Senate Votes to Block Tests of Pesticides on Humans
Posted on: Thursday, 30 June 2005, 18:00 CDT
WASHINGTON The Senate voted to block the Environmental Protection Agency from using studies that intentionally expose people to pesticides when considering permits for pest killers.
By a 60-37 vote, the Senate approved a provision from Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., that would block the EPA from relying on such testing including 24 human pesticide experiments currently under review as it approves or denies pesticide applications.
The Bush administration lifted a partial moratorium imposed in 1998 by the Clinton administration on using human testing for pesticide approvals. Under the change, political appointees are refereeing on a case-by-case basis any ethical disputes over human testing.
The tests include a 2002-04 study by the University of California- San Diego in which chloropicrin, a fungicide that was used as a chemical warfare agent during World War I, was administered to 127 young adults in doses that Boxer said exceeded average federal safety limits.
New EPA rules under development envision permitting the agency to accept data from human tests on children, pregnant women, newborns, infants and fetuses. Even newborns of "uncertain viability" could be tested under the draft EPA rule.
Boxer's proposal would block the EPA from using data taken from human testing for the budget year starting Oct. 1.
Source: Columbian
Related Articles
- Inexpensive 'Dipstick' Test For Pesticides In Foods
- Pesticides to be subjected to EPA testing
- Santaris Pharma Begins Human Clinical Testing of the World's First Medicine Targeted at a Human microRNA
- EPA Exempts Some Pesticide Use
- Tests Find Pesticides in Rural Wells: Private Water Treatment Encouraged
- Despite Some Efforts to Develop Better Methods, Most of the Tools Used for Toxicology and Human Safety Testing Are Decades Old
- Indian Paper Says 95 Human Samples Test Negative for Bird Flu
- EPA to Accept Pesticide Tests on Humans
- EPA Cancels Controversial Pesticide Study
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds