Testimony of Dr. Alan Hirsch on
Physical and Psychological Impacts of Air Pollution from Pulp Mills
Dr. Hirsch said that at least two of the six appellants of the Powell
River pulp mill permit extension were suffering olfactory and immune
impairment, and that such problems were common near mills and other
sites:
"It's clear odour is more than a nuisance. It can cause health
effects, neurologic effects, immune effects, respiratory effects, chemosensory
effects ... and cardiovascular effects. These effects can be permanent
and ... for the majority there's no good way of treating them ... the
best treatment is prevention and elimination of exacerbation and the
best way to do it is to get rid of the bad odour, in this instance
as a result of the pulp mill."
The following is an excerpt from the transcript of the hearing of the
Environmental Appeal Board in Powell River, B.C., July 7, 1999, in the
matter of Fleischer, et al, and Assistant Regional Waste Manager and
Pacifica Papers Inc.
THE CHAIRPERSON: We'll just swear you in, Mr. Hirsch.
A. HIRSCH, Sworn:
THE RECORDER: Would you please state your full name for the record and
give the correct spelling?
THE WITNESS: Alan Richard Hirsch, A-l-a-n H-i-r-s-c-h.
THE CHAIRPERSON: Thank you.
MR. ANDREWS: Before we begin, I'll hand this to the Board. And the other
parties have received copies of Dr. Hirsch's curriculum vitae.
EXAMINATION IN CHIEF BY MR. ANDREWS:
Q. Dr. Hirsch, the first order of business is to review your qualifications
as an expert in the area of the effect of malodours on human health.
The parties and the board have copies of your curriculum vitae. Could
you please tell the Board what your background is?
A. Yes. I am a neurologist and psychiatrist and
I'm the Neurological Director of the Smell and Taste Treatment and
Research Foundation in Chicago. I went to medical school at the University
of Michigan in Ann Arbor and I completed a residency in neurology and
a residency in psychiatry and I'm boarded by the American Board of
Psychiatry and Neurology in neurology, psychiatry, addiction psychiatry,
geriatric psychiatry and completed two residencies including Chief
Residency in Neurology at St. Luke's Medical Centre in Chicago.
Q. May I interrupt for a moment. There may be some difficulty hearing
at the back, so if you could keep your voice up.
A. Oh, I'm sorry.
THE CHAIRPERSON: That microphone is just to pick it up. You have to
speak louder.
A. Okay. I'm sorry. I have reviewed -- I have
been asked to review several articles in the field. I have written
in the area of smell, taste and neurotoxicological facts, give or take
100 articles or so and have written a few books as well as done book
reviews in the area of neurotoxicological facts. I have been asked
to evaluate different sites for neurotoxicological facts of malodours
including -- and have had to testify in the past regarding them sometimes,
including a site outside of Bremerton -- outside of Seattle, Washington,
Bremerton; EPA Superfund site near New Orleans. I was asked by the
Illinois EPA and the Attorney General's office, State of Illinois to
evaluate a mulching site southeast of Chicago; evaluated a site, Rosco,
Illinois, where we looked at almost the entire town. We also looked
at a site outside the Alamo Dome in Texas. We've looked at other sites
in Texas that have been exposed to a variety of different low level,
relatively low level chemicals that had secondary odour affects as
well.
BY MR. ANDREWS: Q. You've had also the opportunity to consult with some
individuals here in Powell River?
A. Yes, I have. I've consulted with six of the
individuals who are involved here and talked with them about the potential
effects of the odour/toxins that they were exposed to.
MR. ANDREWS: Thank you. Madam Chair, at this point I would rest my questions
on the witness's expertise.
THE CHAIRPERSON: I took your opening remarks that you want him qualified
as an expert on the effect of malodours on human health; is that correct?
MR. ANDREWS: That is correct.
THE CHAIRPERSON: Okay. Is there any objections? Mr. Cassidy?
MR. CASSIDY: I have some questions.
THE CHAIRPERSON: Yes.
MR. CASSIDY: That was the effect of malodours on human health?
THE CHAIRPERSON: Yes. This is dealing with his qualifications issue.
MR. J. KEAYS: I appreciate but the final sentence was, as I recall --
THE CHAIRPERSON: Oh, sorry, the effect of malodours on human health
is the area of expertise he is being qualified for.
MR. J. KEAYS: But he mentioned the toxicological components of the air
as well as odour. You said odour slash --
A. Yes. It becomes
a semantic issue because what happens is when the level -- when the
levels become very low we talk about the odour effects; when it becomes
much higher we talk about the toxic effects but for many of the chemicals
they approach each other and so that --
MR. J. KEAYS: It's a continuum?
A. Yes.
MR. J. KEAYS: Thank you.
THE CHAIRPERSON: Okay. I was just taking your words.
BY MR. ANDREWS: Q. Well, can I ask, what term do you use?
A. It depends on the realm. I mean, if you want
to talk about the odour effects, that's fine, with the realization
that different ones, we know the odour threshold for many of the different
chemicals so we know what the threshold levels are. So if you want
to talk about -- in general, we could talk about the odour effects,
specially when we -- at the site that we're looking at, it's a mixture
and we really don't know the exact levels. All we know is they were
smelling bad-rotten-egg-odour so we say, well, gee, it sounds very
much like hydrogen sulphide at levels of a few parts per billion for
instance. But it depends on what the exact odour is.
Q. So when you use the term malodour, you're referring to the effect
of a variety of chemicals?
A. That's right. That's correct.
THE CHAIRPERSON: Okay. I think we take that gloss on your definition.
Mr. Cassidy?
CROSS-EXAMINATION BY MR. CASSIDY:
Q. Dr. Hirsch, when I heard you were going to become a witness here
I went looking on the internet and I found your web page and I was a
little surprised when I saw the first page of your web page which reveals
that in fact you were the author of Dr. Hirsch's Guide to Scentsational
Weight Loss and Dr. Hirsch's Guide to Scentsational Sex. By that, it
appears to me, Dr. Hirsch, your real expertise is in respect of these
areas and that is your principal expertise is in respect of odour and
weight loss and odour and sexual performance; do you agree with me?
A. Well, I would suggest to you that that is --
those are two areas that we've done research in but that we've done
research in a whole host of other areas as well, whereas we've written,
I think, about six articles about the effects of odours and sexual
arousal and about four articles on odours and the effects on weight
loss. I've written well over 20 articles on effects of malodour.
Q. Well, if these are not the significant parts of your research then
why are they on the front page of your web page?
A. Well, those are things that lay-people have
much interest in and those are also books that I have written that
are available to the lay-public.
