Twenty years ago today, Katherine celebrated her last birthday.
It would be impossible to express the misery of
living on without her – for one minute, much less twenty years – so I won’t
try. But multiply that misery times all the parents who have lost children, not
to mention all the children themselves who have lost so many decades of their
lives.
That’s
the worst of it – that she is missing out on a life that I am left only
imagining – and that she wanted so badly to live every day of. In 2021, an
estimated 15,590 children were diagnosed and 1,789 died of cancer. Cancer
among children has increased 41% just since 1975, and numbers began rising soon
after World War II, when so many more pesticides were converted from nerve gas
to agricultural and other uses, just for starters.
Cancer, particularly childhood cancer, and even more
particularly leukemia, is being increasingly recognized as preventable. All the research suggests that
most cases of childhood cancer result from exposures to environmental chemicals
during childhood, pregnancy, or even before conception.
I
am presently working with the Childhood Cancer Prevention Initiative (CCPI), an
amazing group of researchers, health care professionals, activists, and
business people working towards a cancer-free economy. Even the title says,
“About time!” It’s about time we recognized the truth the research has been
telling us for decades: that we could prevent the #1 disease killer of
children, and the #2 killer of children overall.
The
reverse question is also worth asking: why do we
continue to grant social license to the chemical industry to kill some number
of our children – and the rest of us – each year? 20% of Americans will die of cancer. What
price should we put on a life? Katherine’s would have been extraordinary: she
was brilliant, beautiful, imaginative, joyous, and loving.
So
little progress has been made since she died, though I remain committed to
fighting the good fight as long as I can, in every way I can. Chlorpyrifos, the
chemical sprayed for mosquitoes chiefly responsible for Katherine’s death, was
slated for banning before she died, yet it was not until last year that that
was finally accomplished, and only for food
applications, partly because the Trump administration overturned the
already made determination for another five years.
When it comes down to it, there are so many heroes
who are working to protect children: all the researchers in childhood cancer;
the professional organizations that have made statements on environmental
chemicals and cancer, like the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP),
The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG),
and The Endocrine Society; advocacy groups
like CCPI, The Program for Reproductive Health at the Environment
(PRHE) at UCSF, the Children’s Environmental Health Network (CEHN),
and the Children’s Environmental Health committee
of the American Public Health Association’s Environmental Section, with whom I’ve also
been working.
There
are also so many villains who do their best to ignore the evidence that their
industries or practices are killing children. You know who you are: fossil
fuels, plastics, pesticides, some manufacturers. The list goes on.
Katherine did not just die. She was killed. Her doctors and I
saw it at the time, and the evidence for it is more robust every year. I hope
anyone reading this will consider how they can avoid products and practices
that contribute to this tragedy, as we continually poison children – others’ as
well as our very own.
Jean-Marie Kauth is a professor at Benedictine University in
Lisle, Illinois. This article is from her blog, Poisoning Our Children. Here is
the Link: Katherine’s
Last Birthday « PoisoningOurChildren (wordpress.com)
The list of federal and state governmental offices whose purposes are to keep our citizens safe from poisons and environmental threats is long and intertwined. They are intentionally underfunded, understaffed and undermined by corrupt elected officials who have been corrupted by corporate cripplers and killers who make obscene profits from their pollutants. It's all about the money for corporations. It's all about life and death for human beings.
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