School poisonings rise  
BY PAUL H.B. SHIN
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER
July 27, 2005

The number of children poisoned by pesticides at school has jumped in recent years,
according to a new study that measured the casualties of haphazard spraying in and
around classrooms.

The rate of American children being sickened by pesticides at school jumped 39% in
four years, from 5.6 out of every million students in 1998 to 7.8 per million in 2002,
researchers said yesterday.

That doesn't count the untold number of children who may not know they were
exposed to pesticides at school or don't suspect pesticides caused their sickness,
said Dr. Walter Alarcon of the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health.

Using reports from three national toxic surveillance programs, Alarcon's team tracked
2,593 people who got sick after being exposed to insecticides, disinfectants, bug
repellents and weed killers at schools.

"Pesticide exposures at schools continue to produce acute illnesses among school
employees and students in the United States, albeit mainly of low severity," said
Alarcon, whose findings appear in today's Journal of the American Medical
Association.

"We think there's definitely under-reporting," Alarcon told the Daily News. "Some
patients will not associate their illnesses with pesticide exposure."

Pesticide poisoning commonly goes undiagnosed or misdiagnosed, because symptoms
resemble flu-like illnesses, pink eye or stomach problems, said Dr. Allen Dozor, chief
of pediatric pulmonology at Westchester Medical Center.

"Little kids have very sensitive lungs and even very low levels of chemicals can
irritate and inflame their airways," he said.

In the Northeast U.S., pesticide-related illnesses spiked in 2000, rising from 5.4 cases
per million students in 1998 to 10.4 cases. It's unclear if that was due to bug spraying
in the wake of the West Nile virus.

There are no federal rules limiting pesticide use in schools. But city public schools
only use pesticides as a last resort, Education Department spokeswoman Margie
Feinberg said.

If pesticides are going to be used, "schools must provide written notification to all
parents, guardians and staff," at least 48 hours before they are used, Feinberg said.

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/local/story/331774p-283527c.html





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