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Fliers fume over planes treated with pesticides
By Chris Woodyard, USA TODAY
As the United Airlines jet winged home from Sydney last year, Sharon Dorazio's eyes started to burn and her stomach ached. The pain became unbearable. "I have never been so sick, so quick," she says. Her two grandsons, ages 13 and 14, complained of burning skin, itching eyes and loss of appetite. Sharon's husband, Richard, a surgeon, was confounded.
Read more
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On the Web Department of Transportation's site on spraying
Attorney's site for passengers affected by spraying
Stories and pictures taken while spraying was under way
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Then a flight attendant confided in them. Others were ill on the flight, the attendant said, and the crew believed the cause was the spraying of long-lasting pesticides in the cabin interior before passengers boarded.
A lawsuit filed last week by the Dorazios is the latest in a series of challenges to the decades-old practice of spraying pesticides in airliners. Australia, New Zealand, India and a few smaller countries, such as Jamaica, are among the dwindling number that require all airlines flying in from other countries to treat their planes with pesticides to keep out unwanted bugs.
Some nations require passenger airplanes arriving from other countries to be sprayed with insecticide to protect plants, animals and people.
These countries require spraying of insecticides while passengers are on board:
Grenada India
Kiribati Madagascar
Trinidad and Tobago Uruguay
These countries allow planes to be treated while they are empty; the pesticides used are designed to be effective for up to two months.
Australia Barbados
Fiji Jamaica
New Zealand Panama
These countries require spraying of planes from particular regions where there are contagious or infectious diseases.
Czech Republic Indonesia
South Africa Switzerland
United Kingdom
Source: Department of Transportation
The World Health Organization says the pesticides used are safe. But the complaints of some people who have ridden treated airplanes range from dizziness and skin rashes to more serious conditions such as tremors and breathing problems. A flight attendant says she became unable to work at age 32 after six years of flying in planes treated with pesticides. A pilot says his flying ability became impaired after he napped in the pilot bunkroom of a Boeing 747-400 that had been sprayed before his flight.
Sharon Dorazio says she developed "headaches and severe nausea" while on the United jet, according to the complaint she and her husband filed in Cook County Circuit Court in Illinois, where United is based. Their lawsuit alleges that United "carried on a campaign of silence and misinformation" about the potential effects on passengers of cabin spraying. They are seeking class-action status for the case.
United declined comment on the lawsuit. Its spokeswoman, Chris Nardella, says United sprays "because we're required to. As a company, we would prefer not to do this." Other airline officials say the pesticides might be bothersome to a few people but do not cause long-term health damage.
Although all airlines that fly to countries with spraying requirements are affected, United is getting the most attention. It is the only U.S. carrier that flies to the three largest countries that mandate aircraft spraying — Australia, India and New Zealand. The Association of Flight Attendants, which represents United employees, says the Dorazios' flight was one of 214 United flights in the past year in which passengers, pilots or flight attendants complained about pesticide odors.
Where spraying is drawing new attention:
The USA's largest pilots union is considering a campaign against the use of pesticides on aircraft. The Air Line Pilots Association is investigating reports of pilots who say they were affected by pesticides, and its executive board plans to discuss them in October.
One United co-pilot, in an internal report of a December incident, said his flying ability was impaired by pesticide used on a flight from Australia:
"My eyes started burning, and I said something to the other pilots and they had the same problem. When I awoke from first break, my head was congested, my eyes were burning, I had a sore throat and I had a rash on both sides of my neck. As the flight progressed, my sinuses swelled worse, I had problems swallowing and I was having problems breathing. I was making mistakes and suffering short-term memory loss and confusion."
The report says he and another relief pilot in the four-man crew went to the airline's medical office after landing.
The Federal Aviation Administration says it knows of only one incident of a pilot complaining about the effects of pesticide spray. "It's extremely, extremely rare," says spokeswoman Alison Duquette.
