Monday, December 17, 2007

 

WILL THEY FIND THE SOURCE OF FORMALDEHYDE?

RV Business
Monday, December 17, 2007

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) will begin testing this week on the air quality in mobile homes and trailers provided by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to Gulf Coast residents displaced by Hurricane Katrina to check the level of formaldehyde pollution.

According to a report on the website for Medical News Today, Sussex, United Kingdom, beginning Dec. 21 the CDC will test for formaldehyde in the air inside 500 randomly selected trailers and mobile homes in Louisiana and Mississippi for around five weeks. Results should be available in 2008, said the agency on its website. The agency said a computer will randomly select the homes to be tested and volunteers cannot be accepted.

FEMA has set up a resident hotline and said it will move temporary housing residents with a "formaldehyde concern" into a hotel or motel if they ask for it.

The CDC and the FEMA are also going to do a joint health study on children living or born while their families live in the homes provided by the FEMA scheme. The study will look at the effects of indoor air quality from living in the FEMA scheme homes on child health. The results should be out sometime in 2008.

The CDC said that in order to conduct a valid study that releases results quickly, in the public interest, they cannot investigate every FEMA trailer or mobile home, or every child living in one.

The CDC is carrying out indoor air quality tests for formaldehyde in FEMA provided mobile homes and trailers because FEMA asked the agency for help in answering questions raised by residents.

The CDC will sample FEMA-provided travel trailers, recreation park trailers and mobile homes.

The agency pointed out there are currently no federal or scientifically recognized standards for formaldehyde levels in travel trailers. The agency will help FEMA to communicate the findings to residents so they understand what the scientific results of the tests mean. The agency will also help FEMA to prioritize which families should be moved out first into permanent housing.

Director of CDC's Coordinating Center for Environmental Health and Injury Prevention, Dr. Henry Falk, said in a prepared statement that: "This is a complex task. Knowledge about health effects of formaldehyde on long-term residents of temporary housing is limited. Levels we find in these tests will help everyone involved in this process make better informed decisions about what steps to take."

Falk said this was a "complex task," but the agency was "mindful of the importance of this information to people who have been living in temporary housing for such a long time."

FEMA Administrator David Paulison added, “FEMA's first priority has been and continues to be the health and safety of temporary housing residents."

"Upon request, FEMA will continue to move any temporary housing unit resident with a formaldehyde concern into a hotel or motel immediately and will work with all residents to provide them a housing alternative."

"Every occupant who has expressed a health concern through our hotline has been offered a housing alternative and we are continuing to work with each of them to find a permanent housing solution that meets their needs," explained Paulison.



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