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Reps call for health department renewal
by Leo Cashman
Prior to naming of Dr. Sanne Magnan as Commissioner
of the Minnesota Department of Health, four DFL legislators publicly
called on Gov. Pawlenty to choose a leader who can restore trust
in the department. At a Sept. 25 press conference, the legislators
spoke bluntly about the need for a change in the culture at the
Minnesota Department of Health in the wake of the scandal that led
to the resignation of Commissioner Diane Mandernach.
“There is no trust on the Iron Range in
the Department of Health right now,” said Rep. Tom Rukavina,
of Virginia, Minn. “The department has gotten a black eye.”
For 15 months, the health department suppressed data showing a spike—from
17 cases to 58 cases—of mesothelioma, a rare but deadly form
of cancer affecting the lungs. The shocking data came to light only
after a department employee leaked the data to the media.
Another legislator, Rep. Shelley Madore, called
upon the health department to quit promoting the flu vaccine to
the elderly, pregnant women and other vulnerable people without
telling the public that there are typically 25 micrograms of mercury
in the typical flu shot. Madore, a mother of an autistic son, is
sensitive to the findings of independent researchers that mercury
in the mandated childhood vaccines has led to the ten-fold increase
in autism and other developmental disorders seen in children both
in Minnesota and around the country. But the state health department
has steadfastly denied that there is scientific evidence of such
a link of autism to vaccine injury. Health department officials
have also actively opposed a Madore-authored bill to establish a
mercury-free preference for vaccines. Health care providers would
have to use a mercury-free version of a vaccine when one it available
and, when the only available vaccine has mercury, the bill calls
for a warning to the consumer that the vaccine contains mercury.
The department has always opposed such warnings.
Activist critics say that it is the department itself that, by its
irresponsible conduct, is undermining public confidence in vaccine
programs in Minnesota.
Other state issues of concern are elevated levels
of perfluorinated chemicals in fish, the insecticide atrazine, and
the department’s failure to do cancer registry as called for
under a new law. The ground water in at least 35 communities, extending
from the Twin Cities to Winona, is threatened by perfluorocarbons,
requiring 150,000 people to drink specially treated water. Pesticides
like atrazine and acetochilore cause deformities in frogs (only
the industry disagrees) and hormonal changes in humans, but it took
an MPCA whistleblower to reveal, in June 2007, that that agency
had suppressed testimony on the dangerous levels of these insecticides
in our state’s waters. The administration has also opposed
stricter drinking water standards.
The new cancer surveillance law called for registering
not only the name, age and gender of the cancer victims in our state,
but also the residence and the occupation of the person. By simply
recording this additional data, links between cancer and dangerous
exposures in communities and in workplaces can be uncovered. But
the department has balked at the requirement that it gather the
additional data, says Rep. Karen Clark.
Rep. Clark represents the Phillips neighborhood
of South Minneapolis, which is still cleaning up arsenic-contaminated
soils. The health department has failed to set safe standards for
human exposure to arsenic, either acute or long-term exposure. Such
standards are badly needed by our community, Clark says, but the
department seems to have balked at spending the money needed to
really address the problem.
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