The Dorazios' lawsuit follows another filed against United last month on behalf of employees. Its lead plaintiff is a flight attendant who says she developed a head-to-toe rash on a May 23 flight. "I thought I had the German measles," says the flight attendant, Susan "Sam" Matthews. "It scared the hell out of me."
United Airlines had no comment on that lawsuit, either.
California's Department of Health Services is investigating about 100 cases of suspected pesticide illness from United planes. Preliminary findings are expected by Dec. 31. "We've known for a long time there are potential hazards from these aerosols," says James Cone, chief of the occupational health branch.
The State Department urged officials of India earlier this year to end the required spraying of airplanes when passengers and crew are aboard. "Spraying when passengers and crew are present should only be done when absolutely essential," says Deputy Assistant Secretary of State John Byerly.
The U.S. halted mandated spraying of planes with passengers aboard in 1979. United says India will allow it to spray planes when they are empty when United begins non-stops from Chicago to New Delhi on Oct. 27.
The issue has echoed in Congress. Thirty congressmen and 11 senators signed letters sent to the departments of State and Transportation this summer demanding to know what's being done to protect passengers and air crews.
A Canadian flight attendants union says it has received 15 to 20 reports from cabin crew about symptoms of pesticide exposure in the past year on Air Canada flights to Sydney and has written the airline about it. Air Canada spokesman John Reber says, "We are aware of a limited number of flight attendants who have raised this specific concern. It would be incorrect to describe it as widespread or representative of general concern."
The Flight Attendants Association of Australia says it's starting to make inquiries to its major airline, Qantas, about the safety of spraying. Qantas officials say they haven't had any complaints.
"This is not just a U.S. problem," says Shane Enright, head of the civil aviation division of the London-based International Transport Workers Federation. "I am aware of cases in Europe and Australia of crews that have been affected."
Two spraying methods
Aircraft insecticides are applied either from aerosol cans with passengers aboard or, in the case of Australia, New Zealand and some other countries, through "residual" spraying. In that method, workers in protective gear blanket a solution in an empty aircraft cabin that dries and leaves a residue that lasts up to 56 days.
Up to 2% of all passengers on planes treated or sprayed with pesticides may experience irritation, said Gary Kohn, a United Airlines medical director, in an internal memo last September. They will experience "bothersome conditions," though they are "not dangerous in the long term," he said.
Fliers may not realize the cabin was sprayed or smell insecticide.
"A lot of what we call jet lag may actually be pesticide poisoning," says toxicologist Gary Ordog in Santa Clarita, Calif., who estimates he has treated more than 30 United employees as well as flight attendants from Alaska and Northwest airlines for illnesses related to pesticides.
Planes that have been treated may carry passengers who did not visit the countries where spraying is required. United has all 44 of its Boeing 747-400s treated with residual pesticides in Sydney. It then uses them on other flights around the globe.
Nardella says the residue poses no danger to passengers. Every plane airs out at least an hour before boarding, she says. Workers make sure that every plane is dry and odor-free before it flies.
Flight attendants who work the Australia-West Coast routes say airplanes' interiors sometimes are still wet from spraying. United's daily Flight 816 from Sydney to Los Angeles accounted for a third of the complaints in the past year, the flight attendants union says.
In August 2000, 13 flight attendants on Flight 816 breathed from oxygen bottles and sought medical treatment after landing in Los Angeles, says Judith Murawski of the Association of Flight Attendants. On another day on the same flight, flight attendants served passengers while wearing oxygen masks and the pilots stuffed a blanket under the cockpit door to keep out the odor.
Common pesticides
After years of exposure to pesticides, some flight attendants say their minor symptoms became serious — and eventually career-ending.
