There have been a few women who have mentioned clusters of cancer in their neighnorhoods.
If you have experienced the same or a similar occurrence, would you mention it here?
Comments
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Clusters of cancer
I haven't experienced this personally, but I know of a couple of towns to the north of me where this happened. There was a GE plant in one of the towns, and toxic chemicals like PCB's were dumped into the river there for years. Also, there were gypsies who were spreading the PCB waste on driveways like driveway sealer, getting paid by the homeowners who didn't know what they were getting. There were and still are people who have gotten cancer from this. GE is now spending billions to dredge the Hudson River in NYS to get rid of the PCB's. A different chemical plant in that area may have also contributed to the damage. I know there was also a toxic waste dump in one of the towns where homes had been built. One street that was best known for having that problem was where one of my ex co-workers lived. She was a smoker, so she had a double whammy. She first got lung cancer and then developed kidney cancer and died after several years of fighting the two.
In addition, there was a clump of people who had cancer in Albany, NY, most of whom went to the same high school. It was thought to have been caused by the nuclear testing that was done in Nevada in the 50's. The radiation was picked up in air currents there and was expected to drift out to sea. However, a bad rain storm brought the radiation down to earth in the Albany area. Many of these high school classmates developed the same extremely rare cancer. I can't recall what cancer it was now, but I think it was some cancer of the blood. The radiation at the time was found and documented by a government contractor in a nearby town.
This whole area in general has a higher than normal incidence of cancer of various types.
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pinkypinky104 said:Clusters of cancer
I haven't experienced this personally, but I know of a couple of towns to the north of me where this happened. There was a GE plant in one of the towns, and toxic chemicals like PCB's were dumped into the river there for years. Also, there were gypsies who were spreading the PCB waste on driveways like driveway sealer, getting paid by the homeowners who didn't know what they were getting. There were and still are people who have gotten cancer from this. GE is now spending billions to dredge the Hudson River in NYS to get rid of the PCB's. A different chemical plant in that area may have also contributed to the damage. I know there was also a toxic waste dump in one of the towns where homes had been built. One street that was best known for having that problem was where one of my ex co-workers lived. She was a smoker, so she had a double whammy. She first got lung cancer and then developed kidney cancer and died after several years of fighting the two.
In addition, there was a clump of people who had cancer in Albany, NY, most of whom went to the same high school. It was thought to have been caused by the nuclear testing that was done in Nevada in the 50's. The radiation was picked up in air currents there and was expected to drift out to sea. However, a bad rain storm brought the radiation down to earth in the Albany area. Many of these high school classmates developed the same extremely rare cancer. I can't recall what cancer it was now, but I think it was some cancer of the blood. The radiation at the time was found and documented by a government contractor in a nearby town.
This whole area in general has a higher than normal incidence of cancer of various types.
Thanks for the information, and yikes.
I was just remembering that my brother and I who got germ cell cancers at the same age, used to play in the rivers of chemicals in a fiberglass factory across Old Country Road from us in Hicksville, NY. What a name for a town, eh?
Billy Joel lived across the street from us and was some years younger. Wonder if he has cancer. How would one go about figuring out who lived where when? You know my question. How do you think people who lived in the area could be followed up with.
Anyway, thanks for responding.
Warm hug,
claudia
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Hicksville
I went to the State University of New York at Albany, where a bunch of Long Island kids went. I remember some of them mentioning Hicksville. That was the first I'd heard of it.
I really don't know how people's residences would be tracked when they have moved around a bit. The cases I heard about were people who still live in the area. I was in my bank one day and got on the subject of cancer with the teller. She told me she'd lived right next door to the GE plant, and GE had offered her money for her house as a way of settling up for causing her husband's cancer death.
I do know there are tumor registrars in the hospitals in this state who report facts about cancers to the state health department. I had to do part of their job back in the late 80's or early 90's when I worked in a hospital that didn't yet have people in that position. Unfortunately, I really don't remember now what information had to be sent off on each patient. I can't recall reporting any information on different places where they lived. I may have been required to report a current address for the patient, but I think that would have been the limit of it.
I have heard at another area hospital where I worked that there are an abnormally high number of cancers in this area. I think this information came from the facts collected by the tumor registrars and summarized by the state.
You didn't happen to live in NYS in the 50's or early 60's when the radiation from Nevada came down, did you? I've gotten the impression you're not as old as I am. Playing in the chemicals in the river certainly could have been a factor.
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Pinkypinky104 said:Hicksville
I went to the State University of New York at Albany, where a bunch of Long Island kids went. I remember some of them mentioning Hicksville. That was the first I'd heard of it.
I really don't know how people's residences would be tracked when they have moved around a bit. The cases I heard about were people who still live in the area. I was in my bank one day and got on the subject of cancer with the teller. She told me she'd lived right next door to the GE plant, and GE had offered her money for her house as a way of settling up for causing her husband's cancer death.
I do know there are tumor registrars in the hospitals in this state who report facts about cancers to the state health department. I had to do part of their job back in the late 80's or early 90's when I worked in a hospital that didn't yet have people in that position. Unfortunately, I really don't remember now what information had to be sent off on each patient. I can't recall reporting any information on different places where they lived. I may have been required to report a current address for the patient, but I think that would have been the limit of it.
I have heard at another area hospital where I worked that there are an abnormally high number of cancers in this area. I think this information came from the facts collected by the tumor registrars and summarized by the state.
