
Exposure to a mix of pesticides raises risk of pregnancy complications, study suggests
The study, which bio-monitored pregnant women in a heavily agricultural state in Argentina, adds to recent-but-limited evidence pointing to heightened dangers in mixtures of pesticides.
The authors say research into how pesticide mixtures impact human health is important because the vast majority of studies look at exposure to a single pesticide, and regulations on the substances' use are developed based on toxicity to just one.
However, people are frequently exposed to multiple pesticides in non-organic meals, or when living in agricultural regions around the world. Studying exposure to those mixtures and other environmental factors is 'essential' to protecting people's health, said the authors, with the National University of the Littoral in Argentina.
'The concept of the exposome, which encompasses all lifetime environmental exposures, underscores the importance of studying pesticides as mixtures rather than in isolation,' the authors wrote.
The study comes on the heels of University of Nebraska research that found state cancer records and bio-monitoring data showed that exposure to multiple pesticides could increase the chances of children developing brain cancer by about 36%.
The new study checked for pesticides in the urine of nearly 90 pregnant women in Santa Fe, Argentina, a heavily agricultural region, and monitored their pregnancy outcomes. About 40 different pesticides were detected.
At least one pesticide was found in the urine of 81% of women, and 64% showed multiple pesticides. Of those, 34% had pregnancy complications.
The number of women living in urban areas who had at least one pesticide in their body was only slightly lower than those in rural districts, suggesting that food is also a meaningful exposure route. But about 70% of women in rural settings showed multiple pesticides, compared to 55% of women in urban settings, highlighting a greater risk among the former.
Rural participants were over twice as likely to have pregnancy-related complications compared to urban, in part because they are more frequently exposed to mixtures.
The Santa Fe region grows dozens of crops, including lettuce, cabbage, chicory, tomato, parsley, spinach, carrot, bell pepper, potato and strawberry, and the wide range of crops leads to the use of more pesticides, the authors wrote.
'The increased prevalence of pregnancy-related complications among rural participants highlights the need for a comprehensive review of pesticide use protocols, exposure limits and health risk assessments in agriculture and horticulture programs,' the authors said.
Gestational hypertension was among the most common pregnancy-related complications, and the most common outcome was intrauterine growth restriction, a condition in which the fetus does not grow to a normal weight during pregnancy.
The findings may also point to dangers in the type of pesticide to which women are exposed, the authors wrote. Those who had complications showed higher levels of triazole fungicides, a pesticide class that is widely used on crops like corn, soybeans and wheat. Some previous evidence suggests it's a reproductive toxicant, and the authors say their findings show the need for more research on the class's potential effects.
Though not all the same pesticides are used in the US or other countries as in Argentina, the use of triazole fungicides increased four-fold in the US between 2006 and 2016, especially in the southeast and midwest. Still, it has drawn little regulatory scrutiny.
Exposure to mixtures of pesticides in general 'is the rule, not the exception', said Nathan Donley, a pesticides researcher with the Center for Biological Diversity, who was not involved with the study.
'For the most part we have absolutely no clue how different mixtures interact in utero, in a child or in an adult,' Donley said. 'Some mixtures probably aren't doing much of anything, others are probably causing significant harm that we have not identified yet.'
There is little regulatory oversight of pesticide mixtures in the US, in part because determining health impacts of mixtures is complicated, Donley added.
'The US tends to just default that it's all safe until proven otherwise, and since there is very little research on pesticide mixtures, it's rarely proven otherwise,' Donley said, adding that the unknown risks calls for the use of greater precaution.
The authors note that the paper's sample size is small, and the findings point to the need for a larger bio-monitoring study.
'Greater efforts are required to deepen and expand the evaluation of human exposure to pesticides in vulnerable populations,' the authors wrote.
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BBC News
14 hours ago
- BBC News
Ten years after the Zika outbreak: What happened to the babies born with microcephaly?
