ATSDR in Partnership With Alaska
The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) is the lead
public health agency responsible for implementing the health-related provisions
of the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of
1980 (CERCLA). ATSDR is an Atlanta-based federal agency with more than 400
employees and a budget for 2004 of approximately $73 million. ATSDR assesses the
presence and nature of health hazards at specific Superfund sites, helps to
prevent or reduce further exposure and illnesses resulting from those hazards,
and expands the knowledge base about the health effects of exposure to hazardous
substances.
ATSDR works closely with state agencies to carry out its mission to serve the
public by using the best science, taking responsive public health actions, and
providing trusted health information to prevent harmful exposures and disease
related to toxic substances. ATSDR provides funding and technical assistance to
states and other partners through cooperative agreements and grants to identify
and evaluate environmental health threats to communities. These resources enable
state and local health departments and other grantees to further investigate
environmental health concerns and to educate communities. In
fiscal
years 1993-2002, ATSDR awarded more than
$1.9 million
in direct funds and services to
Alaska for financial support of
specific environmental health activities. In addition to direct funds and
services, ATSDR provides technical and administrative guidance for
state-conducted site activities.
ATSDR Site-Specific Activities
Public Health Assessment-Related Activities
One of ATSDR's important mandates is to conduct public health
assessments of all National Priorities List (NPL) sites and of other
sites where a significant threat to public health might exist. A public health
assessment is a written, comprehensive evaluation of available data and
information about the release of hazardous substances into the environment in a
specific geographic area. Such releases are assessed for past, current, or
future impact on public health. ATSDR, in collaboration with public health and
environmental officials from Alaska, has conducted 10
public health assessments in the state, including the following recent example.
Fort Wainwright—Fort Wainwright is an active U.S. Army
installation in Fairbanks. Accidents or waste management
practices over the years have resulted in spills or releases of industrial
materials into the soil or the underlying groundwater of the installation.
The most common contaminants at the post are volatile organic compounds;
pesticides; polychlorinated biphenyls; and petroleum, oils, and lubricants.
In September 2003, ATSDR released a public health assessment to evaluate
exposure pathways and respond to community members' concerns about past and
current exposures to contaminants originating at the site. ATSDR assessed
past and current potential exposure pathways (via groundwater, soil, and
air) at the site. ATSDR did not identify public health hazards associated
with the majority of the on-post contaminated sites because they are not
widely accessible to the public, they contain only low levels of
contamination, or remedial activities to remove contaminants were completed.
ATSDR assessed past exposures for three potential exposure pathways. The
groundwater pathway from a nearby contaminated church well and possible
exposure pathways resulting from coal ash and its use as road grit on the
post posed no apparent public health hazard. However, ATSDR concluded that
on-post coal-fired power plant emissions periodically could have reached
concentrations that exceed the current National Ambient Air Quality
Standards. Because data to assess possible exposures are not available,
exposures to these emissions were categorized as an indeterminate public
health hazard.
ATSDR identified several possible current exposure pathways. Four of these
were categorized as no apparent health hazard: contaminants in on-post or
off-post drinking water supplies; on-post surface soil and Chena River
surface water or sediment; lead-based paint in on-post housing; and hazards
in on-post housing, administrative, and industrial buildings.
ATSDR categorized current exposure to radiation associated with buried
radiologic material as no public health hazard.
ATSDR categorized current exposure to contaminants from ingestion of Chena
River fish as an indeterminate public health hazard because insufficient
sampling data are available to determine whether concentrations of metals
exist in the river at levels that could indicate a public health hazard for
fish consumers. ATSDR recommends considering additional sampling for the
Chena River to determine whether the one arsenic sampling event was
representative of chronic contamination or a random occurrence. The Army is
scheduled to reevaluate the sampling needs for the river in 2005; the need
for additional arsenic sampling will be considered at that time.