Q. So you would not consider these to be serious pieces of academic
research then?
A. Oh, no. I would suggest that they are serious.
Our studies on how odours can impact on weight loss involved a study
of 3,193 people over six months where we found that different odours,
for instance banana, green apple and peppermint impacted upon the appetite
and weight. Our study looking at how odours can impact upon sexual
arousal came upon some -- our treatment of patients who have smell
and taste disorders, we have found when people lose their sense of
smell about 17 per cent develop sexual dysfunction so we began to explore
how odours can impact upon sexual arousal. We initially looked at "normals",
both men and women, and then we began to look at men who had vasculogenic
impotence from diabetes as well as women with sexual arousal disorders.
So those are very serious.
Q. And are you the author of any peer reviewed articles in the topic
of odour emissions from kraft mills or pulp and paper mills?
A. Well, the -- from kraft mills, no. I think
we did refer to pulp mills in that one article, that review article
on Negative Health Effects of Malodours in the Environment, A Brief
Review from the Journal of Neurology, Orthopaedic Medicine and Surgery
(1998).
Q. And that was peer reviewed?
A. That's correct.
Q. Right. So that's it?
A. Of --
Q. In respect of pulp mills.
A. That deals directly with pulp mills, that's
correct.
Q. There's nothing else dealing with pulp mills?
A. Not specifically with pulp mills.
Q. Right. And nothing with regard to kraft mills?
A. Nothing with regard to kraft mills, that's
correct.
Q. And in fact, therefore, you have written more extensively in the
area of scentsational sex and scentsational weight loss than you have
in the area of pulp mills?
A. Well, I've written several articles. I've written
about four articles about weight loss, or so, and six articles about
sex, in that range, as well as one book on each of those, whereas there
is not a big demand from the lay-public for a book about kraft mills.
Q. Right. And so that's why in fact you have this website, because you're
trying to meet a public demand; is that what your reason is?
A. Well, it was to --
Q. You're marketing yourself; is that correct?
A. It was to facilitate the sale of books.
Q. That sounds to me like marketing; is that correct?
A. You can describe it as you wish.
Q. In fact on the website you're referred to as the Calory King, on
the Internet. Are you aware of that?
A. As the what?
Q. On the Internet you're described as the Calory King. Are you aware
of that?
A. No. What's the --
Q. Do you know --
MR. G. KEAYS: I object to all of this.
MRS. KEAYS: I object. This is personal assassination.
MR. G. KEAYS: This is personal assassination and we're not going to
stand for it.
BY MR. CASSIDY: Q. Do you know, Dr. King, what -- Dr. Hirsch, what chemicals
are produced in recovery boilers?
A. Well, the chemicals that -- in review of the
material that was provided for here, it was my understanding that the
chemicals that are in question are particularly hydrogen sulphide,
methylenecaptan, dimethody (phonetic) sulphide and dimethyl sulphide.
Questions also exist regarding sulphur dioxide and NOx and NO2 and
then there were a -- as I read over the material there appeared to
be a variety of trace metals that are -- had been reported to exist
including lead and manganese, arsenic, mercury and zinc.
Q. When was the last time you were in a pulp mill?
A. I've never -- last time I was in a pulp mill?
Q. Yes.
A. I was in a pulp mill about four years ago when
I was consulted by the pulp mill regarding odour effects and what to
do to minimize them.
Q. Any other times?
A. That is the last time I recall being in one.
MR. CASSIDY: Madam Chair, I have concerns about the expertise of this
witness with regard to the issues that are at stake in this hearing.
It is my submission, he is not qualified to give expert evidence with
regard to human health effects of pulp mills. He does not have a significant
part of his resume dealing with these issues at all. His evidence is
of a more general nature with regard to odours and it appears to be,
from his perspective, more important that he deal with issues like weight
loss and sexual performance and, as a result, I do not believe he comes
forward as a credible expert witness with regard to odours from pulp
mills. And, as a result, that is what's really at issue in this hearing
and specifically with kraft mills and in particular with regards TRS
or particulate and I just don't believe that he represents the expert
that can be of assistance to this Board and the issues before it and
therefore I object to him be qualified as an expert.
THE CHAIRPERSON: Mr. Andrews?
MR. ANDREWS: I guess my submissions are in short that there's no merit
to the objection. The witness is probably one of the most qualifiedd
experts in the world on the topic. The impact of odours on humans is
a topic that exists independently of the source of the odour. The chemicals
involved are ones that come from a wide variety of sources and the witness
has already indicated that he has experience in the health effects of
odours from a wide variety of sources including having consulting with
a pulp mill. There's no reason, in my submission, that this expert should
not be qualified -- this witness should not be qualified as an expert
on the topic.
THE CHAIRPERSON: Mr. Hirsch, I just have one question for you.
QUESTIONS BY THE CHAIRPERSON:
Q. On the chemicals that you've listed -- that you looked at in association
with this pulp mill, are those chemicals that you've evaluated in other
research or --
A. Oh, yes. Those are chemicals that we look at
for a variety of them including EPA.
Q. Right. And you mentioned you did consulting for a pulp mill.
A. That's correct.
Q. What did that involve?
A. That involved the -- going down to the site
which was in Ohio and talking with them about their odours, evaluating
the odours and trying to give them some ideas of ways that they can
minimize their odour effects. What happens with pulp mills -- in the
process of it I had to learn pretty much about pulp mills. One of the
difficulties is that around the sites of the pulp mill one sees a large
degree of odour which tends to cause permanent olfactory impairment
in people who live around the site and that's one of the big concerns,
at least in the States, is that because permanent olfactory impairment
can have marked impact upon an individual's lifestyle. And they asked
what can we do to help get rid of the odours, what can we do -- then
they asked us to give an idea of how much effect the olfactory impact
was having on people around the site.
THE CHAIRPERSON: Right. I think, clearly, Dr. Hirsch is being tendered
as an expert on the effect of malodours on human health with obviously
malodours including the effects of chemicals and I think certainly in
his extensive curriculum vitae has certainly a focus, if you like, on
environmental impacts and has indicated he has dealt with the chemicals
of concern in this site in other context. We accept that he has limited,
certainly, experience in the pulp and paper area but he is testifying
on the impact of these particular chemicals on human health. So we will
allow his testimony at this hearing.
MR. ANDREWS: Thank you.
EXAMINATION IN CHIEF BY MR. ANDREWS (Con't.):
Q. Dr. Hirsch, you have an article called the Negative Health Effects
of Malodours in the Environment that you were planning to use as something
of a --
THE CHAIRPERSON: Let me just mark his CV as Exhibit 15 and the material
provided by Mr. Cassidy -- do you want that marked?
