
InfoWars
Steve Watson
New York State health officials have
released statistics indicating that 360 9/11 rescue workers have since
died, but have also admitted that there is an overall undercount.
The New York Daily News reports
that of those deaths 154 have been explained and 80 have died of
various forms of cancer, mostly impacting the lungs and digestive
system while others were related to blood cancers and heart and
circulatory diseases.
"It’s the tip of the
iceberg," said David Worby, who is representing 10,000 workers - 600
with cancer - who say they got sick after working on rescue and
recovery efforts.
"These statistics bear out how toxic that site was," Worby said.
The Statistics were released by the World Trade Center Responder Fatality Investigation Program.
While insisting the state
is "not making judgment" on whether all the deaths were related to the
toxic air around ground zero, which was filled with asbestos, mercury,
lead and other contaminants, official Kitty Gelberg did say that she
believes there to be an overall undercount of rescuers and workers who
have died since 9/11.
In spite of the state’s
refusal to be drawn on whether there has been an elevation in deaths
due to 9/11, it was revealed back In 2006,
almost five years on from the disaster, that there has been a startling
increase in cases of a particular lung scarring disease, known as
sarcoidosis, among firefighters, which rose to five times the expected
rate in the two years after the attacks.
At the time the New York Times reported:
"The most worrisome to medical experts
are granulomatous pulmonary diseases, which show a particular type of
swirling marks left on the lungs by foreign matter like dust. Doctors
say the severity of the disease is often dictated by a patient’s
genetic makeup. The diseases include pulmonary fibrosis and
sarcoidosis, a sometimes fatal disorder that can be set off when
exposure to dust causes the body’s immune system to attack itself. "
Medical experts have stated
that it still may be at least another decade before the full effects of
the attacks are witnessed as diseases may take longer to develop in
some people than others. It is estimated that around 40,000 people were
involved in rescue work around the World Trade Center site and the
Fresh Kills landfill where debris was taken immediately following the
attacks.
The number effected may be significantly more than that however given that a recent study by Mount Sinai Medical Center revealed
that out of 70,000 participants, 85 percent are suffering some kind of
respiratory problem.
A previous study
in 2006 by the medical center also found that of of 9,442 workers, 70%
suffer breathing problems. This was also the figure gleened from a further study in 2007.
Though the center’s figures have been criticized and questioned by some,
they are the only real source to go on given that the city, state and
federal governments did not engage in any form of research into or
treatment of 9/11 related illnesses for some time after the attacks,
and still have not set about a truly committed program to do so.
Dr. Robin Herbert, Co-director of the
World Trade Center Medical Monitoring Program at Mount Sinai has
indicated that there may be three "waves" of illnesses experienced by
ground zero workers. The first wave refers to coughing and respiratory
problems, the second wave includes severe chronic lung diseases and the
third wave could be fatal cancers.
Dr. Michael Baden, chief forensic
pathologist for the New York State Police and the former chief medical
examiner of New York City, has reviewed several ground zero-related
autopsies, and has commented "Three thousand people may have died, but
100,000 others may have been exposed".
We have extensively reported
on the fact that the EPA knowingly gave misleading information to
residents and workers regarding the air quality in the aftermath of the
attacks and how a cover up, which leads to officials at the very top,
has ensued.
The heroes of 9/11 have
been shunned by a government that still refuses cover the costs of
healthcare for the vast majority of the stricken because to do so would
be an admission of culpability.
Last month it was reported
that some of the heroes who have since succumbed to dust-related
illnesses will be memorialized on the NYPD’s "Wall of Heroes" for
officers killed in the line of duty.
Sadly, more space will be
needed on that wall in the months and years to come as the officials
ultimately responsible for this continuing tragedy remain unpunished.