Manataka American Indian Council
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Home Sick?
By Lauren Liori Lea Zack
Is your home making you sick? You may have multiple chemical sensitivity. 15% of the US population has sensitivity to chemicals commonly found in household products. Many of those with MCS are thrown into poverty and homelessness, unable to find housing that does not make them sick.
From: Homesick, a Video About Living With Multiple Chemical Sensitivities:
Coal miners used to send canaries into the mines
ahead of them to check the level of lethal gases. If the canaries died, the
gasses had reached deadly levels. If they lived, it was safe to mine…
Today, millions of people are made sick from the toxicity of their everyday
environments. These “human canaries” suffer from a condition called
Multiple Chemical Sensitivities (MCS).
This condition overlaps with Fibromyalgia, Chronic Fatigue, Sick Building
and Gulf War Syndromes. There is no known cure for MCS.
15% of the US population has "an increased allergic sensitivity to chemicals
commonly found in household products.” (Estimate: The National Academy of
Sciences)
"The population that is allergic to
chemicals will grow to 60% by 2020.” (Business Week)
Homesick: Living with Multiple Chemical Sensitivities
is an hour long video documentary produced and written by Susan Abod that is
now in the process of completion. In Homesick, Susan goes on the road to
find out how other people around the country are coping with MCS and dealing
with the difficult problem of finding safe housing. She visits their homes
and witnesses their daily struggles. They come from all walks of life and
live in diverse dwellings that include tents, a house on stilts and a
teepee.
Watch the trailer of "Homesick" the video:
http://www.homesick-video.com/
What is MCS?
MCS is most easily described as a severe reaction
to household and commercial products and other chemicals commonly found in
the environment. These include pesticides, perfumes, paints, cleaning
products, gas stoves, new carpeting and building materials, mold, tobacco
smoke, vehicle exhaust, etc. The onset of MCS can often be traced to a
specific chemical exposure, but just as often, its cause is unknown.
People who live with MCS often suffer debilitating chronic fatigue along
with a multitude of other symptoms provoked by chemical exposures. These
symptoms include asthma, migraines, nausea, aching joints and muscles,
weakness, sleep disorders, memory loss, impaired balance, anaphylactic shock
and seizures. It is also very common to have problems with memory and
concentration, which is affectionately referred to as “brain fog” by those
who are all too familiar with it.
Finding a home that isn’t toxic
Perhaps the biggest issue for sufferers of MCS is creating a safe home
environment where chemical exposures are minimal. These environments must be
non-toxic and can require the implementation of expensive technology.
Typically, people with MCS are forced to move from one place to the next as
their homes are made unlivable, often by the activities of those around
them. All too often they find themselves temporarily homeless. Others are
forced to live in inaccessible, toxic spaces where their health
deteriorates. Tragically, the desperate, overwhelming nature of this illness
and the difficult process of locating safe housing has resulted in numerous
suicides.
Are we listening to today’s human canaries?
People suffering with MCS serve to make us aware of the dire consequences
living in a society where chemicals are used in virtually every area of our
lives. One of the foremost questions of the 21st century is how do we create
a healthy and sustainable environment? We can begin by taking heed of the
plight of these human canaries.
MCS Resources:
Chemical Injury Information Network:
http://ciin.org/ The Chemical Injury
Information Network (CIIN) is a support and advocacy organization dealing
with Multiple Chemical Sensitivities (MCS). It is run by the chemically
injured for the benefit of the chemically injured, and focuses primarily on
education, credible research into MCS, and the empowerment of the chemically
injured.
The Chemical Sensitivity Foundation raises public awareness
about Multiple Chemical Sensitivity:
http://www.chemicalsensitivityfoundation.org/index.html
Related Blogs:
"Pollution, Poverty, and MCS":
http://curezone.com/blogs/m.asp?f=309&i=367
"Reducing Toxins in Home"
http://curezone.com/blogs/m.asp?f=309&i=281
"Creating Healthy Buildings"
http://curezone.com/blogs/m.asp?f=309&i=26
"Healing Homes":
http://curezone.com/blogs/m.asp?f=309&i=31