Flight attendant Diana Brown-Dodson, 37, became unable to work 5 years ago. She spoke to USA TODAY on the condition that her airline not be named. She estimates that she was exposed to pesticides about 150 times over 6 years of international flights. Now, she says six doctors independently have diagnosed exposure to pesticides as a cause. She stays home in Huntington Beach, Calif., tethered to an oxygen tank most of the day to help her breathe. She also has lost short-term memory and concentration — "couldn't make the cake off a cake box," she says.
One of her doctors, Man Brautbar in Los Angeles, says Brown-Dodson has a blood-cell disease and below-normal oxygen retention consistent with pesticide and second-hand smoke exposure. Brautbar, who treated patients in the poisoning case featured in the film Erin Brockovich, says he's treated 15 to 20 other United flight attendants for the same conditions.
Another flight attendant says the memory loss, tremors, nosebleeds and other symptoms landed her on disability after 20 years of flying in the Pacific. Gracie Lerno, 62, of Simi Valley, Calif., says the first time she encountered the pesticides in 1979 she thought, "Oh my God. I'm being gassed." She estimated she was exposed to pesticides 840 times over her career. Like Brown-Dodson, she did not want the airline she works for identified.
The insecticides that both women believe are the root of their troubles are as common as a can of Raid. They contain permethrin or phenothrin, synthetic versions of a natural insecticide found in chrysanthemums.
Permethrin is classed by the Environmental Protection Agency as a "moderately to practically non-toxic pesticide" with the potential to cause eye or skin irritation. Products containing it must carry warning labels, even though it didn't appear to cause any long-term damage in animal tests, the EPA says.
But, toxicologist Ordog says, comparing aircraft spraying to household use is like asking how many people would lock themselves in a closed pesticide-sprayed room for half a day. "The airplane is like an enclosed canister with the air being recycled," he says. "Anything that's sprayed in there, stays in there."
The World Health Organization has long held that the pesticides are safe for aircraft use when the active ingredient in an aerosol makes up no more than 2% of its ingredients. A study released last year by the British House of Lords found no danger in cabin spraying.
Concentrations of the active ingredients sprayed in the cabin are so minuscule that they won't harm crew or passengers, says Claus Crudt-Christensen, chief of medicine for the International Civil Aviation Organization in Montreal, which helps regulators around the world develop air policies and standards. Crudt-Christensen points out, too, that the complaints have been limited mostly to the USA and Canada. Spokeswomen for Air New Zealand and British Airways report few, if any, complaints about the spraying.
The Australians and New Zealanders say spraying has kept their countries free of malaria and other deadly diseases.
"If they were able to prove a direct link between aircraft spraying and a medical condition, there would be a need for the governments and the World Health Organization to reassess ... but until such a time that indication of evidence is brought forward, we have the responsibility to protect Australia and its citizens from exotic diseases," says Carson Creagh, spokesman for the Australia Quarantine and Inspection Service.
When airline passengers find out they are going to be present for spraying, they can become rebellious.
About 30 passengers shouted and rushed toward the door of United Flight 815 arriving in Sydney last November when an agricultural official informed them that they had to stay on board during aerosol spraying, according to a witness that USA TODAY interviewed. At least 15 people got off, but the Australian officials told the rest to return to their seats for the procedure. Instead, some passengers sat on the floor close to the exit.
The Dorazios, who live in Camarillo, Calif., say there was no detectable odor when they boarded their United plane in Sydney in August 2000. But Richard Dorazio, 62, chief of surgery at Kaiser Permanente Medical Center, says he caught a strong whiff when a flight attendant opened a compartment near where they were seated. Sharon Dorazio, 61, a real estate agent, says her symptoms didn't fully clear up for 3 weeks.
Besides damages, the Dorazio's lawsuit asks the court to issue an order banning aircraft treated with residual pesticides from flying routes other than to countries that require the spraying. It also would require airlines to warn passengers about the presence of pesticide residue before they buy their tickets.
