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This thinly veiled chloramine endorsement appeared on MSN in the form of an "Ask Dr. Rob" demonstrates apparent influence of policy makers over main stream media. The question concerns apparent water exposure symptoms from simply bathing or showering. The answer directs attention to every other imaginable cause. And in this case the real story is all about what is not mentioned. It hardly seems an accident that the entire long winded piece saves chloramine from as much as a single mention. This in spite of increased awareness and even legislation presently being considered in multiple states to ban the continued use in favor of an immediate return to chlorine. See for yourself via the link immediately below. And of course, DeepWaterWeb has a reply
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May 23, 2007 Dear "Dr. Rob", It appears that you have, knowingly or otherwise,
participated in a deliberate deception. I can only wonder
whether you might genuinely believe this "water allergy" to be
anything but another of a flood of reports to adverse reactions to about the
only water disinfectant somehow magically excluded from even a
single mention in this same apparent propaganda piece.
The best indication of masterful redirection is
the application of a technical term "aquagenic pruritis", with a
more easy-to-remember and completely misleading description as a "water allergy"
as suggested by the bold introduction. And as long as, as you state "the
exact cause of this condition remains uncertain", it is an empty meaningless
term for what will later be recognized as a toxicity affect from a well-enough
known enemy to public health and also to the environment.
We both know, and the body of your article
correctly states that it is not an allergy. What
most readers will more likely remember, however, is the bold
introduction "Allergic to Water? Yes it's possible."
The body of this same piece is also correct to
point out that the non-allergic but very real and "miserable" reactions are
all about what's in the water. Still the most likely cause associated with most reports is the one
impurity specifically excluded from mention.
Somehow you did remember to mention "chlorine,
fluoride" and even "mineral present in the water." This appears to leave
two possibilities. One is that you, like most of the public, are
completely unaware of an alarming trend to misuse chloramine as a water system
disinfectant. The more sinister possibility is that you are reasonably
knowledgeable and that you deliberately excluded any specific mention by
including "chloramine" in the seemingly innocuous mention of
"others".
I suspect you do know that chloramine is the
result of mixing two chemicals that any "D" biology student knows not to
mix. The result of the mixture of chlorine and ammonia is so toxic that
the water systems adopting this very poor choice in a disinfectant need to wear
full Hazmat gear when adding it to our water, and that accidental
release of the resultant potion (primarily by water-main breaks) has
already resulted in mass kill-off's of fish, frogs and other
amphibians.
This same bad choice does such a poor job
of disinfecting, that the World Health Organization actually recommends
boiling water a full ten minutes before any immune compromised persons even
think about drinking from water systems compromised by the use of
chloramine. And dialysis patients are simply not allowed any water so
treated.
It does however do a great job of
corroding plumbing, damaging water filtration systems, and persisting
in both food and drinking water (in spite of filtration attempts), and
sufficiently caustic that the very acts of bathing and showering has become
a known hazard for some, and an under-studied long term health risk
for the rest of us.
What is worse still, is chloramine is about as
persistent as the most recent prior EPA endorsed threat to our water systems, namely MTBE.
As simple a matter it is to remove chlorine and other impurities, whole home
filtration systems deemed adequate to reasonably deal with chloramine removal
are $15,000 and up, and there is still no guaranty offered by those offering
these systems that the chloramine will not still appreciably sneak
through.
Whereas there is simply insufficient study on
chloramine (for it to be responsibly used in public water systems), the
following are known:
What has not been established (yet) is a
correlation between sharp increases in childhood asthma might be related to
inhalation in a hot bath, shower, or in situations where a humidifier is used
with chloraminated tap water.
The worst thing, is that with insufficient research
on human health effects, there is no reasonable basis for physicians to connect
the dots between the emergence of what will likely continue to be misdiagnosed
as "aquagenic pruritis".
As for your own answers to this desperate call for
help, had you even thought to ask the individual whether there were any changes
in their water system during the time these symptoms first
appeared? Or whether the same individual might experience
relief when traveling to regions not yet poisoning their own system with chloramine.
The same relief will be realized in the much less convenient option (to
which many have actually been forced to adopt) of bathing in bottled spring
water. And virtually all who remove chloramine from their food, drink and
bathing practices, enjoy immediate rewards in significant improvements to their
health.
Whereas you have likely detected a by of cynicism
on my part, I remain hopeful that this is an honest mistake as opposed
to a purposeful manipulation. If this is truly a matter of being
under-informed, than I hope you might consider researching the facts and
submitting a correction. A good place to start would be www.chloramine.org .
Hope this helps you, and more importantly however
large an audience will benefit any followup writing you might offer after
becoming a bit better informed.
Best regards,
Eric
Deepwaterweb |
Will keep you posted as to any replies from "Dr. Rob" or MSN
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