By Joseph Barbaree
Copy edited and produced Laura Straub
A sickeningly
sweet industry might be one cause of Central America’s widespread kidney
disease epidemic. And researchers at one unlikely institution could soon prove
it.
News broke in the past year of kidney disease affecting
communities in El Salvador and Nicaragua among others in Central America. A
total of some 24,000 deaths were recorded beginning in the year 2000.
Included in the efforts to solve the mystery are researchers
from a small community in rural Ohio.
Dr. Dina Lopez, professor of geology at Ohio University in
Athens, is a native Salvadoran living in the United States. Her research
focuses on multiple environmental problems, including acid mine drainage in El
Salvador.
|
Dr. Diana Lopez, courtesy of the Ohio University
Department of Geology. |
Investigating the soil composition
Lopez is now leading an international investigation of soil
conditions in El Salvador to determine the present levels of chemical
pesticides in communities most widely affected by kidney disease and failure.
There’s speculation that the sugar cane industry is a primary factor.
Collaborating with Lopez is Dr. Carlos Orantes, a clinical
health physician in El Salvador. Orantes studied the rural agricultural region
of Baja Lempa and found that one in four men had kidney disease. Most of these
men were not diabetic, a common symptom of the disease.
After interviewing 775 members of the community, Orantes
found that more than 40% reported exposure to a number of chemical herbicides
and pesticides.
Paraquat, glyphosate and hedonal were most widely reported
and led Orantes to his belief that prolonged exposure to these causes the
health problems among workers. Each chemical is reported to have some
detrimental effect.
“These
chemicals are banned in the United States, Europe and Canada, and they’re used
here, without any protection, and in large amounts that are very concerning,”
said Orantes.
Spurred
by the work of Orantes, Lopez began collecting soil samples from the regions
affected by kidney failure in mid-2011.
Sugar cane and kidney failure
Helping
Lopez at Ohio University is student researcher Darcy VanDervort. They traveled
to El Salvador in August and collected soil samples, which they are analyzing
for chemical presence.
VanDervort
runs statistical analyses and maps data in order to compare regions of sugar
cane production with areas of concentrated kidney failure.
|
Traditionally, sugar cane fields are burned after the harvest to kill off any insects or eggs in the field. Photo courtesy of Erika Blumenfeld |
“My maps
are showing that the areas are overlapping – a lot,” said VanDervort.
She is
finding that the most concentrated areas of kidney disease are in the coastal
regions of the country and at the border between La Libertad and La Paz.
Northwest of San Salvador is also highly concentrated.
As many
as 65 per 1,000 inhabitants are affected by kidney disease in these regions.
Once
Lopez and VanDervort conclude the statistical mapping and soil analysis, they
will send a report to the Ministry of Health in El Salvador.
But they
can’t yet conclude decisively that the use of pesticides in the sugar cane
industry is solely to blame. “We think it’s multi-factorial,” said VanDervort.
Presence of heavy metals and difficult working conditions may be part of the
cause.
The
results of preliminary research, such as that conducted by Orantes in his study
of Baja Lempa, have led only a handful of environmental groups to speak out
against the practices of the agricultural industry. Among those in El Salvador
is the Mangrove Association, organized by EcoViva, which coordinates several
community-led grassroots initiatives for environmental change.
Even
when more substantial evidence is produced, regulatory change may still be
years away for El Salvador.
How this affects America
This
means the continued export of sugar products to the United States from
countries that use possibly harmful herbicides and pesticides. The United
States in 2011 imported some 330,000 metric tons of sugar from Central America,
constituting roughly 23% of total sugar imports.
For now,
the fate of laborers in El Salvador is a waiting game until action is taken
either by the Salvadoran government to regulate the use of chemicals or sugar
producers begin regulating their products through third party certification.
Until
then, Lopez and VanDervort will continue to explore the causes of Central
America’s deadly epidemic, one whose roots remain elusive.
3 comments:
Thank you for your article. I would very much like to hear about your findings. I am looking into the congeners of the persistent pesticide toxaphene that was used in cotton. Specifically Hp-sed, Hx-sed, and P-15 which accumulates in the kidney. There are others that bioaccumulate in the body which is very interesting.
Sadly, kidney problems are becoming too common now a days.
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Each chemical is reported to have some detrimental effect.
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