Minamata Disease and The Photography of W Eugene Smith Martin Donohoe http://www.publichealthandsocialjustice.org Outline • Introduction • Mercury and Methylmercury as pollutants • Minamata Disease • W Eugene Smith.

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Transcript Minamata Disease and The Photography of W Eugene Smith Martin Donohoe http://www.publichealthandsocialjustice.org Outline • Introduction • Mercury and Methylmercury as pollutants • Minamata Disease • W Eugene Smith.

Minamata Disease and The
Photography of W Eugene Smith
Martin Donohoe
http://www.publichealthandsocialjustice.org
Outline
• Introduction
• Mercury and Methylmercury as
pollutants
• Minamata Disease
• W Eugene Smith – bio and photos
• Minamata Convention
Mercury
• Mercury ore (cinnabar) used as pigment
since Neolithic era (found in 10,000 yr
old cave paintings)
• Ancient Romans, Chinese used as rouge
makeup
• Pigment mixed with wax for document
seals in Middle Ages
Mercury
• Syphilis Treatment
- 15th Century onward
- abandoned 1940 for penicillin
• Recognized as cause of disease in 19th
Century (Hunter-Russell Syndrome)
- chemists, hatters (matted fur together
with mercuric nitrate to make felt hats)
Mercury
• Used in late-19th Century to extract silver
from pulverized ore
• Diuretic (used through mid-20th Century)
• Used as a preservative in latex paints
until banned by EPA in 1991
Mercury
• Added by US government to industrial
alcohol during Prohibition to make it
more lethal and discourage moonshine
production (1926-1933)
–Led to more than 10,000 deaths
Mercury
• Used in chlor-alkali plants to make
chlorine and sodium hydroxide for
industry
• Used in production of vinyl chloride, an
important ingredient in plastics and vinyl
Mercury
• Hg miners at high risk
• Found today in Chinese medications, skin
lightening creams, hair dyes
Mercury
• Half from volcanic eruptions and other
geological processes
• Released into air by coal combustion,
industrial processes, mining, and waste
disposal
– 4500 tons/yr
• Travels throughout atmosphere and settles in
oceans and waterways
• Bacteria convert it to toxic methyl-mercury
Mercury
• Travels up food chain via fish
– Warmer temperatures increase metabolic
rate and ability of fish to accumulate
– Avoid top predators (tuna, shark, swordfish
• Acadian redfish, aka dogfish – used in
school lunch programs
– 1/3 of US exposure to methylmercury from
canned tuna
Gold Mining
Gold = Cyanide + Mercury
• Mercury used to capture gold particles as
an amalgam
• Gold leached from ore using cyanide
–Cyanide paralyzes cellular respiration
• At least 18 tons of mine waste created to
obtain the gold for a single 3 oz., 18k ring
Gold Mining and Mercury
• Contaminated groundwater often sits in
large toxic lakes held in place by tenuous
dams
• Release of cyanide and mercury into local
waterways kills fish, harms fish-eating
animals, and poisons drinking water
Mercury
• Other sources:
–Deforestation and runoff
–Industrial boilers
–Tooth fillings
–Car batteries
–Cosmetics
Mercury
• Dental amalgams:
– 50% mercury; 50% silver, copper, tin, zinc mixture
– dental amalgam factory workers at high risk
– Mercury dental amalgams pose health risks to
pregnant women, unborn babies, and children
(FDA Black Box Warning added 2009) – esp tooth
grinders
– No link with nervous system toxicity and no
benefit to removal in adults
Mercury
• 720,000 metric tons removed from
ground since 1850
• 57% of mercury released since 1850
circulates in environment
• 43% locked away in sediments and
landfills
Mercury
• Long biological half-life
- 1-3 years in humans
• Regulation inadequate
– Allows “cap and trade”
Mercury
• 16% of women of childbearing age exceed the EPA’s
“safe” mercury level
• Freshwater fish mercury levels too high for pregnant
women to eat in 43 states
• Consumers Union disagrees with FDA recommended
limits on tuna consumption for pregnant women
– States pregnant women should not eat ANY tuna
Minamata Bay
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Southern Japan
Shiranui Sea
Fishing village
Villagers: fisherman/Chisso Corporation
employees and their families
Chisso Corporation
• Established 1918
• Produced acetaldehyde for plastics, drugs,
perfumes, photography
• Mercury (Hg) catalyst
• Byproduct = methylmercury, dumped into bay
(150 tons over 4 decades)
• Dumped over 60 deadly poisons, including
vinyl chloride (cause of liver cancer)
Chronology of Chisso's
Environmental Pollution
• 1925 - local fishing cooperative compensated
for decreased catch
• 1950s - bizarre behavioral changes observed
in birds, marine fish, land vertebrates; oysters
vanish
• 1950s / 1960s - reports in Japanese medical
journals about human cases
Chronology of Chisso's
Environmental Pollution
• 1956 - cause (MeHg) of Minamata Disease
elucidated
• 1958-60 - reports in English medical journals
• 1959-69 - Dr. Hosokawa's experiments
– Cat #400
– Other studies
• 1959 cyclator added
– Removed Hg, but not MeHg
Chronology of Chisso's
Environmental Pollution
• 1965 - fishing banned in Minamata Bay after
similar events noted in Niigata, Japan
• 1968 - all acetaldehyde-producing plants
ceased operating
• 1970 - Japan Water Pollution Control Act
– Allowed no detectable Hg or MeHg in waste water