MR. CASSIDY: Yes, please.
THE CHAIRPERSON: Exhibit 16 and the Negative Health Effects article
will be Exhibit 17.
--- EXHIBIT 15: Curriculum Vitae, Dr. A.R. Hirsch
--- EXHIBIT 16: Internet material, Dr. Hirsch
--- EXHIBIT 17: Paper, Negative Health Effects of Malodours in the Environment
MR. ANDREWS: Ready to proceed?
THE CHAIRPERSON: Yes, thank you.
BY MR. ANDREWS: Q. Could you begin by giving us a general background
to the factors that are relevant to the connection between odours and
the chemicals that cause them and human health?
A. Sure. You know, when we think about odours,
we just think of them as a nuisance, you know, if it smells bad you
go away from it. But odours can really have a much greater impact when
we think about it for several reasons. Number one, you have to understand
that each of us is different in our perception of odours. In a normal
-- well, in the world of vision, for instance, if you look at somebody
who has 20/20 vision and somebody else who has 20/200 vision we know
one is blind, the other has normal vision. In the world of smell those
both would be considered normal. One's olfactory ability is of such
great variation that a 10,000 variation in ability to smell would all
be considered within the realm of normality. Given that, some people
can detect odours at much lower concentrations than others.
On top of that, what happens is that some individuals
are predisposed to the health effects of odours to a far greater degree
than others. For instance we think of asthmatics. There are a number
of studies been done now suggesting that in asthmatics an odour can
induce, even a relatively insignificant odour, is of much greater risk
of inducing an asthma attack in somebody who has unstable asthma. In
somebody with more stable asthma a strong odour can induce the asthma
attack.
So given that there's different variations of
individuals in terms of how much an odour will affect them, let's talk
a little bit about some of the studies suggesting that odours -- malodours
can have negative health effects. And not all -- and I have to say
that many of them do not deal with pulp mills but keep in mind that
the concept of the malodour in and of itself can have negative effect
regardless of the source of the malodour.
In 1980 Miner described the results of exposure
to livestock waste and he described odours and the effects including
depression, headaches, insomnia, impaired appetite and difficulty with
breathing. Now, we, over the last almost 20 years, have studied a variety
of different sites and their effects, the effects of malodour. We looked
at outside the Gaylord Chemical plant which I think, outside of Bogalusa,
Louisiana. We looked at the effects of exposure to nitrogen tetroxide
as well as hydrogen sulphide. We looked at acute chlorine gas exposure
causing neurotoxicity in -- outside of Las Vegas. Neutra reported hazardous
-- reported effects of malodour on people who live around hazardous
waste sites. And Shusterman demonstrated that even levels that were
considered to be non-toxic there were effects of odours on physical
symptoms. So if we divide it for ease of understanding into basically
six different areas in terms of how odours can affect people's behaviour,
we think about respiratory effects which we talked about already in
terms of making people who have asthma much more unstable; chemosensory
effects; cardiovascular effects; immune effects; neurologic and psychological
effects or psychiatric effects.
Chemosensory effects I think are the ones that
I'd like to spend a little bit of time talking about because -- for
a few reasons. Number one, exposure -- the current exposure to malodour
induces olfactory loss period. It exists around pulp mills. It exists
around sites of chemical release, of continual chemical release or
industrial sites. We just completed a study looking at all the firemen
in the City of Chicago. We found a substantial number of them, also
from the current exposure, had some olfactory deficits. In a large
study done -- actually it was done with National Geographic where there
were over a million responders where they did scratch and sniff tests
-- what was found was in sites around pulp mills there was impaired
olfactory ability. All of these suggest that the impact has negative
affect on ability to smell.
When we've been studying people who left the site
where they lived near the pulp mill and then they moved to another
site away from the pulp mill odour, we found years after leaving the
pulp mill sites their olfactory impairment persisted, suggesting that
we were looking at chronic permanent olfactory deficits as a result
of exposure to pulp mill sites.
Now, you say, well, who cares if you can't smell?
You know, so you can't -- well, not being able to smell has a marked
-- can have a marked impact upon an individual. When you can't smell
you're going to have a much greater risk of being involved in food
poisoning. Since about 90 per cent of what we call taste is really
smell so you'll have much greater incident of being either hospitalized
for it or at least in the emergency room for food poisoning. You can't
-- when you can't smell you can't detect the ethyl capstan that's added
to natural gas to give it its gas-like smell so you'll more likely
be involved in gas explosions. When people lose their sense of smell
there's a much higher incidence of both -- of DSM3R, AXIS I and II
diagnoses, actually 96 per cent ends up being that criteria when we
studied it but those are -- there's much higher incidents of psychiatric
disorders, dysthymia, a form of chronic depression, internalized anxiety
disorder being the most common.
We also --
Q. Can I interrupt for a moment to ask you repeat the DSR --
A. Oh, DSM3R is the old diagnostic standard for
psychiatry. Now, it's come out to DSM4 but unfortunately we did all
our studies when it was still the DSM3R so we haven't reported on them
as such. But what that does is it categorizes psychiatric illness and
what we found is when people lose their sense of smell there's a much
higher incidence of depression and anxiety.
Also, when people lose their sense of smell there's
a much higher incidence of a whole host of social effects. When people
lose their sense of smell they develop a contrite reaction. They become
much more fearful of going out. They don't know if they themselves
smell so they avoid others. There's more familial disharmony when people
lose their sense of smell and part of it may have to do because they've
lost contact with others so not only do they have the inherent loss
of one of the senses, so they can't appreciate the holidays -- they
go to Christmas dinner and they feel like they're in a plastic bubble
because they have none of the smells associated with it. They lose
their ability to appreciate food or wine or flowers, but, even more
important, it has major health effects on people who lose their sense
of smell.
I bring this up because we're going -- we'll talk
about this more later, but one could estimate with a very high degree
of reliability that a substantial number of people who live around
the pulp site here have impaired olfactory ability, a substantial impaired
olfactory ability.
Malodours can also induce cardiovascular effects
and this is -- malodours effect -- can do this by causing an increase
in adrenocortical discharge, an adrenomedullary response which causes
an increase in blood pressure and the increase in blood pressure then
causes secondary cardiovascular effects.
A number of studies have suggested that increase
in cortical response, in cortisal response in response to -- like a
stress reactions occurs in response to malodour.
Q. Can I ask you, is that -- does chest pains describe that?
A. Well, chest -- you can have chest pains --
usually what happens is you have -- you think of your fighter-flight
response, how you get really nervous or anxious, sort of like testifying
in front of a room of semi-friendly people, so you have this sort of
adrenalin response and associated with this adrenalin response there's
an increase in constriction of the arteries which leads to -- if it
occurs over a chronic period of time ends up causing an increase in
blood pressure and predisposes to stroke and cardiac disease. Even
independent of increase in blood pressure, they're predisposed to stroke
and cardiac disease.
