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A Pattern, As Ground Zero Workers Die

Posted on: Friday, 20 January 2006, 09:00 CST

By Amy Westfeldt

James Zadroga spent 16 hours a day toiling in the World Trade Center ruins for a month, breathing in debris-choked air. Timothy Keller said he coughed up bits of gravel from his lungs after the towers fell Sept. 11, 2001. Felix Hernandez spent days at the site helping to search for victims.

All three men died in the last seven months of what their families and colleagues say were persistent respiratory illnesses directly caused by their work at ground zero.

While thousands of people who either worked at or lived near the site have reported ailments such as "trade center cough" since the terrorist attack, some say that only now are the consequences of working at the site becoming heartbreakingly clear.

"I'm very fearful," said Donald Faeth, an emergency medical technician and officer in a union with two of the ground zero workers who died last year. "I think that there are several people who died that day and didn't realize that they died that day."

Some officials say that it is too early to draw such a conclusion. Doctors running different health-screening programs say that it will take decades to get a clear picture of the long-term health effects of working at ground zero.

The city Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, which is tracking the health of 71,000 people exposed to 9/11 dust and debris, said last week that it is too soon to say whether any deaths or illnesses among its enrolled members are linked to trade center exposure.

But Robin Herbert, who directs a medical-monitoring program at Mount Sinai Medical Center for more than 14,000 ground zero workers, said "certainly it is not inconceivable" that a person could die of respiratory disease related to 9/11.

Karin DeShore said she does not need scientists to tell her what caused the death of her friend Keller, 41. DeShore was a Fire Department captain who took Keller to the trade center on Sept. 11 and barely escaped the south tower's collapse.

"He came back coughing" two days later, she said. Faeth said that Keller told him he coughed up debris so violently he could barely breathe on Sept. 11, and later developed emphysema.

Keller went home to Levittown on medical leave in March. He died June 23 of heart disease complicated by bronchitis and emphysema, the Nassau County medical examiner's office said.

Hernandez, 31, worked on rescue and recovery work at ground zero after the attack, said his former supervisor, Lt. Regina Pellegrino. In 2002, "it started with a cold he couldn't shake, . . . and it kept getting worse and worse and worse," she said.

Hernandez was diagnosed with various respiratory diseases and was told by doctors at one point that he might have cystic fibrosis, Pellegrino said. He left the job in 2004 when he became too weak to climb stairs and died Oct. 23 of respiratory ailments in Florida, said colleagues who spoke with his family.

Keller and Hernandez, each with a decade on the job, were nonsmokers and had no health problems before 9/11, Faeth said.

Zadroga, a 34-year-old New York detective, logged 470 hours at the site in 2001, including Sept. 11, and died Jan. 5. Family members and co-workers said he had contracted black lung disease and had high levels of mercury in his brain. Autopsy results have not been released.

David Worby, an attorney representing more than 5,000 plaintiffs suing those who supervised the cleanup over their illnesses, said 21 of his clients have died of 9/11-related diseases since mid-2004.


Source: Buffalo News

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