health, And Pollution In Your Blood
Each week, KHN finds interesting reads from around the Web.
Say you are found on your bathroom floor, on the grassy knoll of someone else鈥檚 front yard, in the berth of your tractor-trailer, in your own bed, at the foot of a bridge, under a car wheel, in the car, caught in the bend of a river, collapsed in the bar, alone in the remains of a scorched kitchen. Your death is sudden and unexpected, a death that no one plans for but that approximately half a million of us will experience this year in America. No death is special, but this kind of death requires special care, procedurally, from a number of people you will never meet. The procedural aspects of your death, which you will never see, begin with a phone call. One afternoon in the summer of 2018 in Cleveland, a man returned home to find his wife slumped over her computer keyboard. She was in her 50s and had been in poor health, but nothing seemed urgent or life-threatening. It looked as if she died while shopping online. Her husband called 911. (Kisner, 2/25)
Surat Lal died with seven colleagues in an explosion at a small quarry in India, but like thousands of other casualties at mines in the developing world, his death wasn鈥檛 counted as a mining fatality. Around 90% of the world鈥檚 miners, according to the World Bank, work in small-scale operations or illegally by trespassing on land controlled by others, including bigger mining companies. Those miners鈥攚ho dig up materials used in cars and smartphones, among other products鈥攁re frequently operating in emerging economies like India, in dangerous conditions with no safety regulations, poor equipment and a culture of risk-taking. (MacDonald and Pokharel, 2/27)
"None of us would have signed up for this,鈥 said Sandy Wynn-Stelt, kicking off a round of gallows humor among her neighbors. 鈥淣one of us would have said, 鈥楬ey, I鈥檒l do the experiment.鈥欌滻t was a warm summer evening in the town of Belmont, Michigan, and Wynn-Stelt 鈥斅燼long with neighbors Jennifer Carney and Tobyn McNaughton 鈥 was in Carney鈥檚 backyard discussing how things got upended here in 2017. That鈥檚 when they all learned that the groundwater running below their homes is contaminated with per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances 鈥斅燾ollectively called PFASs (pronounced PEE-fasses). Known as 鈥渇orever chemicals鈥 because they don鈥檛 fully degrade in the environment, these industrial compounds have been found in air, water, and soil around the globe, and in the bodies of most people. They have been associated with a laundry list of health problems, including cancer, ulcerative colitis, diabetes, and disrupted immune development. And yet, despite a recent surge in the number of studies devoted to PFASs, their health effects are not yet fully understood. (Talpos, 2/24)