'People need to be warned'
"People need to be warned about this," says the Dorazios' attorney, Perry Sanders Jr. of Lake Charles, La. "They need to be able to make a decision whether they want to fly under these circumstances." Sanders has set up a Web site, www.pesticideplanes.com, for passengers affected by spraying.
Giving warnings to passengers isn't a new idea. In 1995, the Department of Transportation proposed a rule that would have required airlines to tell passengers when they were going to be on a flight on which spraying would be required. But officials decided not to follow through because of the progress they made persuading 20 countries to drop their spraying requirements from 1994 through 1998.
The lawsuits against United aren't the first to challenge spraying on aircraft. Houston attorney Linda Laurent still has an active lawsuit against five makers of aerosol insecticides that use permethrin. The lawsuit was filed in 1996 on behalf of Continental Airlines flight attendants. Continental is not a defendant.
Airlines say they try to make the required spraying as unobtrusive as possible. United told its Los Angeles-based flight attendants in a memo last November that it had changed the method of residual treatment from a drenching to a fogging sprayer. It also was applying a new solution with an odor absorber that has "a more pleasant smell, similar to a freshly shampooed carpet."
The memo closes by imploring, "We ask that you remain professional and to demonstrate your leadership by keeping any personal concerns out of earshot of our customers."
Warning:
The disinfection of AIRCRAFFTS MAY RESULT IN ACCUTE POISONING and long lasting disability! From the injury well known as injury to Central Nervous System to damage to neurotransmission and
Due to the seriousness of pesticide poisoning and the lack of understanding of the magnitude of the problem the adverse reactions shall be reportable and DOT shall maintain registry of reports victims of pesticide poisoning, and treatment.
DOT shall:
maintain US wide and International Airline statewide surveillance data;
managing the reported cases, including followup studies, as mandatory not only if necessary;
and
developing and coordinating related surveillance activities including physician education seminars, information dissemination, and technical consultation.
It is expected that this shall and will also heighten physician awareness, increase present knowledge, and require mandatory reporting of pesticide poisoning during or after flights. The pesticides might cause to frequent travelers severe long-term health damage.
SERVING, DRINKING or EATING OF ANY FOOD SERVED ON AIRCRAFTS SPRAYED WITH PESTICIDES PRIOR TO FLIGHT or DURING FLIGHT SHALL BE PROHIBITED WITH NO EXCEPTION. FOOD VSERVED BY AIRLINES MAY BE CONTAMINATED BY PESTICIDES.
DOT shall require Airlines to provide MSDS and warn passengers prior to spraying on flight. On objections of ANY passenger penalty for spraying passengers with pesticides on plane shall be at least U$ 10,000,000 per passenger .
Improper application of poisons such as methyl bromide
Physicians and laboratory directors are required to report cases or suspected cases of pesticide poisoning. Many states have already enacted specific laws and regulations for the reporting of environmental illness and injury. However, reporting systems in many states have met with only very limited and marginal success due to industry FRAUD.
Departments of Health do recognize that successful control of environmentally related conditions depends on two factors: recognition and diagnosis of cases by health care workers, and the implementation of surveillance, prevention, and control programs.
Pesticide poisoning symptoms:
Burning throat, tearing eyes, swollen palms, diarrhea, abdominal convulsions and pain, chest tightness, SOB, pulmonary edema, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, confusion, pinpoint pupils, photosensitivity and blurred vision, muscle twitching, excessive sweating and salivation, severe fatigue, Multiple Chemical sensitivity, Fibromyalgia, Iritable Bowel Syndrome and Carpal Tunel (NEUROTOXICITY not well known cover up with alleged repetitive stress). Frequently many develops abdominal pain, pulmonary edema, pleuritic chest pain, conjunctivitis, misdiagnosed for infectionns sore throat, cough caused by damage to nerves in trachea, feeling like having fever, suffering vision disturbancess, dizziness, headaches, short-term memory loss and confusion after inhalling pesticides.
