Addressing historic environmental exposures along the Alaska Highway

Background. A World War II defense site at Northway, Alaska, was remediated in the 1990s, leaving complex questions regarding historic exposures to toxic waste. This article describes the context, methods, limitations and findings of the Northway Wild Food and Health Project (NWFHP). Objective. The...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lawrence Duffy, The Northway Health Study Team, Anna Godduhn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2013-08-01
Series:International Journal of Circumpolar Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.circumpolarhealthjournal.net/index.php/ijch/article/download/21187/pdf_1
id doaj-7336a1c642544cbd80a23de58a865602
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7336a1c642544cbd80a23de58a8656022020-11-25T02:45:49ZengTaylor & Francis GroupInternational Journal of Circumpolar Health2242-39822013-08-017201910.3402/ijch.v72i0.21187Addressing historic environmental exposures along the Alaska HighwayLawrence DuffyThe Northway Health Study TeamAnna GodduhnBackground. A World War II defense site at Northway, Alaska, was remediated in the 1990s, leaving complex questions regarding historic exposures to toxic waste. This article describes the context, methods, limitations and findings of the Northway Wild Food and Health Project (NWFHP). Objective. The NWFHP comprised 2 pilot studies: the Northway Wild Food Study (NWFS), which investigated contaminants in locally prioritized traditional foods over time, and the Northway Health Study (NHS), which investigated locally suspected links between resource uses and health problems. Design. This research employed mixed methods. The NWFS reviewed remedial documents and existing data. The NHS collected household information regarding resource uses and health conditions by questionnaire and interview. NHS data represent general (yes or no) personal knowledge that was often second hand. Retrospective cohort comparisons were made of the reported prevalence of 7 general health problems between groups based on their reported (yes or no) consumption of particular resources, for 3 data sets (existing, historic and combined) with a two-tailed Fisher’s Exact Test in SAS (n=325 individuals in 83 households, 24 of which no longer exist). Results. The NWFS identified historic pathways of exposure to petroleum, pesticides, herbicides, chlorinated byproducts of disinfection and lead from resources that were consumed more frequently decades ago and are not retrospectively quantifiable. The NHS found complex patterns of association between reported resource uses and cancer and thyroid-, reproductive-, metabolic- and cardiac problems. Conclusion. Lack of detail regarding medical conditions, undocumented histories of exposure, time lapsed since the release of pollution and changes to health and health care over the same period make this exploratory research. Rather than demonstrate causation, these results document the legitimacy of local suspicions and warrant additional investigation. This article presents our findings, with discussion of limitations related to study design and limitations that are inherent to such research. http://www.circumpolarhealthjournal.net/index.php/ijch/article/download/21187/pdf_1endocrine disruptionpersistent organic pollutantsmilitary wasteenvironmental toxicscomplexityuncertainty
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lawrence Duffy
The Northway Health Study Team
Anna Godduhn
spellingShingle Lawrence Duffy
The Northway Health Study Team
Anna Godduhn
Addressing historic environmental exposures along the Alaska Highway
International Journal of Circumpolar Health
endocrine disruption
persistent organic pollutants
military waste
environmental toxics
complexity
uncertainty
author_facet Lawrence Duffy
The Northway Health Study Team
Anna Godduhn
author_sort Lawrence Duffy
title Addressing historic environmental exposures along the Alaska Highway
title_short Addressing historic environmental exposures along the Alaska Highway
title_full Addressing historic environmental exposures along the Alaska Highway
title_fullStr Addressing historic environmental exposures along the Alaska Highway
title_full_unstemmed Addressing historic environmental exposures along the Alaska Highway
title_sort addressing historic environmental exposures along the alaska highway
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series International Journal of Circumpolar Health
issn 2242-3982
publishDate 2013-08-01
description Background. A World War II defense site at Northway, Alaska, was remediated in the 1990s, leaving complex questions regarding historic exposures to toxic waste. This article describes the context, methods, limitations and findings of the Northway Wild Food and Health Project (NWFHP). Objective. The NWFHP comprised 2 pilot studies: the Northway Wild Food Study (NWFS), which investigated contaminants in locally prioritized traditional foods over time, and the Northway Health Study (NHS), which investigated locally suspected links between resource uses and health problems. Design. This research employed mixed methods. The NWFS reviewed remedial documents and existing data. The NHS collected household information regarding resource uses and health conditions by questionnaire and interview. NHS data represent general (yes or no) personal knowledge that was often second hand. Retrospective cohort comparisons were made of the reported prevalence of 7 general health problems between groups based on their reported (yes or no) consumption of particular resources, for 3 data sets (existing, historic and combined) with a two-tailed Fisher’s Exact Test in SAS (n=325 individuals in 83 households, 24 of which no longer exist). Results. The NWFS identified historic pathways of exposure to petroleum, pesticides, herbicides, chlorinated byproducts of disinfection and lead from resources that were consumed more frequently decades ago and are not retrospectively quantifiable. The NHS found complex patterns of association between reported resource uses and cancer and thyroid-, reproductive-, metabolic- and cardiac problems. Conclusion. Lack of detail regarding medical conditions, undocumented histories of exposure, time lapsed since the release of pollution and changes to health and health care over the same period make this exploratory research. Rather than demonstrate causation, these results document the legitimacy of local suspicions and warrant additional investigation. This article presents our findings, with discussion of limitations related to study design and limitations that are inherent to such research.
topic endocrine disruption
persistent organic pollutants
military waste
environmental toxics
complexity
uncertainty
url http://www.circumpolarhealthjournal.net/index.php/ijch/article/download/21187/pdf_1
work_keys_str_mv AT lawrenceduffy addressinghistoricenvironmentalexposuresalongthealaskahighway
AT thenorthwayhealthstudyteam addressinghistoricenvironmentalexposuresalongthealaskahighway
AT annagodduhn addressinghistoricenvironmentalexposuresalongthealaskahighway
_version_ 1724759928650858496