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Page added on January 5, 2014

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Study Shows Fracking Is Bad for Babies

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The energy industry has long insisted that hydraulic fracking — the practice of fracturing rock to extract gas and oil deep beneath the earth’s surface — is safe for people who live nearby. New research suggests this is not true for some of the most vulnerable humans: newborn infants.

In a study presented today at the annual meeting of the American Economic Association in Philadelphia, the researchers — Janet Currie of Princeton University, Katherine Meckel of Columbia University, and John Deutch and Michael Greenstone of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology — looked at Pennsylvania birth records from 2004 to 2011 to assess the health of infants born within a 2.5-kilometer radius of natural-gas fracking sites. They found that proximity to fracking increased the likelihood of low birth weight by more than half, from about 5.6 percent to more than 9 percent. The chances of a low Apgar score, a summary measure of the health of newborn children, roughly doubled, to more than 5 percent.

The study, which has yet to be peer-reviewed or posted online, comes at a time when state and federal officials are grappling with how to regulate fracking and, in the case of New York State, whether to allow the practice at all. Much of the available research has been sponsored either by the energy industry or by its critics. Independent studies have found evidence of well-water contamination in areas close to fracking activity. Establishing a direct link between fracking and human health, though, has been complicated by a lack of information on the chemical substances used in the process and the difficulty of obtaining health records that include residence data.

Currie, who had financial support from the Environmental Protection Agency and the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, and her colleagues obtained Pennsylvania birth records containing the latitude and longitude of the mothers’ residences, matching them to the locations of fracking sites. In doing so, they built on the work of Elaine Hill, a PhD student at Cornell University who sparked controversy in 2012 with a study showing that infants born near fracked gas wells had more health problems than infants born near sites that had merely been permitted for fracking. One criticism of Hill’s study was that fracking activity might change the demography of an area, attracting more mothers who are likely to give birth to infants with health problems.

The new research addresses such concerns by following a constant group of mothers who had children both before and after the onset of fracking, and by controlling for geographical differences in mothers’ initial health characteristics. It seeks to achieve the rigor of a controlled experiment by focusing on mothers who, due to their locations and the dates of their pregnancies, were effectively selected at random to be exposed to fracking.

While the study strongly indicates that fracking is bad for infant health, more work is needed to understand why. Surprisingly, water contamination does not appear to be the culprit: The researchers found similar results for mothers who had access to regularly monitored public water systems and mothers who relied on the kind of private wells that fracking is most likely to affect. Another possibility is that infants are being harmed by air pollution associated with fracking activity.

The study doesn’t necessarily tell us whether or not fracking is worth doing. There may be offsetting health benefits related to the added jobs fracking creates, to lower energy prices or to the reduced use of coal or other fuels as more natural gas becomes available. “Given how important fracking is for the economy generally, it might make sense to compensate people for the cost of moving away from a site rather than shutting it down,” said Currie.

Still, evidence that our demand for cheap energy could be doing irreversible harm to children should be reason for serious pause.

Bloomberg



5 Comments on "Study Shows Fracking Is Bad for Babies"

  1. Stilgar Wilcox on Sun, 5th Jan 2014 8:12 am 

    Shift, skew, alter, mislead numbers as they pertain to adults health – we see that all the time, but people usually do not allow that kind of behavior regarding babies. I guess we’ll find out just how desperate the drive for energy is now.

  2. Stilgar Wilcox on Sun, 5th Jan 2014 8:20 am 

    I’m not saying the numbers have been falsified in this case, rather that if given the opportunity, they would be to cover up the low birth weights of babies.

  3. Baldwincng on Sun, 5th Jan 2014 1:19 pm 

    What a ridiculous article

  4. Dave Thompson on Sun, 5th Jan 2014 2:04 pm 

    Ever read the well published easy to find information on the chemicals being pumped and dumped into and onto the earth? What could possibly go wrong?

  5. robertinget on Sun, 5th Jan 2014 4:05 pm 

    Fracking, like 19th century meat-packing
    needs closer regulation, enforcement of existing laws. Not “low birthweight
    in search of a cause.

    President Theodore Roosevelt had described Sinclair as a “crackpot” because of Sinclair’s socialist positions.[10] He wrote privately to William Allen White, “I have an utter contempt for him. He is hysterical, unbalanced, and untruthful. Three-fourths of the things he said were absolute falsehoods. For some of the remainder there was only a basis of truth.”[11] After reading “The Jungle”, Roosevelt agreed with some of Sinclair’s conclusions. Roosevelt wrote, “radical action must be taken to do away with the efforts of arrogant and selfish greed on the part of the capitalist.”[12] He assigned the Labor Commissioner Charles P. Neill and social worker James Bronson Reynolds to go to Chicago to investigate some meat packing facilities.

    Learning about the visit, owners had their workers thoroughly clean the factories prior to the inspection, but Neill and Reynolds were still revolted by the conditions. Their oral report to Roosevelt supported much of what Sinclair portrayed in the novel, excepting the claim of workers falling into rendering vats.[13] Neill testified before Congress that the men had reported only “such things as showed the necessity for legislation.”[14] That year, the Bureau of Animal Industry issued a report rejecting Sinclair’s most severe allegations, characterizing them as “intentionally misleading and false,” “willful and deliberate misrepresentations of fact,” and “utter absurdity.”[15]

    Roosevelt did not release the Neill-Reynolds Report for publication. His administration submitted it directly to Congress on June 4, 1906.[16] Public pressure led to the passage of the Meat Inspection Act and the Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906; the latter established the Bureau of Chemistry (in 1930 renamed as the Food and Drug Administration).

    Sinclair rejected the legislation, which he considered an unjustified boon to large meat packers. The government (and taxpayers) would bear the costs of inspection, estimated at $30,000,000 a year.[17][18] He complained about the public’s misunderstanding of the point of his book in Cosmopolitan Magazine in October 1906 by saying, “I aimed at the public’s heart, and by accident I hit it in the stomach.

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