Chronology of Chisso's
Environmental Pollution
• 1997 – Minamata Bay declared free of
mercury
• 2004 – Japanese Supreme Court rules
government shares responsibility for
epidemic (government slow to react, cut
off research funding in 1962)
Minamata Disease
• 3,000 official cases in Minamata Bay
(almost 1800 dead)
–Tens of thousands of unofficial cases
–Number of victims may be as high as
100,000
• Social stigma / Poor health care
Congenital Minamata Disease:
Signs and Symptoms
• Congenital: high dose → infertility; medium
dose → spontaneous abortions; low dose →
congenital disease (including anencephaly and
spina bifida)
• S/S: poor physical growth, mental retardation,
impaired speech/chewing/swallowing, muscle
tone abnormalities, involuntary movements,
constricted visual fields
- EDTA not effective
Signs and Symptoms
• Acute / Chronic Poisoning:
– Numbness, slurred speech, ataxia, unsteady gait,
deafness, poor vision, dysphagia, hypersalivation,
confusion, drowsiness/stupor to
irritability/restlessness
– Linked to autism
– Chronic liver disease, liver cancer
– Nephropathy
Signs and Symptoms
• Acute / Chronic Poisoning:
– Hypertension
– Autoimmune disorders
– Rash - Acrodynia (“pink disease”, small children,
swelling and irritation of palms and feet →
desquamation, irritability, photophobia, fever,
insomnia, profuse sweating
– Death within a few months if severe
Diagnosis
• Mercury levels in air, blood, urine:
–“Normal” level = 5 mcg/l
–20 mcg/l – 100 mcg/l = subacute
toxicity, consider treatment
–>100 mcg/l in blood and/or urine =
toxic, treat
Treatment
• Chelation with BAL, penicillamine, DMPS,
DMSA (best)
– May help with neurologic symptoms
– Nephrotic syndrome resolves over several months
– Follow levels to assess adequacy of treatment,
need for additional doses
– Consult occupational medicine/poison control
Civil suit vs. Chisso (1969-73)
• Plaintiffs initially awarded $66,000 for deceased
victims, $59,000 - $66,000 for survivors
• Precedent - Niigata suit versus Showa Denko
– $3.4 million paid out the first night, $80 million
paid out by 1975
• As of 2014, most victims have received financial
compensation ($160,000 - $180,000; $26000 for
those with lesser disabilities)
Civil suit vs. Chisso (1969-73)
• Dr. Hosokawa key witness (from
deathbed)
–Identity - company employee vs.
impartial physician with obligation to
patients
–Loyalty - company vs. to public
Reasons for Delayed Recognition
and Action
• Science slow, unfunded/underfunded,
corrupt
• Dissemination of knowledge slow
• Social stigma of disease, fear of
contagion
• Pressure from fisheries cooperative,
Chisso employees
Reasons for Delayed Recognition
and Action
• Lack of local/world awareness of health
effects of pollution
• Strong government-business links in
Japan, employee loyalty strong
Decreasing Causes and Limiting
Consequences of Mercury Pollution
• Phase out coal burning power plants
• Hospitals phasing out mercury
thermometers
• Stop buying gold (e.g., wedding rings)
• Make healthy seafood purchases
• Screen and treat when appropriate
• Avoid tainted cosmetics
Minamata Convention
• A set of legally binding measures to curb
mercury pollution
–As of 10/16/14, 128 countries have
signed and 6 (including the U.S.) have
ratified
–Takes effect 90 days after 50 nations
ratify
Minamata Convention
• Best emission-control technologies requred for new
power plants, boilers and smelters
• Compact fluorescent lightbulbs containing over 5 mg
Hg banned by 2020
• Primary mercury mining banned (old mines get 15
yrs to close down)
• Allows use of mercury in artisanal and small scale
gold mining; encourages nations to phase out use
altogether
Minamata Convention
• Exempts dental fillings, but encourages
alternatives
• Vaccines with thimerosol (ethylmercury)
exempt (very few, trace amounts)
• Considered “safe” but best to avoid if
possible
• But benefits of vaccination great
Minamata Convention
• Bans Hg-containing batteries by 2020
(button-cell batteries exempt)
• Bans switches and relays with Hg by 2020
• Limits Hg in soaps and some cosmetics
Minamata Convention
• Bans Hg in medical devices by 2020
• Exempts religious and traditional uses of Hg
• Bans use in certain types of manufacturing
• Japan – Asia’s largest exporter of mercury
• Japanese industry fighting treaty/trade ban
Minamata Disease Memorial
W Eugene Smith
• Born 1918, Wichita, KS
• Local news photographer at age 15
• Turned down scholarship to Notre Dame
to study photography at NY Institute of
Photography
• Worked for Newsweek, then Life, then
Magnum
W Eugene Smith
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Married to Aileen Smith, photojournalist
Minamata: Final Assignment
Beaten by Chisso employees
Died 1978
Role of the Media in Promoting Awareness
of Environmental Health Issues
• Books
– Henrik Ibsen’s Enemy of the People
– Upton Sinclair's The Jungle
– Rachel Carson's Silent Spring
• Photography
– W. Eugene and Aileen Smith's Minamata photoessay
– Jacob Riis, Dorothea Lange, Sebastiao Salgado, James
Nachtwey, others
• Film, TV
Contact Info, References
Martin Donohoe
[email protected]
This slide show and others available at
http://www.publichealthandsocialjustice.org
http://www.phsj.org