Another area is the immune and immune system,
there can be -- can be comprised -- it can be affected directly as
a result of the olfactory projections as a result of the malodour,
the olfactory projections to the area of the brain which then goes
to lymphoid tissue or it can be secondarily affected as a result of
malodour inducing depression and then that causes secondary immune
compromise.
This area becomes particularly interesting. When
I saw the output of the trace metals that were described here and I
saw zinc was one of them that is reported and there was whole flurry
of articles that just came out recently talking about why you shouldn't
use zinc. We used to use zinc treatment for olfactory loss and we used
to use zinc for a variety of different conditions and there was a whole
series of articles suggesting that zinc alone causes immunal compromise
in individuals. That's why they say don't give it to patients who have
AIDs because it will cause them much more immunal compromise. So my
concern is that when you combine levels of trace metals combined with
the odour you may be having even a further degree of immunal compromise
than otherwise occurs.
Now, neurologic effects can also occur as a result
of exposure to malodours. Chronic exposure to intermittent malodours
from a navy dump site induced cortical and subcortical dysfunction
which was manifested by people becoming encephalopathic or having trouble
thinking and having difficulties with limbic encephalopathy or difficulties
with the part of the brain that controls emotions. We did that outside
of Washington State.
There's also been a number of other studies suggesting
that malodours can affect it. There was one very interesting study
that looked at nitrogen dioxide and sulphur dioxide at levels below
the olfactory threshold and in that group they found that individuals
had impaired visual processing. They had difficulty with adaptation,
light adaption. It was like when you go into a movie theatre and you
can't -- everything seems black and it takes a few seconds for you
to be able to see it where there's much prolonged olfactory adaptation.
They also found that there was -- in response to those malodours there
was change in EEG as well as some impairment in reflexes which was
persistent in nature.
Psychological effects of odours have been recognized
for centuries. As a matter of fact, Freud recognized this and described
it in great detail.
There's evidence that's suggesting that people
who already may be somewhat psychologically compromised are more likely
to be susceptible to the effects of malodour which goes along with
what we know most predominantly in the neurologic and psychiatric literature,
which is that if you already have an area that's partially damaged
you have less reserve and hence it's more likely to become more affected
by the insult.
And it makes logical sense that odours could affect mood and behaviour because
the part of the brain that we think smells, or the olfactory lobe, is actually
part of the limbic lobe or the emotional brain. So anatomically they're connected
up. As a matter fact, MacLean, when he originally defined the limbic lobe included
the olfactory lobe to be part of it.
Now, there are a whole host of different mechanisms
whereby odours can actually pathophysiologically affect the limbic
lobe or affect emotions. One, it could do this by inducing a Pavlovian
condition response. It could -- so, for instance -- or through -- a
second is through olfactory evoked nostalgia and a third is by direct
action on the brain similar to a drug.
Let's talk about the last one because you can
actually show presentation of hydrogen sulphide and presentation of
malodours causing EEG change or brain wave changes in individuals when
they're exposed to it at the time.
Bad odours can tend to induce a variety of negative effects, both acutely and
in a more chronic nature. They can induce trigeminal nerve stimulation.
Now, let me backtrack for a second what we're
talking about. The olfactory nerve you smell from, the top of the nose.
The trigeminal nerve is the nerve that's the irritant. You know, when
you cry when you cut an onion, the reason you cry when you cut an onion
is because the trigeminal nerve is being stimulated. When the trigeminal
nerve is stimulated, as occurs around pulp mill sites, what happens
is it induces an adrenalin release or it's basically a painful response
and the painful response can induce a more angry state.
Q. Can I just interrupt to ask, first of all, how to spell trigeminal?
A. Oh, I'm sorry. T-r-i-g-e-m-i-n-a-l.
Q. And, for the record, you were pointing to your eyes, the corners
of your eyes when you were talking about that nerve?
A. Yes, that's correct.
What happens when people are exposed to bad odours,
well, I mean, this initially makes them in an angry state because the
trigeminal nerve is stimulated. And then a variety of different experiments
have been performed looking at what do people do when they're exposed
to a bad odour. I think one of the most interesting ones was where
college males were told by turning a knob to the right a colleague
would get an electric shock. Okay? And when they did this same experiment
when the college males were exposed to malodour then tended to turn
the knob much further to the right suggesting that they were being
more aggressive. All of this goes along with that malodours tend to
increase aggression. I mean, not that college males need to be induced
to be aggressive anyhow, but, you know -- so, other studies have suggested
that there's increased incidents of motor-vehicle accidents in the
presence of bad odours, suggesting that drivers are driving more aggressively.
Now, we studied a mulching site where there was
-- for the Attorney General's office where there was a bad odour that
would waft across the street where there was a school across the street
and on days when there was the bad odour there was an increase in behavioural
problems in the school kids. So all of these suggest that malodours
tend to increase levels of aggression.
When people were studied next to swine operations
there was -- subjects reported an increase in tension, fatigue, confusion,
depression, anger and a decrease in energy.
Also ambient pollutants cause people to become
more irritable. In sort of an interesting study in Germany where there
was -- in an urban area, moods of young adults would fluctuate according
to the daily ambient air quality. And this was particularly true amongst
those who were already emotionally unstable, so suggesting that there
may be a group that's more susceptible to malodours than others.
There have been a variety of other studies suggesting
that not only are emotions affected in people who are emotionally unstable
initially but even in those who have diseases, for instance, in one
study in Bavaria variations in feelings of wellbeing varied depending
upon the air quality in individuals -- in women who suffer from chronic
diabetes.
Q. Excuse me, can you repeat that? You went a little fast.
A. Oh, sure. I'm sorry. In a study in Bavaria
in women who had chronic diabetes, their feeling of wellbeing varied
depending upon the level of ambient air quality, suggesting that they
don't have to be emotionally unstable for it to be affecting. All they
have to be is in some way more susceptible than others and it could
be on a physical basis as well. Similar results were found in a study
in Israel as well, urban health effects.
There have been a variety of studies looking at
if odours can affect -- if malodours can affect psychiatric status
one would expect that it would affect utilization of psychiatric facilities
as well, which is what has been found as well. For instance there's
an increase in instances of 9-1-1 calls. There's increases instances
of violent behaviour as well as psychiatric admissions in the presence
of malodours. One relatively interesting study looked even at use of
drug overdoses and the presence of drug overdose -- sorry, in the presence
of malodour there's an increase in incidences of drug overdoses. So
all of these suggest that malodours impact in a negative way the psychiatric
health of the individual.
