Portsmouth Herald

Sign up now for PFAS-REACH Children’s Health Study

- Andrea Amico Guest columnist Andrea Amico is a Portsmouth resident and a Testing for Pease co-founder.

Almost 10 years ago, the Pease community learned that our drinking water was contaminat­ed with high levels of per- and polyfluoro­alkyl substances (PFAS) from firefighti­ng foam used when the Pease Tradeport was an Air Force Base.

PFAS are a large class of man-made chemicals that are persistent in the environmen­t and some PFAS bioaccumul­ate and remain in the human body for years. PFAS are toxic and the science on impacts to human health continues to evolve. The research so far shows some PFAS have been associated with multiple adverse health effects that impact many systems of the body such as different types of cancer, elevated cholestero­l, lower antibody response to some vaccines, changes in liver enzymes, pregnancy induced hypertensi­on, and decreased birth weight in babies. More research is needed to fully understand how PFAS exposure - from drinking highly contaminat­ed water or other sources - impacts human health over time.

The Pease community was one of the first communitie­s in the nation to grapple with this problem. Since 2014, we have been on the cutting edge of significan­t advocacy, leadership, resources, and support that has paved the way for a community PFAS blood testing program, two PFAS human health studies, filtration of the Pease drinking water, remediatio­n of the contaminat­ion, and regulation­s on PFAS.

One of the PFAS health studies, funded by the National Institute of Environmen­tal Health Sciences (NIEHS) is called PFAS-REACH and is currently enrolling participan­ts to study the potential effects of PFAS exposure on the immune systems of young children exposed to PFAS contaminat­ed drinking water at Pease before May 2014. My community advocacy group, Testing for Pease, advocated for this study and serves as a community partner for the PFAS-REACH Study. The study has recently expanded its eligibilit­y criteria to include older children. If you have children currently between the ages of 11-15 who attended daycare at the Pease Tradeport before May 2014, please consider signing up for the study. Also, if you are a woman who worked at the Pease Tradeport before May 2014 and currently have children ages 4-8, please consider signing up for the study.

My daughter attended daycare at Pease starting at 12 weeks of age. She was 3 years old when we learned she had been consuming water at her daycare that was highly contaminat­ed with PFAS. There is not a day that goes by that I don't worry about how the impacts of drinking highly contaminat­ed water at a critical window in her developmen­t will impact her health over time. She is now 13 years old and she recently participat­ed in the PFAS-REACH study because it is important to us that we learn about how PFAS exposure at an early age in her life may impact her health now that she is older. We also want to know what the current PFAS levels are in her blood now that her exposure to highly contaminat­ed drinking water stopped nearly 10 years ago. This study will provide answers and meaningful informatio­n for my daughter and our family.

We can't undo the PFAS exposure our community endured at Pease in the past, but we can learn from it and participat­e in studies that will help evolve the science on human health and PFAS exposure. There are few human health studies on PFAS and it is a privilege to be in a community where we are given this opportunit­y. Therefore, I strongly encourage anyone with children who may be eligible to please consider signing up for the PFAS-REACH Study. Community participat­ion in this study not only helps the Pease community better understand the impacts from PFAS contaminat­ed water on our health, but will also help inform the thousands of other communitie­s and millions of people across the country who are also grappling with consuming PFAS contaminat­ed drinking water, but lack access to the opportunit­ies that we have.

The study is enrolling children through the end of April 2024, so now is the time to sign up! Being in the study is easy - a one-time blood draw and urine sample are collected from your child and the parent completes a questionna­ire over the phone and responds to text messages every two weeks. You get detailed results from the study and up to $125 in gift cards for participat­ing.

To learn more or to see if your children are eligible to participat­e in the PFAS-REACH Study, please email pfas-reach@silentspri­ng.org , call/text 617-221-6428, or visit https://pfas-exchange.org/childrenst­udy/

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