You didn't happen to live in NYS in the 50's or early 60's when the radiation from Nevada came down, did you? I've gotten the impression you're not as old as I am. Playing in the chemicals in the river certainly could have been a factor.
I'm 67. Lived in New York, mostly on the island and in the city, til I was 21, when I moved to the Bay Area in California.
I like the idea of contacting hospital records offices.
claudia
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Claudiacalifornia_artist said:Pinky
I'm 67. Lived in New York, mostly on the island and in the city, til I was 21, when I moved to the Bay Area in California.
I like the idea of contacting hospital records offices.
claudia
i grew up in St. Louis, MO. My mom had colon cancer, a brother died of colon cancer, and a brother died of Melanoma, and I have UPSC. If you google Coldwater Creek St. Louis. You will see the unusually high number of cancers in that area. There was a company called Mallinkrodt that moved toxic wastes around the area. I did not play in Coldwater Creek, but do not know if the toxic waste were in our drinking water. It is sad the number of young people that have been affected with Cancer and birth defects. One high school Mc Cluer has really been affected. My neice graduated from Mc Cluer and her mother died of breast cancer and her dad died of colon cancer. So I do worry about her and hope she keeps up with her physicals.
One news report said eight zip codes were affected by this Coldwater Creek, but I could not find if the zip code I grew up in was one of them. The main area is Florrisant MO which is getting all the publicity over the Brown shooting.
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Claudiacalifornia_artist said:Pinky
I'm 67. Lived in New York, mostly on the island and in the city, til I was 21, when I moved to the Bay Area in California.
I like the idea of contacting hospital records offices.
claudia
I didn't think of this when you first replied to me, but I just want to let you know that you shouldn't bother trying to contact hospital medical record offices. There is a law now that prevents them from giving out medical information on their patients, although I'm sure they still have to report it to government agencies who keep the stats on cancer. You and I wouldn't be able to get the information from them. If the hospital medical record office employees were to give out this information to the general public, they could be put in jail for violating the patients' privacy.
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Clusterspinky104 said:Claudia
I didn't think of this when you first replied to me, but I just want to let you know that you shouldn't bother trying to contact hospital medical record offices. There is a law now that prevents them from giving out medical information on their patients, although I'm sure they still have to report it to government agencies who keep the stats on cancer. You and I wouldn't be able to get the information from them. If the hospital medical record office employees were to give out this information to the general public, they could be put in jail for violating the patients' privacy.
I think that either the CDC or EPA, possibly NIH has information on this. just a thought. Hope you all had a great Thanksgiving!
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Cancer registryAWK said:Clusters
I think that either the CDC or EPA, possibly NIH has information on this. just a thought. Hope you all had a great Thanksgiving!
When I read my pathology report, it mentioned that my name and diagnosis would be sent to a cancer registry for the State of Florida. Maybe information about cancer clusters occurring in certain zip code areas can be obtained by contacting this cancer registry in your State.
I hope you all are doing well and I wish you the very best during this holiday season.
Cathy
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Cluster
Don't know if this is a cluster, but of the 66 people in one square block of the neighborhood where I was raised 16 have/had cancer. My own family household seems to be the highest number with three of the five of us having cancer. I live in Southeast Texas, the oil/gas refinery of the world! Go figure! Debra
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Coldwater Creek and the nuclear waste legacy in St. Louis
I lived very close to this creek in the late 60s. When I was 12 I lost my thyroid and now I have stage four synovial sarcoma. I am 100% sure it was caused by the nuclear waste developed when they enriched uranium for the Manhattan project at Mallinkrodt chemical plant in St. Louis. They dumped all the waste out by the airport in unsealed barrels And it sat there for 40 years blowing in the wind. Three months ago the Army Corps of Engineers tested the yards in my old street and found radiation in all of them .There's no cancer history and my family and I've talked to several physicians and they all say that my type of cancer is usually caused by radiation exposure.
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just saw this post
I live in a small town of about 1000 and I can't tell you how many cases of cancer have occered in this area. It is almost a weekly occorence (sp) that someone new has been diagnosed with this desease. Almost all are different types, Men and women, We do have a gold mine in the area that used syinide in it proccessing. and not we were informed that our city water had uranium it it and that if you have health issues to talk to your dr.. Mine said no one should be drinking it. It really makes you wonder Lou Ann
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Cancer diagnoses and environmental carcinogensLou Ann M said:just saw this post
I live in a small town of about 1000 and I can't tell you how many cases of cancer have occered in this area. It is almost a weekly occorence (sp) that someone new has been diagnosed with this desease. Almost all are different types, Men and women, We do have a gold mine in the area that used syinide in it proccessing. and not we were informed that our city water had uranium it it and that if you have health issues to talk to your dr.. Mine said no one should be drinking it. It really makes you wonder Lou Ann
Interesting and enlightening posts. I learned recently that a hospital, closed due to bankruptcy years ago, was investigated due to a high incidence of cancer among employees who worked close to or within the Radiology Dept there. I worked there for close to 3 years and left in advance of the known pending bankruptcy. My dearest friend at the hospital died at age 51 from breast cancer. Another close friend there died from brain cancer. Apparently there were others. Of course, now me. I spent quite a bit of time talking to my two close friends there. The investigation proved to be "inconclusive". I wonder what the truth is about the health of this hospital's interior.
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