During visits to the site, ATSDR was concerned that children could enter the
underground corridor system (utilidors). The post's Department of Public
Works will replace the unlocked utilidor lids with new lids to prevent
children from entering utilidors and to maintain worker safety.
A health consultation is a written or oral response from
ATSDR to a specific request for information about health risks related to a
specific site, chemical release, or hazardous material. A health consultation is
a more limited response than a public health assessment is. Sixty
health consultations have been developed at 39 sites in
Alaska, including the following recent example.
Umiat Air Force Station—A Nuiqsut community
member asked ATSDR to evaluate fish data collected from the Colville River in
2001, taking into consideration specific exposures to the Nuiqsut community. In
2001, ATSDR released a health consultation that reviewed data from fish sampled
near the former Umiat Air Force Station in 1997 and 1998. The health
consultation focused on evaluating the potential risk to people who harvest fish
in or near the Umiat site. Because of the small quantity of fish, ATSDR
determined that human exposures to contaminants in fish at the Umiat site were
not occurring at frequencies considered a current public health problem.
Therefore, ATSDR concluded in the 2001 health consultation that current Colville
River fish contamination data did not indicate the need for public health
concern.
As part of the 2001 health consultation, ATSDR recommended that additional
sampling be conducted to better characterize the nature and extent of downstream
contamination in the river. To address this issue, 70 burbot were collected from
the Colville River near Umiat and Nuiqsut. Burbot are the most numerous resident
predatory fish in the river, and the species is actively sought and eaten by the
subsistence population.
In a health consultation released in November 2003, ATSDR reviewed and evaluated
potential exposures to the Nuiqsut community, which relies on fish from the
Colville River. ATSDR recognizes that the use of these fish has high cultural
and nutritional significance. To help the community weigh information about
potential risk in terms of their personal values, the health consultation also
presents information about the benefits of eating fish.
ATSDR reviewed and evaluated four potential exposure scenarios: eating fish from
the river every day for 70 years, eating whole burbot in high quantities 4
months of the year, eating burbot livers 4 months of the year, and eating
several burbot livers in one sitting.
Although PCBs, dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT), and DDT derivatives were
detected in fish collected from multiple areas of the river, the levels were
low, and exposures to those levels are not expected to cause harmful health
effects. Thus, ATSDR determined that the fish are safe to eat at all four
exposure levels: conservative chronic exposure from eating a high quantity of
fish (up to almost a pound) from the river every day for 70 years; intermediate
exposure from eating burbot in high quantities during certain times of the year
(for example, during the seasonal harvest); intermediate exposure in which the
elders of the Nuiqsut community eat about six burbot livers per week and
children eat about three livers per week during the 4-month burbot harvest; and
an acute exposure scenario in which elders eat six burbot livers during one
meal.
Health Education and Community Activities
American Indian and Alaska Native Initiative
Through its Office of Tribal Affairs, ATSDR coordinates and consults with Alaska
Native villages about health concerns related to hazardous exposures.
ATSDR is partnering with Alaska Native villages and corporations, federal
agencies, and state agencies concerning possible environmental exposures from
former military sites and the correlation to cancer rates in several areas.
ATSDR also is collaborating with Alaska Natives to evaluate potential exposures
to chemicals. The following sites, tribes, or villages have ongoing activities:
Aleutian Pribilof Islands,
Annette Island,
Cook Inlet,
Dutch Harbor,
Eiselson Air Force
Base,
Elmendorf Air Force Base,
Ft. Yukon,
Gambell,
Ketchikan,
Northeast Cape,
Port Graham, and
Sitka.
Training
In response to requests from communities and tribal governments in Alaska for
training, ATSDR conducted the Basic Course for Health Assessment and
Consultation in February 2003 in
Anchorage. The 55 participants
represented a variety of villages, organizations, and agencies and throughout
the state, including the native villages of
Paimuit,
Elim,
Koyuk, and
Kivalina;
Tanana Chiefs Conference;
Bristol Bay Health Corporation;
Alaska Native Health Board (
ANHB);
Alaska
Community Action on Toxics;
University of Alaska; as
well as the state of
Alaska, U.S. Army, and EPA. Participants
traveled from nearly every borough in Alaska to attend the course.