Now, even more than that, it affects not just
people who are already partially ill. It can affect normals as well.
There have been -- it was a very good study that looked at what happens
when -- what happens to long distance runners in the presence of malodours
and what happens is their time drops. They do worse in the presence
of malodours. So all of this suggested that the presence of malodours
can have a negative impact on the overall health and wellbeing of individuals
even if they don't have an underlying disease state. It can affect
the community at large. And so the prolonged exposure to malodours
can lead individuals to a feeling of helplessness, depression which
then they can either respond to through negative effects or just accept
it and have a negative overall health in the community and have a negative
impact upon the community.
So, that sort of in a nutshell give you an idea
of what some of the effects of malodours can have, both acutely as
well as chronically in terms of the overall health of the individuals
in the community.
We looked at six of the people who were involved
here. Not all six had effects of malodour. Some of them had other predisposing
factors so that they would be more susceptible to effects of malodour.
But of the six we found that two had respiratory effects of the exposure
to odour; two had chemosensory deficit or trouble with smelling as
a result; two had evidence that there been some immune logic effect
of the malodour; four had complaints of neurologic impairment as a
result of the odour and four had complaints consistent with psychological
effects of the odour.
And I had to say that six people does not a study
make. And I would suggest to you that six is not enough. I would like
to look at the whole community to see if it effects. I would suggest
to you that while only two people appeared to have chemosensory deficit
in this group, I would suggest to you that the actual effect is far
greater than that because we find that people lose their sense of smell
and if it's of a gradual nature they don't usually recognize it. They
don't complain about it. So that I would not be surprised if we saw
a far greater incidence of olfactory impairment in the population that
is around this site.
In addition to that, people -- we all tend to
deny things. We all tend to think, well, you know, where I am is safe.
It's the people next door that have difficulties. So people tend to
deny their deficits so if you actually examine people who live around
a site such as this you're much more likely to find deficits than they
would otherwise complain of.
Q. Would it surprise you for some individuals in the community to say
that although they have lived here for a long time they don't have any
difficulty with the smell, nor do they feel it's had any effect on them?
A. Oh, no. No, it wouldn't surprise me. But actually,
you bring up some very good points with that. Number one, what happens
is as you -- I think this may be what happened with one of the individuals
who we looked at -- is that when you're here -- first off, if you're
committed to the community you want to minimize the effects and you
want to minimize the effects on yourself. You know, you want to think,
oh, gee, I'm okay, and therefore you tend to minimize it. That's number
one. Number two is some people are more susceptible than others --
some are very resistant -- by and large because they start off at different
levels so they may not have a deficit to begin with or they may have
such super good ability that they lose a little bit and it doesn't
really bother them.
Another reason is that what happens is as you're
exposed to malodour recurrently, and we see this all the time, is that
you lose the -- in people working around pulp mill sites in particular
and other sites -- is you lose the ability to smell the malodour so
what happens is that you say, "The odour isn't that bad. You know,
I only notice it a few times a year." The reason being is because
your olfactory ability has become impaired to such a strong degree
you don't even recognize it but it's there. That doesn't mean it doesn't
cause any secondary effects because the olfactory threshold, the olfactory
ability allows you to detect when the chemical is present so you know
to move away from it.
When people lose their sense of smell, as I said,
they often don't recognize it, specially if it's gradual. I have to
say that in the group -- every area is different in terms of medical
care and medical intervention. In the cities, in non-rural areas, people
tend to seek medical intervention I think to a quicker degree than
in the rural areas just because of maybe the ease of obtaining a specialist's
care and one would anticipate that even individuals who say, "Oh,
there's no effect," if they were actually examined you might actually
see an effect.
Q. Can you comment on the difference, if any, in effect between chronic
exposures, long-term exposures at certain, say, medium or lower levels
versus exposure which is characteristic of peaks and then very little
or no exposure?
A. Sure. One of the difficulties we have, and
we have it here and we have it virtually at every exposure site that
we look at, is that you don't -- you only can estimate what their exposure
was, too. The reason being is because your monitors aren't always at
the sites where the exposure is and the monitors average it over an
hour, a day, whatever, so you don't know, so if you have one level
that's very, very high and you got it absent for the rest of the day
it'll average to be a really variable level, yet that high level could
be severe enough, even for a transient period of time, to cause marked
neurologic olfactory effects.
Q. So you're saying that -- I mean, is there a comparison? Is it appropriate
to say that it's the peaks that make the big difference or is it both?
A. Well, no, it's really both but the peaks --
peaks in and of themselves can have an effect and we see this and we
know that peaks occur because we know that individuals who are exposed
to trigeminal levels of some of these chemicals and we know -- let
me backtrack. Olfactory level is at a point when you can detect if
an odour is present and then you go the next step higher and it's olfactory
recognition level where you can actually recognize, oh, yeah, that
smells like ethylene capstan or that smells like hydrogen sulphide,
and then you go to another level up higher, usually like 100 times
higher -- it depends on your chemical -- where you actually have the
trigeminal threshold where the person cries when they're exposed to
the odour or it stings in their nose.
We know these individuals were exposed to relatively
high levels of different chemicals, of the group of the six I talked
to, at least for five of them -- maybe for all six. I have to look
back in my notes -- they had at times experienced trigeminal thresholds
which suggested they were at times exposed to relatively high levels
of the odourance.
Q. Can you explain again what the trigeminal threshold symptom would
be?
A. They would complain of not only the intense
smell but the burning of their eyes or a stinging in the nose. So those
are very good indicators that they're exposed to relatively high levels
at least transiently. And transient high levels in and of themselves
can have an effect so we see -- sometimes -- at one site we had no
record at all of any levels being elevated on the monitoring systems
yet we clearly showed deficits and we knew there was effects because
the entire community described trigeminal effects.
MR. ANDREWS: Thank you. Madam Chair, I don't know what the schedule
is. Shall we break at this point or?
THE CHAIRPERSON: Where are you in --
MR. ANDREWS: I have basically a small amount more.
THE CHAIRPERSON: No, I think we'll take the lunch break now and come
back at ten after one and then we'll continue with your questions.
--- PROCEEDINGS RECESSED AT 12:06 P.M.
--- PROCEEDINGS RESUMED AT 1:13 P.M.
THE CHAIRPERSON: Mr. Andrews?
MR. ANDREWS: Thank you, Madam Chair. First, to keep the paper work in
order, can I ask that this review article, Negative Health Effects of
Malodours, be entered as an exhibit?
THE CHAIRPERSON: That one already is. Exhibit 17.
MR. ANDREWS: Oh, all right. That happened while I was doing something
else.
THE CHAIRPERSON: I think we're up to date.
R.A. HIRSCH, Resumed:
EXAMINATION IN CHIEF BY MR. ANDREWS (Cont'd.):
Q. Dr. Hirsch, there was a question earlier about a moniker for you
to do something along the lines of the Calory King. I gather you didn't
understand what the word was and you now know what that was reference
to.
A. Yes. I suspect that's in reference to that
I work on odours and weight loss but I have to say that actually doesn't
bother me too much because I've been called much worse. The New York
Times called me Jacques Cousteau of the nose and Oprah called me the
Magellan of the Nasal Passages so within perspective Calory King is
okay.
Q. You said early on in your testimony that weight loss was a serious
issue that you've done work on in relation to odours. Can you tell the
panel what the implication is there?
A. Oh, sure. I tell you why that has some importance
for today, although when -- in treating patients who have lost their
sense of smell we find that they initially gain 10 or 20 pounds. Why
that's so important, if we're looking at a community that has as a
group impaired olfactory ability it would predispose them to becoming
more obese, or towards obesity so as part of the secondary complications
of having chemosensory loss, or loss of sense of smell, you see a much
higher incidence of obesity so that would predispose this community
to that health risk.
Q. And, likewise, the effect of odour on sexual function?
A. That's right. That also -- done some serious
work with it and a real important part about that is that we found
this connection between olfactory dysfunction, if you lose your sense
of smell one sees a much higher incidence of sexual disorders, sexual
dysfunction, impotence and sexual arousal disorders. Again, it would
suggest that as a community, if we're seeing this chemosensory dysfunction
in the group, you would also expect to see a higher incidence of sexual
dysfunction in the group as well. So all of this relates to what we're
talking about today. It is not a primary effect but it is a secondary
effect of the odours from the pulp mill.
Q. Do you have any comments on the effect or the relationship between
odours and tourism or people's movement, behaviours?
A. Oh, sure. And we've done -- again, it's not
health effects so much as the effects on the community as a whole.
We've done studies looking at how odours impact upon tourist's behaviour,
particularly we looked at a few different sites. We looked at Garry,
Indiana. We also looked in Las Vegas. And it's very clear that when
pleasant odours are present people will persist in those areas for
much longer than if an unpleasant odour is present. When there's an
unpleasant odour, people tend to avoid those areas. So, if anything,
having unpleasant smell around the area will negatively impact upon
tourists staying here very long. It may not effect them deciding to
come out here but once they're here and they smell the bad odour they're
not going to want to stay around for very long.
Q. Can you discuss the synergistic effects, the implications of odour
causing agents in combination with each other?
A. Sure. Usually when we talk about effects of
a neurotoxin we talk about low levels, TLVs, or various low levels
and what their effects are and they talk about -- usually we talk about
one agent at a time. This is the level of one agent that causes an
effect. This is the Level H2S
that causes an effect. This is the level of whatever. With malodours
these chemicals tend to have a synergistic effect so they can be at
much lower levels but when you combine them together, it's not just
additive but it's more than additive. It's hyper-additive. And literature
supports that malodours act in a hyper-additive way, in a synergistic
way to cause negative health effects.
Q. You mentioned also delayed effects. Can you explain what that is?
A. Sure. If you get shot in the arm, you're shot
in the arm. You know it right then. But what happens with malodour
effects, literature is very clear that what happens is you can have
an impact and the impact will -- you can be exposed and you may not
manifest the exposure for years after the time of the toxin or the
odour exposure. So that even though you were exposed today or this
month it may be two years till you show the major effects of it and
that's one of the relatively unique things about neurotoxicology and
odour effects as compared to some of the other areas of medicine. If
you have an infectious disease, well, it's true -- let me backtrack.
It's true amongst some infectious diseases as well. For instance, if
you have AIDs now you may not manifest the AIDs encephalopathy for
five years or six years so it's true amongst other areas of medicine
as well but it's very clear that delayed effects can occur.
Q. What is your view of the effect on public health of a delay of any
given amount of time in improvements to the air quality, whether it be
two months, six months, one year?
A. Yeah. It's not good medicine to do that. It's
very clear that malodour is having a negative health effect on this
group and most likely the community as a whole. If you delay it for
four years, for two years, for one year, for six months, it doesn't
make any logical sense. What you want to do is you want to stop the
exposure as soon as possible or minimize the exposure to the greatest
degree that you possibly can. Delaying it for six months or for four
years doesn't make sense. You just continue to expose people and cause
continued medical damage to them and harm to the individuals which,
to a large degree, appears to be irreversible in nature.
Q. You've had considerable experience with public health and environment
officials at least in the United States. Can you describe the way in
which they approach odour and health issues?
A. Sure. Depending upon the site, it's not too
different than this. I was called by the City of Boston to come and
testify for them regarding a plant that was going to be opened up and
I was called and I evaluated the area and we held a public hearing
and I discussed the potential health effects of malodour in the site
in terms of -- because there was so many people with asthma living
nearby, because there were so many people who were older in the community
living nearby and because of the density of the community it was very
clear that the malodour would cause a negative health impact on the
community. And so I testified -- I was called by the City of Boston
to testify. We did it for some Commission, I guess the City, some Commission
there and then they eliminated the -- the prevented the zoning from
the factory going up so it's very -- it's not unlike what happens here.
Now, sometimes I'm called in, like, by the EPA
to come and evaluate a site where there's a malodour coming out and
then I'll come and I'll evaluate the people who live around the site
or who work around the site. We'll talk with the people. Sometimes
we'll examine the people and then, depending upon what we find, we'll
present that. We'll either present it in court or a public hearing
like this and depending upon what happens -- in those situations they've
eliminated the odour. They closed down the site. So it depends on the
exact area but it's not too different than this where there's clear
potential risk to the community as a whole.
Q. Thank you. We've talked about a variety of different aspects of this.
How would you summarize your conclusion about the relationship between
odours and air pollution from the mill in Powell River itself and health
effects in the community?
A. Yeah, just bear with me. It's clear odour is
more than a nuisance. It can cause health effects, neurologic effects,
immune effects, respiratory effects, chemosensory effects. It can cause
-- and cardiovascular effects. These effects can be permanent and there's
no good way of treating them -- well, for the majority there's no good
way of treating them. I mean, you can help if there's a heart attack
and that sort of thing but there's no good way of -- the best treatment
is prevention and elimination of exacerbation and the best way to do
it is to get rid of the bad odour, in this instance as a result of
the pulp mill.
