What dangers lurk in your lab?
The Israeli health ministry released a rather sobering study yesterday: apparently, women who work in a lab are at a 26% higher risk of developing certain cancers.
The scientists are careful to avoid saying anything about cause and effect — they didn't discover links to any particular chemicals that might be the trigger, for example. But there is a convincing correlation. The study took into account 9,000 hospital, health fund and university lab workers who had worked in the labs for 20 years or more, according to this news article.
Depending on the kind of lab they worked in, the women seemed to be at higher risk of breast cancer, melanoma, lip cancer (that one I find a bit strange, I must admit) and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, but at lower risk of lung cancer (which also I find strange).
Because of the findings, the health ministry began organizing courses on lab safety. Good news is, the researchers say, the study was conducted over the 80s and 90s, when conditions were much worse than they are today, so women working in labs today are probably safer.
Do you buy that?

Comments
What I'd be interested in as well would be a survey of the KIDS of women working in a lab. I've seen a huge difference in standards for example between Germany and the US. In Germany, EVERYONE working with radioactivity was provided with a dosimeter which was checked monthly, and women were told there is no such thing as "just a little bit pregnant" and that pregnant=no radioactivity. Conversely, in the US, we were told that only radiologists would get dosimeters and a colleague of mine worked until a week before she gave birth....
Posted by: Oliver H. | May 23, 2007 06:03 AM