| Literature DB >> 19589163 |
Jamie L deLemos1, Doug Brugge, Miranda Cajero, Mallery Downs, John L Durant, Christine M George, Sarah Henio-Adeky, Teddy Nez, Thomas Manning, Tommy Rock, Bess Seschillie, Chris Shuey, Johnnye Lewis.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Decades of improper disposal of uranium-mining wastes on the Navajo Nation has resulted in adverse human and ecological health impacts as well as socio-cultural problems. As the Navajo people become increasingly aware of the contamination problems, there is a need to develop a risk-communication strategy to properly inform tribal members of the extent and severity of the health risks. To be most effective, this strategy needs to blend accepted risk-communication techniques with Navajo perspectives such that the strategy can be used at the community level to inform culturally- and toxicologically-relevant decisions about land and water use as well as mine-waste remediation.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19589163 PMCID: PMC2714847 DOI: 10.1186/1476-069X-8-29
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health ISSN: 1476-069X Impact factor: 5.984
Figure 1Exposure conditions specific to most Navajo Communities. a. Navajo family hauling water from a windmill.; b. new home under construction within 1200' of mine waste pile; c. children playing near partially reclaimed waste pile; d. cattle grazing on contaminated soil adjacent to mine waste. (Photo credit, J. deLemos, C. Shuey, and C. George)
Figure 2Map of the study area including chapter boundaries, main roads, hydrography, location of chapter house, as well as mine features (portal- mine entrance; prospect-area of exploration, rim/pit- land stripped away to access ore; or vertical shaft-passage into a mine) and waste piles.
Mapping area demographics
| Total Participants (n) | 151 |
|---|---|
| % Male | 42 |
| % Female | 58 |
| Mean Age (± standard deviation) | 58 ± 16 |
| Language | |
| % Bilingual with family | 58 |
| % Bilingual at work | 45 |
| % Bilingual with friends | 50 |
| % Reporting annual household income <$15,000 | 63 |
| % Reporting a high school diploma or higher level of education | 35 |
| Median fraction of life spent at current residence | 0.7 |
| Median # of minutes to access food and supplies | 30 |
| Median # of minutes to access medical services | 25 |
| Median # of minutes to water source | 20 |
| Median # of minutes to work | 30 |
Figure 3Percent of participants hauling water from unregulated source, regulated source, and groceries. Primary, secondary, and tertiary hauling sources are the first three water sources reported by participants in the survey. N = number of participants that use a primary, secondary, and tertiary source.
Environmental history self-reported by survey participants.
| Environmental History | Percent reporting behavior | Median contact years of potential exposure |
|---|---|---|
| Lived near a uranium mine: "Near" = downwind, along a road to, in a floodplain of, or within two miles. | 40 | 30 |
| Lived near a uranium mill: "Near" = downwind, along a road to, in a floodplain of, or within two miles. | 16 | 28 |
| Played on a tailings pile or waste dump | 20 | 8 |
| Played outdoors near or next to a uranium mine, mill, or waste dump | 18 | 15 |
| Drinking, wading, or contact with mine water or waste spills | 30 | 5.5 |
| Herding livestock on or next to a uranium mine, mill, or waste dump | 25 | 10 |
| Sheltering livestock in an abandoned mine | 4 | 2 |
| Living in a mining camp | 5 | 7.5 |
| Washing or handling clothes of a friend or family member who was a uranium worker | 29 | 3 |
| Used materials from an abandoned uranium mine or mill for any purpose | 28 | 15 |
* Not all participants recalled a contact time. Value reported is median of participants who reported a contact time.
Figure 4Water hauling map for Churchrock with use recommendations. Navajo legend included for human-use recommendations.
Figure 5Soil restriction recommendation map.
Criteria for evaluation of water quality
| USE | Comparison Criteria |
|---|---|
| Drinking or Cooking | NNEPA and USEPA Maximum Contaminant Levels |
| Livestock Watering | New Mexico Guide M-112, Water Quality for Livestock and Poultry |
| Other Domestic Use | USEPA Secondary Drinking Water Standards, and overall water chemistry including salinity, TDS, pH, and aesthetic properties |