The course was tailored to meet the needs of Alaska Natives and those who work
for Alaska Native organizations or on Alaska Native environmental health issues.
Case studies and exercises used Alaskan hazardous waste sites as examples and
addressed issues of concern for the area, such as contamination in fish. This
tailored course trained professionals and village workers in Alaska how to
assess health implications at hazardous waste sites. The course increased
participants' knowledge of ATSDR processes and resources, which will aid future
collaborations. The course also provided networking opportunities to aid future
cooperation between the diverse groups represented at the training and increased
agency participants' abilities to conduct community involvement and health
education activities in rural village settings.
The Alaska Traditional Diet Project
Alaska Residents' Concerns
Persistent organic pollutants, heavy metals, and radionuclides from both local
and distant sources have been found in
Alaska and other Arctic
areas. Concerns exist that exposure to contaminants resulting from a subsistence
lifestyle, or through commercial and recreational exposure, can potentially lead
to cancer, worsen existing conditions such as diabetes and asthma, and increase
the incidence of other health problems. To enable them to make informed choices
about their foods, Alaskans have asked for more information about the risk from
these exposures and the nutritional benefits of traditional foods.
Congressional Mandate
In 2001, Congress asked ATSDR to identify and study "contaminants in the
environment, subsistence resources, and people in Alaska Native populations."
Subsequently, Congress expanded ATSDR's project to cover all consumers-including
subsistence, commercial, and recreational consumers-of Alaskan traditional
foods. Among its strengths, ATSDR brings an extensive public health experience
in helping state and tribal governments and communities identify and reduce
exposures to contaminants in the environment.
ATSDR's Response to Mandate
ATSDR formed an
Alaska Traditional Diet Project (
ATDP)
team to address the mandate from Congress. In consultation and collaboration
with the
Alaska Department of Health and Social Services, other
state and federal agencies, Alaska Native organizations, and tribes, ATSDR
provided funding to the
ANHB. The monies supported a
contaminants workshop in
Alaska, development and implementation
of a food frequency questionnaire (FFQ), and limited biota (food) sampling for
environmental contaminant testing.
The grant to ANHB, which begun in September 2001 and has been extended through
fiscal year 2004, includes training and monies to Alaska Native villages to
conduct the FFQ and analyze the data collected. The FFQ provides information
about food eaten seasonally and portions consumed. Data analysis by nutrition
experts will provide information on the nutrients present in these foods.
The project is being closely coordinated with Alaska Natives and, through tribal
input, will build capacity within the native villages for future projects.
Thirteen villages were funded to collect FFQ data; these villages are located in
four broad, regional areas of
Alaska—the interior, the
southeast, the west coast, and the Arctic slope. All 13 communities and their
respective health corporations recently cleared the FFQ results for release. The
FFQ results were used to identify foods being sampled for contaminants in two of
these communities. This limited food sampling is ongoing.
Resource Materials
ATSDR develops materials for public health professionals and medical care
providers to use to assess the public health impacts of chemical exposures.
These resources are available in print, on the ATSDR Web site, and on CD-ROM.
For example, medical management guidelines are available for acute chemical
exposures to more than 50 chemicals. These guidelines were designed to aid
emergency department physicians and other emergency health care professionals,
such as first responders, who manage acute exposures resulting from chemical
incidents. ATSDR's toxicological profiles comprehensively describe health
effects; pathways of human exposure; and the behavior of more than 250 hazardous
substances in air, soil, and water at hazardous waste sites. The toxicological
profiles primarily are used as a comprehensive resource by health professionals
at all levels. These profiles have been sent to requesters, including
representatives of federal, state, and local health and environmental
departments; academic institutions; private industries; and nonprofit
organizations in
Alaska. ATSDR also has developed extensive
resources for community members.
April 2004