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"And yet I would ask every doctor I visited: 'My kid is going to walk, right?'"Rute's daughter is one of the nearly 2,000 babies born to women who contracted the mosquito-borne virus in Brazil between 2015 and then, the country was preparing to host the Olympics and the world watched with concern as the virus spread across Brazil as well as to dozens of other Love Stories: I went to Brazil to find out how families are coping A public health emergency was declared by the World Health Organization and Brazilian authorities, whose warning remained in place until May still not clear why the outbreak spontaneously ceased and it hasn't resurged over the past disappeared from the public eye, and families dealing with its long-lasting consequences have been largely to government figures, 261 children diagnosed with congenital Zika syndrome - a pattern of birth defects caused by infections during pregnancy - have died. Hundreds more have seen their health conditions is one of them. She lives in Maceió, a coastal city in north-eastern Brazil, where 75% of the cases of congenital Zika virus syndrome in the country were registered. Scientists still don't have a conclusive explanation of why that region was the most affected. Congenital Zika syndrome is characterised by heart problems, joint issues and difficulty co-ordinating chewing and swallowing. Most of those with it do not go through traditional development milestones like crawling, eating, walking, speaking or potty deal with the challenges of raising her daughter, Rute joined forces with other affected mothers. She first met them in a support group put together by local health authorities in 2016."There were so many kids with the same syndrome as Tamara. We started talking to each other, exchanging information… and things finally started to make sense."But life was still difficult. A year on, the women felt they weren't getting enough support from local authorities. So they formed an independent group, with bespoke yellow shirts, to help each other - and demand more. Moving in together Many of the mothers had stopped working and were living off state benefits of around $265 (£199; €230) per month - the minimum wage. They found themselves in legal battles against the healthcare system trying to secure surgeries, wheelchairs, medication and baby had been abandoned by their husbands - some of whom have remarried and formed new founder of the association, Alessandra Hora, says men rarely came to the group."I heard from many women that their husbands felt they were putting being a mother before the role of wife," she tells the women have found new ways of organising their lives. After making an application to public housing authorities, almost 15 were able to move into the same complex, where they've now lived for five years."Our goal was for them to live close to one another so they could help each other - to be the support network that most don't have," says started taking care of her grandson Erik, who has congenital Zika syndrome, after her son was murdered in their neighbourhood on the outskirts of Maceió.Rute moved to the Zika mothers' housing block after her became close to her neighbours Anne Caroline da Silva Rosa and Lenice França, whose children Moisés and Enzo also have congenital Zika syndrome. Like Tamara, Moisés eats through a feeding tube that comes out of his stomach. He can no longer stand, but he manages a faint smile when his little sister Maria covers him in hugs and is one of the few children with Zika-related microcephaly who has more autonomy. After many years in and out of hospitals, the nine-year-old is now able to walk and so close to one another means the mothers have been able to share tips on how to handle their children's complex health conditions. But there have been other benefits started taking night classes when Anne Caroline and Lenice offered to look after Tamara - meaning she could resume her studies and obtain a high-school can neither walk nor speak, as doctors predicted. A few years ago, she couldn't fix her gaze on an object either - but thanks to physical therapy she can now even recognise herself in the eyes follow her mother everywhere she goes. They usually stare at each other when Rute is cuddling with her on the couch and stroking her long curly hair. Winning higher compensation The mothers' decade-long battle for better financial assistance has also paid December, Brazil's Congress approved a bill introduced back in 2015 that would see families affected by Zika receive compensation of $8,800, and monthly payments of $1,325 - five times higher than the current President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva vetoed the bill, saying its financial implications were unclear. His administration had instead proposed a one-off payment of $10, like Mardjane Lemos, the doctor who diagnosed some of the first cases of Zika-related microcephaly, said this was far from enough. She argued that state authorities had failed the families on multiple levels - failing to contain the virus and under-compensating affected children for years. Alagoas state's health department said the virus situation in the region had improved in recent years thanks to their efforts in educating citizens to clear stagnant water and training health surveillance didn't respond to questions about how the state has supported families affected by Zika ultimately, the mothers were Lula's veto on the bill was overturned and they were told they would receive the full levels of compensation approved in the 2015 bill. Mysterious drop in cases Even though the number of Zika cases and births of babies with the syndrome have sharply dropped, a new outbreak is possible as the cause of the decline is still unknown, says Ms Lemos."The boom in cases seems to have spontaneously ceased. This leads to the theory that there is some natural immunity. But is that really the case? How long does it last? We do not know," she points out.A decade on from the outbreak, a lack of research has left many questions unanswered. 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She wants private health insurance for Tamara and dreams of buying a car one day, to take her to medical appointments."Some of the mothers thought this day wouldn't come," she adds. "But I didn't give up hope."