MR. ANDREWS: Thank you. Now, if I could raise one issue I neglected
to mention earlier, is that Dr. Hirsch has a flight out at 5:40 and I
don't anticipate we'll go anywhere near that long but I did want to mention
that that is an outside constraint on his availability. Thank you.
THE CHAIRPERSON: Mr. Keays, you're first up.
MR. J. KEAYS: I would like to ask my questions in the context of information
that I guess I enter now as an exhibit. Is that -- I mean, I want to
give Mr. Hirsch some information and ask him some questions about it
and I obviously can't give it just to him so I give it to everybody.
MR. CASSIDY: Excuse me, Mr. Keays, do you have one for the Union representatives
as well?
CROSS-EXAMINATION BY MR. J. KEAYS:
Q. The graph is pictures of particulate levels in Powell River. The
particulate levels at Level "B" are 50 on the scale and there
are no Level "A" standards that I'm aware of for ambient air.
But it's clear from the picture that there's occasional spikes in the
information. People are subjected at one time or another to, say, over
60 whereas on average they're subjected to 15, okay, roughly, parts per
million of particulates. Now, my question is, in evaluating the health
impacts of things like this, do you think there would be a greater effect
from the constant low exposure or the temporary periodic high exposures?
A. I don't know which would be greater. It's my
perception that limited high exposures are very -- the way in which
it's usually taught in medicine is intermittent high exposures are
bad but at this moment I can't answer your question. Clearly both are
not good.
Q. Okay. On the second one, I've got the papers were stapled backwards.
It's information on poly-aromatic hydrocarbons and there's a picture
circled on the right of the second to last page of a molecule that's
retene, but these pictures are of molecules that tend to be hydrophobic.
They don't like water. They tend to be stored in fat. So you were saying
that the effect of a -- an effect on people of bad odours was an increase
in weight. And my question is, would it then follow that molecules like
this that store in fact would tend to be stored
more because there was more fat?
A. Yes. If there's a greater lipid area there
would be more to be stored in so whether it be DDT or other compounds
that store in fat you expect that.
Q. My last question is, I was looking at some samples from a lake and
I came across balls of resin from trees. They were microscopic balls
of resin and I tried to separate them so I could get them analysed and
in trying to separate them I managed to get some in a Petri dish and
I made a mistake and put some alcohol in the dish so it evaporated. And
I started sneezing and I got a strong headache and I think that the molecule
that was common -- it smelled like a low tide, where in a log boom area
where you've got a lot of rotten wood -- and I smelled the low tide and
I noticed I couldn't stop sneezing and I had a strong headache and I
think that the molecule that I was smelling was this molecule retene.
Do you know anything about retene? It looks a bit like estrogen. It's
a --
A. Not -- well, very little about it.
Q. So I have reason to believe that retene is fairly common as a result
of this mill. Now, given that it induced this strong reaction in me,
my question is, is there a general relationship between induction of
asthma -- I assume these were kind of asthmatic responses. Is sneezing
and a headache -- why would I get a headache and start sneezing from
that molecule? Or if it isn't that molecule, what happened?
A. Those are very good questions and let me start
of by telling you, asthma -- when we talk about asthma we talk about
hyper reactivity of the airway, of the small areas of the airway, of
the bronchioles and the airway and so they are hyper reactive to all
sorts of different things, odours, very, very cold temperature for
instance. A single exposure to something usually does not induce an
asthma attack. It usually requires a few -- or it does not usually
-- it can induce an asthma attack but does not induce somebody to develop
asthma. Usually asthma requires recurrent exposures to something for
the development of the asthma. Then, once you have it, it's sensitive.
It's sensitized to all sorts of different things. When you -- it could
be that what made you sneeze -- you sneezed first or had the headache
first?
Q. I ignored both as long as possible so I don't know. I was trying
to do something and I -- I don't know.
A. There's a phenomenon where you sneeze and then
develop a headache because your head moves so quickly and then you
can get a trauma induced headache and actually people develop subdural
haematomas after they sneeze recurrently so that's one possibility.
The same way that snuff, if you go out -- you take snuff and you sniff
that and it makes you sneeze -- people have developed severe headaches
when they recurrently sneeze from that. So my suspicion is that the
headaches were secondary to the sneezing and there was something here,
whether there be retene or something else, that induced you to develop
this irritant. In fact, the sneeze is really a mild form of irritation
like the trigeminal nerve being stimulated.
Q. But if you stimulate the trigeminal nerve do you sneeze?
A. You can sneeze. It's a very interesting gradient
because when you do it at a very small level you get sneezing. If you
get to the high level you get a burning.
MR. J. KEAYS: Okay. I've very much enjoyed your participation. Thank
you. And, in as much as the answers were responsive to this, shall I
ask that this be number --
THE CHAIRPERSON: Yes, 18.
MR. J. KEAYS: 18?
THE CHAIRPERSON: And that will be -- call it material filed by John
Keays.
--- EXHIBIT 18: Material filed by John Keays
MR. J. KEAYS: I have hundreds of questions but we're out of time so
I'm going to shorten them. I really did enjoy listening to you.
A. Thank you. I'm sorry I couldn't answer your
question in more detail.
MR. J. KEAYS: Unanswered questions may be the best ones.
THE CHAIRPERSON: Okay. Mr. Grant Keays?
MR. G. KEAYS: I have no questions. I would like to say something to
though, which is that your testimony here is the first time I forgot
I was at a hearing. Thanks.
THE CHAIRPERSON: Sally Keays?
MS. KEAYS: Yeah, I have a few questions.
CROSS-EXAMINATION BY MS. KEAYS:
Q. I take it that you have -- that you're an expert in two fields, both
the field of odour and the field of neurotoxicity?
A. Well, they tend to come together because --
but, yes, I would say that that's the case.
Q. How many experts are there in these fields in America today anyway?
A. Well, in the world of odours and their effects,
there's very few. We're very, very frequently called to comment on
things all over the world. We're called by lay-public to talk about
odours, malodours. Oprah we talked about effects of malodours and we
talked -- we've been called on Mindy O'Leary and all the different,
you know, 20/20, 48 hours and Dateline and all the different TV shows
when we have to talk about malodours, they'll ask us to come in and
talk. And also we see people with malodour problems from all over the
world. Even though we're in Chicago, about half of the patients we
see come from out of Illinois. A quarter of the patients we see come
from other countries. You know, we see people from Asia and Europe
all over, come in with different malodour difficulties, so it's a very
rare thing. Mayo Clinic sends their patients that have malodour problems
to see us or the people out in California, Kaiser, fly their people
out to see us so it's very, very rare.