Depending on complex, may mimic inorganic poisoning or possibly dysarthria, visual field deficits and brain and liver encephalopathy. Within few weeks delayed night sweats and misdiagnosis of alleged MENOPAUSE.
Incidents of crew poisoning by spraying the effects of pesticide spray are very common and MUST be monitored before and after each flight.
Levels of pesticides MUST to be tested 1 hour before embarking the planes. Should levels are reportable plain need to be disqualified from flying for at least 24 hours untill pesticide levels will be completelly vented prior to embarking.
Spraying when passengers and crew are present should never be allowed as dangerous practice and unsafe for children, infants and adults not only airplane personnel.
Mechanism of Action of permethrin or phenothrin spraying:
Irreversible cholinesterase inhibitor in vivo, leading to increased amounts of acetylcholine with effects on parasympathetic, sympathetic and CNS.
Altered metabolism and damage to enzymatic/hormonal balance.
Primary Route of Exposure by inhalation and skin contact, DO NOT TOUCH EYES while BOARDING PLANE! Wash hands after leaving aircraft.
What we call jet lag may actually be not jet lag but misdiagnosed for jet lag pesticide poisoning.
Eyes, nasal passages (olfactory penetration of BBB - Blood Brain Barrier), skin itching or burning, later skin painful ulceration , gastrointestinal tract and hypereactivity of trachea due to damaged by inhallation nerves, than lungs infections. Eye itching with keteroconjunctivitis and blefarocongunctivitis. Reported Parkinsonian tremors and breathing problems. Feeling of being hot with out raising temperature - cramping legs, increased impaired ammonia metabolism, acidity, acidic sweat. Misdiagnosed Menopause. Forms complexes with enzyme systems throughout the body with diffuse effects.
It is necessary to decontaminate drenched piece of clothing and luggage after pesticide spraying or unwanted exposures.
Instructions for Handling of Biological Pesticides and Analysis of Blood/Urine Samples
In addition to any routine medical tests to be performed in the work up of a case, there are several laboratory tests specific for suspected cases of pesticide poisoning.
Blood and urine specimens can be analyzed for the presence of pesticide residue. Confirmation of acute organophosphate exposure is possible by measurement of plasma (pseudo-cholinesterase) and red blood cell (acetylcholinesterase) levels. To be the most reliable, specimens should be collected as soon as possible after exposure and prior to giving any antidotal therapy, if feasible.
Blood
Given the usual uncertainty about the specifics of chemical exposure, it is best to draw several tubes of blood which may be used for analysis, if needed.
Draw one or two (5-10ml) samples into heparinized (green top) tubes. This sample may be used for cholinesterase testing, if appropriate for the suspected pesticide exposure. Consult with the laboratory performing the analysis for specific instructions, as methods vary.
Draw one sample (5-10ml) into glass tube (red top), with no heparin or preservative. Remove rubberized stopper and cover it with foil, and replace stopper. Tape down stopper. This sample can then be used for analysis of pesticide residues.
Samples which can be delivered to a lab within 24 hours of drawing should be kept refrigerated. If delivery time will exceed 24 hours, samples should be frozen.
Urine
Samples may be collected in a plastic container unless poisoning by a chlorinated compound is suspected, in which case a glass container is preferable. Do not use any preservative. Samples should be handled and shipped in the same manner as blood.
Other biological media (gavage, stool, adipose tissue)
Use glass containers and freeze samples; ship frozen and package with dry ice or blue ice packs.
Non-biological samples
Fot pesticide poisoning testing the samples of contaminated clothing or other materials should be double bagged in polyethylene bags and packaged separately from other samples for shipment and analysis. If a sample of a pesticide product is sent for analysis, it should be in a glass container, clearly labeled, and sent separately to avoid cross contamination of biological samples.
AIRCRAFT DISINSECTION REQUIREMENTS
In order to protect public health airplane disinsection SHALL BE banned and disinfected planes shall NOT be permitted to enter or to fly to US despite international law, as human health and the environment is more important than , agriculture.