Times
20 hours ago
- Times
Evangelists once used guns to convert the Amazon. Their new tool is deadly too
Five hundred years ago it was the horse, the plough and the gun that helped convert millions of indigenous people in South America to Christianity. Now evidence has emerged that 21st-century missionaries are, like their predecessors, using modern technology to proselytise. Last week, a joint investigation by the Brazilian newspaper O Globo and The Guardian revealed that solar-powered devices reciting biblical messages had been found by members of the Korubo people in the Javari valley, near the Brazil-Peru border. The discovery was troubling because of where it was made. The exceptionally remote valley is home to an estimated 6,000 people, including several thousand members of 11 'uncontacted' tribes living their lives in stone-age conditions. All are acutely vulnerable to diseases such as measles, which affects other societies less having gained partial immunity over hundreds of years of exposure. Since 1987, the Brazilian government has stipulated that no non-indigenous people can enter the area at all. Interaction with the uncontacted tribes is permitted only if they initiate the process. The situation is precarious, with loggers, miners, poachers, drug traffickers and missionaries all known to be active on the fringes of the region. The yellow and grey device found by the Korubo was, O Globo reported, the size of a mobile phone. It broadcast passages — apparently in Spanish and Portuguese — from the Bible, along with lectures by the late American Baptist evangelical Charles Stanley. It does not run out of power thanks to an built-in solar panel. 'This is very serious,' Ivaneide Bandeira of the Kanindé Association told The Sunday Times. The association lobbies for the rights of the people of the Amazon basin. The fact that a man-made device had been left so close to otherwise isolated people raised the risk of spreading diseases to them, she said. 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She said that across the Amazon indigenous rituals were already being edged out by western culture, often introduced by missionaries. 'They learn the indigenous language and then the whole, powerful evangelisation process begins.' She described how the missionaries — in recent decades most often Protestants rather than Catholics — would bring clothes as gifts, which the local people would then be persuaded to wear 'to cover their shame'. She said they were also encouraged to marry, like good Christians. Weddings were often conducted 'in the white man's tradition' complete with veils and wreaths. Bandeira added that modern technology could give outsiders the appearance of possessing supernatural powers. 'They usually arrive in the villages and forests with a lot of antibiotics,' she said. 'They hand out medicines that cure illnesses faster than the ones the shamans give. This can convince people that the medicine comes from God.' 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The Wai-wai are understood to have collaborated with American missionaries to convert other tribes since they were converted to Christianity in the 1950s. But Grey said Messengers should not be present in the Javari region. 'We don't go anywhere we are not allowed,' he insisted. Evangelism has been rising steadily in Brazil in recent decades. According to the country's latest census, released in June, those identifying as evangelical Christians now account for more than a quarter of all Brazilians. The country's historically dominant Catholic population saw its numbers fall in the same survey, from 65 per cent in 2010 to 57 per cent. Evangelicals have been especially successful in making inroads in the Amazon region. The former president, Jair Bolsonaro, a right-wing ex-soldier who was in office from 2019-23, actively courted the evangelical vote and was backed by several prominent pastors. In one of his most controversial moves as president, Bolsonaro sought to appoint a former evangelical missionary, Ricardo Lopes Dias, as the head of the government department tasked with protecting isolated and recently contacted indigenous tribes. Lopes Dias was linked to a missionary group whose explicit purpose was to convert 'unreached people' to Christianity. Appointing such a controversial figure purportedly to protect indigenous people was described by activists at the times as equivalent to 'putting a fox in charge of the hen house'. Eventually the appointment was blocked by the courts. By 2030 it is forecast that there will be more Brazilian evangelicals than Catholics. Pastors talk of the development as a 'revival' that should be duplicated around the world. But Bandeira questions whether this really is something to celebrate, especially if those numbers are being swelled by indigenous converts. She said her experience was that contact with evangelical missionaries eventually led to 'envy, and then division' inside the communities.


Reuters
2 days ago
- Reuters
Brazil's EMS to sell injector pens to treat obesity
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