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Mercury Threat To Fetus Raised
Please note - this PROVES that the BABY has MORE mercury than
the mother! This totally supports my concept that all informed
people on earth NEED to detox mother and preferable the prospective
father and preferably BEFORE conception occurs. Although EDD is
useful, the threat is so high that I prefer to also use heavy
detox and even some of the Beyond Clean - simple EDTA powder in
the bathtub daily to help the overall detoxification process and
this not only will prevent absorbing TOXIC metals from the water
supply INTO the body, but will pull metals from the skin, which
with PROCTOR AND Gamble's research means the skin stays younger,
less wrinkles, less age spots, less skin cancer, less burning
when you go OUT in the sun and on the research animals, a 20 %
INCREASE in average lifespan. Why drink bottles water and shower
or bath in FILTH when for as little as $24.95 RETAIL, your patients
can have 20 ounces of pure food grade EDTA to convert every bath
into a mini-chelation program that the whole family can share,
and thus help to save water for our planet, while looking younger
with healthier skin. Just the iron alone, which is very high in
our skin, is accelerating the aging process, and thus catalyzing
free radical damage to skin from the sun, which the bathing can
easily correct. Now you can encourage your patients to get their
15 minutes of SUN so that they can have HEALTHY levels of Vitamin
C, without FEAR that they are developing skin cancer!
Sincerely
Dr. Gordon MD DO MD (H.)
Washington Post, 2/6/04, p. A-3
By Guy Gugliotta
A new government analysis nearly doubled the estimate of the number
of newborn children at risk for health problems because of unsafe
mercury levels in their blood. Environmental Protection Agency scientists
said yesterday that new research had shown that 630,000 U.S. newborns
had unsafe levels of mercury in their blood in 1999-2000.
The key factor in the revised estimates is research-showing differences
in mercury levels in the blood of pregnant women and their unborn
children. In a Jan. 26 presentation at EPA's National Forum on Contaminants
in Fish, in San Diego, EPA biochemist Kathryn R. Mahaffey said researchers
in the last few years had shown that mercury levels in a fetus's
umbilical cord blood are 70 percent higher than those in the mother's
blood.
"We have long known that the effects of methyl mercury on the
fetal nervous system are more serious" than on adults, Mahaffey
said in a telephone interview yesterday. "But we did not routinely
measure [umbilical] cord blood. We had thought that the mother and
the fetus had the same level."
Jane Houlihan, a vice president of the Environmental Working Group,
noted that the study "for the first time . . . calculated the
number based on children's blood levels, not mothers'. The EPA analysis
is showing that even if even if the mother is below the danger zone,
she can give birth to a baby that's over the limit."
Mercury, a heavy metal, is a highly toxic substance that can seriously
damage neurological tissue. Poisoning can lead to learning disabilities,
lower intelligence and overall sluggishness. Fetuses, infants and
young children are especially vulnerable. Recent advisories from
EPA and the Food and Drug Administration have cautioned pregnant
women on the dangers of eating tuna and other large predatory fish
and shellfish, whose tissues absorb elevated levels of mercury.
EPA has said the largest U.S. sources of mercury contamination are
coal-fired power plants, whose annual atmospheric emissions contain
48 tons of mercury. Much of it drifts into the ocean.
The Bush administration is proposing a new regulation requiring
power plants to cut mercury emissions 29 percent by 2007 and 70
percent by 2018. Environmental advocates say the industry can achieve
significantly deeper reductions.
Mahaffey, a top scientist in EPA's Office of Prevention, Pesticides
and Toxic Substances, said she began developing her new estimates
of the number of infants at risk by studying research published
last year from New Jersey and Maine. The information helped her
revise the formula used to extract data from a survey conducted
by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in 1999-2000 on
mercury levels in pregnant women's blood.
The new formula showed that one out of six pregnant women had mercury
levels in their blood of at least 3.5 parts per billion, sufficient
for levels in the fetus to reach or surpass the EPA's safety threshold
of 5.8 parts per billion. In 1999-2000, the last year for which
government data are available, this meant that 630,000 children
were at risk instead of the original estimate of 320,000.
© 2004 The Washington Post Co.
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