The World Health Organization and the International Civil Aviation Organization stipulate two approaches for aircraft disinsection--either spray the aircraft cabin, with an aerosolized very highly toxic insecticides, unfortunatelly while passengers are on board or treat the aircraft's interior surfaces with a highly toxic residual insecticide (residual method) while passengers are not on board.
Panama and American Samoa have adopted a third method which shall be imediately criminalized, in aircraft are sprayed with an aerosolized insecticide while passengers are not on board.
Although the Report of the Informal Consultation on Aircraft Disinsection sponsored by the World Health Organization (November 6-10, 1995) concluded that aircraft disinsection, if performed appropriately, it is clear that almost every passenger get unhealthy dose of poisonous pesticides, present a pose severe risk to children, and adukts human health, the report also noted that some individuals may experience transient so called "discomfort" following aircraft disinsection by aerosol application.
Although few countries now require that aircraft be disinsected, unfortunatelly most countries reserve the right to do so, and, as such, could impose a disinsection requirement should they perceive a threat to their public health, environment or agriculture. Accordingly, travelers must be warned and NOT travel on such airlines, as the issued advisory is just soap in the eyes. Passengers MUST be advised by AIRLINE reservations agent when bying tickets and shall have right to compensation when refusiung booking to "toxic flights".
Listed below are representatives of airlines who are knowledgeable on disinsection requirements:
Airline Contacts for Information on Disinsection
American Airlines
Mr. Michael Brooks
817-967-2342
mike.brooks@aa.com
Continental Airlines
Mr. Dan Watson
713-324-5408
dwatso@coair.com
Continental Micronesia
Mr. Dan Watson
713-324-5408
dwatso@coair.com
Delta Airlines
Mr. John C. Marshall
404-715-3436
John.c.marshall@delta-air.com
Northwest Airlines
Ms. Dana Heimdahl
612-727-6418
dana.heimdahl@nwa.com
Trans World Airlines
Ms. Beatrice M. Lutz
314-429-8966
blutz@twa.com
United Airlines
Mr. Randy Lee
650-634-4108
randy.lee@ual.com
US Airways
Mr. Daniel Dunn
412-747-3695
dwdunn@usairways.com
The following lists of disinsection requirements were compiled from information provided by foreign governments and supplemented by information obtained from airlines.
Please submit any corrections to the following Internet address: arnold.konheim@ost.dot.gov.
This list was last updated on July 18, 2001.
Countries requiring the disinsection of all in-bound flights with an aerosolized spray while passengers are on board
Grenada
India
Kiribati
Madagascar
Trinidad and Tobago
Uruguay
Countries requiring the disinsection of all in-bound flights but allowing, as an alternative to the above approach, either (a) the residual method or (b) the application of an aerosolized spray while passengers are not on board
Country
Method
Australia
Residual
Barbados
Residual
Fiji
Residual
Jamaica
Residual
New Zealand
Residual
Panama
Spraying
Countries that require disinsection of selected flights
Country
Flight From
Czech Republic
Areas of contagious diseases
Indonesia
Infected areas
South Africa
Areas of malaria or yellow fever
Switzerland
Intertropical Africa
United Kingdom
Malarial countries
Guam requires disinsection, but permits the residual method, of all flights from the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, Thailand, Philippines, Korea, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Federated States of Micronesia, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, and the Republic of the Marshal Islands and, during certain months, of flights from Taiwan, Korea and Japan.
In Reply to: Boycott OF UNITED AIRLINES - Fliers fume over planes treated with pesticides !!!!! posted by Not Flight Attendents only on September 10, 2001 at 18:31:47:
NMI
In Reply to: Boycott OF UNITED AIRLINES - Fliers fume over planes treated with pesticides !!!!! posted by Not Flight Attendents only on September 10, 2001 at 18:31:47:
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