Study: Fracking Industry Wells Associated With Increased Risk of Asthma Attacks
http://www.jhsph.edu/news/news-releases/2016/study-fracking-industry-wells-associated-with-increased-risk-of-asthma-attacks.html[font face=Serif]July 18, 2016
[font size=5]Study: Fracking Industry Wells Associated With Increased Risk of Asthma Attacks[/font]
[font size=4]Evidence growing of health problems linked to active unconventional natural gas wells[/font]
[font size=3]People with asthma who live near bigger or larger numbers of active unconventional natural gas wells operated by the fracking industry in Pennsylvania are 1.5 to four times likelier to have asthma attacks than those who live farther away, new Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health research suggests.
The findings, published July 18 in JAMA Internal Medicine, add to a growing body of evidence tying the fracking industry to health concerns. Health officials have been concerned about the effect of this type of drilling on air and water quality, as well as the stress of living near a well where just developing the site of the well can require more than 1,000 truck trips on once-quiet roads. The fracking industry has developed more than 9,000 wells in Pennsylvania in just the past decade.
Ours is the first to look at asthma but we now have several studies suggesting adverse health outcomes related to the drilling of unconventional natural gas wells, says study leader Sara G. Rasmussen, MHS, a PhD candidate in the Bloomberg Schools Department of Environmental Health Sciences. Going forward, we need to focus on the exact reasons why these things are happening, because if we know why, we can help make the industry safer.
For the study, Rasmussen and her colleagues analyzed health records from 2005 through 2012 from the Geisinger Health System, a health care provider that covers 40 counties in north and central Pennsylvania. The study is a joint effort of the Bloomberg School and the Geisinger Health System. Hopkins researchers identified more than 35,000 asthma patients between the ages of five and 90 years. They identified 20,749 mild attacks (requiring a corticosteroid prescription), 1,870 moderate ones (requiring an emergency room visit) and 4,782 severe attacks (requiring hospitalization). They mapped where the patients with these attacks lived; assigned them metrics based on the location, size, number, phase, total depth and gas production of the wells; and compared them to asthma patients who didnt have attacks in the same year.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamainternmed.2016.2436