Q. But do you have like -- as a group, have you peer reviewed publications,
et cetera? Do you all share the same knowledge, the same ideas?
A. Well, no. You know, I'm one of the reviewers
from some of the medical journals that reviews articles. There are
many different -- everyone views things from a different aspect. As
a neurologist and psychiatrist and somebody who works in smell, I'm
probably -- probably the only one in North America that does specifically
that. But there are other people who are just neurologists or other
people who just work in smell or just work in toxicology.
Q. And are these views apt to be opposing to yours or is there a generalized
view that there's neurotoxicity happening because of TRS and H2S
and --
A. Oh, yeah. Oh, there's general consensus in
that regard. Pretty much everybody in the field has -- most of the
people in the field have the same sort of approach. You have some outlyers,
people who say, oh, we should be going higher with -- for instance,
with lead. Leads a good example. Here we have lead that's coming out
from -- that's found in the site. Almost everybody in the world of
lead suggests that you should be having either tolerance for any level
of lead or it should be very, very, very low, much lower than what
its currently allowable standard is. You have a very few people who
are outlyers who say lead is really not a danger until you get to very
high levels but almost -- and they are the ones who usually work with
the industry so as a general rule -- it's sort of like -- it's very
similar to, I think, what we see in tobacco smoke. I mean, almost everybody
will say that tobacco causes cancer but you still have a few people
who will say there's no connection.
Q. Thank you. Now, my understanding is that some of the chemicals bypass
the blood brain barrier; they go straight up the nose into the brain.
Is this correct?
A. Well, yes. We didn't get into the pathophysiology
of how the odours have an effect. But odours can actually -- there's
four areas in the brain where there's no blood brain barrier. The brain
is like this size inside your head and it's surrounded by a blood brain
barrier and what happens is there's four areas of the brain where there's
no blood brain barrier, where things can just go straight from the
bloodstream or from the external surface into the brain. One of them
is the -- up through the nose. As a matter of fact one of the hypotheses
for why we see this increasing incidence of dementia in the elderly
is that aluminocylicates are progressing through the olfactory nerve
up into the brain and then causing secondary spread there and secondary
destruction there. So that's one of the mechanisms whereby heavy metals,
for instance, cadmium, which was again listed from the site, is one
that's been known to traverse the nose and go into the brain through
that mechanism.
Q. Directly to the brain? If you breathe cadmium in through your nose
it can go directly to and adhere, I would assume, parts of your brain?
A. Cause destructions of cells. As a matter of
fact with -- I think the study that was done, in hamsters where they
infused, but that's correct. And there's a variety of different toxins
that will do that. That's one of the hypotheses why toxins can cause
olfactory loss very early on in the process.
Q. Would this be causal in Parkinson's Disease?
A. Parkinson's Disease is a very much more difficult
question to answer. Let me tell you why. The story of Parkinson's Disease
is -- there is some environmental evidence suggesting that exposure
to pesticides and other industrial toxins and solvents may be associated
with the development of Parkinson's Disease. At this moment there's
no evidence that I know of where odours or levels of chemicals that
produce odours are enough to induce Parkinson's Disease in individuals.
The best model for Parkinson's Disease is MPTP
where it's injected into an individual and they develop Parkinson's
Disease. But the latest demographic data does suggest that there seems
to be some sort of exposure component in a large group of Parkinson's
patients. There's also a sub-group that appears to be primarily genetically
mediated, in which case the environments have very little impact.
Q. Are there any tests -- now, I get Chemical Injury Information Network
newsletter and they say that there are some relatively simple tests that
can define chemical injury. I know that the National Research Council
has seven parameters that can be used in diagnosing chemical injury and
if you have four out of these seven -- they are chronic sinus, nasal,
throat, pulmonary damage, peripheral nerve damage, CNS damage, certain
antibodies, elevated lymphocyte profile and the presence of immune disease
panel. This is from the veterans that came back from the -- Desert Storm
veterans that came back with all chemical sensitivities. And I have one
other paper that says that the one thing that chronic fatigue, multiple
chemical sensitivity, fibromyalgia, some of those malaise-type sickness
have in common are multi porphyries --
A. Porphyries, yes.
Q. Porphyries, and that it's quite different than the established normal
porphyria that has heretofore been the cause, relatively rare. Is there
any simple test that we as a community could ask -- I sit on the Health
Council and I think that they would be very interested in getting this
information to the doctors in our community if we had some direction
from the EAB.
A. That's a great question. Let me comment about
them in twofold. Let me first comment about an important distinction
I want to make here just for the audience and for everybody to understand.
Multi chemical sensitivity are the people who are sensitive to ultra
low quantities or chemicals where a smell of perfume, a small amount
of perfume might cause somebody to be horribly ill or a small amount
of some toxic chemical might cause a person to be horribly ill, whereas
in the rest of the individuals in the population are not affected.
Leaving that aside, what we've been talking here
today is not about MCS patients only. We're talking about you and I.
We're talking about the general population that are not affected by
multi chemical sensitivity that are being impacted upon by levels of
odour or levels of the toxin. Okay, that's just as a starting point.
Multi chemical sensitivity is a very, very difficult
disease to diagnose and to treat and we've written pretty extensively
about it and I've lectured about it. One of the theories about it has
to be porphyria rings and that's -- I think it remains still a little
hypothetical for routine testing. If you wanted to do something for
the community to help see are people being exposed to these toxins,
what would I do? If I wanted to do something very cheap and easy that
a doctor could do in the office and could routinely do I would routinely
do olfactory testing in the office. And if they did it on every patient
that came through or even did it as a mass screening, I think that
way, it doesn't involve drawing blood. It's relatively easy for them
to do. And they by finding -- by looking at that you can then move
from there because olfactory deficits are seen in people who have multi
chemical sensitivity as well but it's also seen in people who have
exposure to pulp mill toxin.
Originally -- a little confusing, but originally the literature talked about
with multi chemical sensitivity they're supposed to be hyper-sensitive to smell
so we tested individuals with this diagnosis of MCS and what we found is that
they didn't have -- they weren't hyper-sensitive to smells. They actually had
hyposmia. What happens is instead of having a better ability to smell than
normal, people with MCS have a worse ability to smell but instead of smelling
all the notes in the chord they're just smelling two or three of them. Those
stand out --
MR. G. KEAYS: Hyposmia?
A. Yes. A reduced ability to smell. In the --
I'm sorry, the website that you referred to, we actually have a whole
bunch of -- which is in the record here, I think -- we have a whole
bunch of definitions. I think we define hyposmia and we go through
a whole bunch of different definitions of different aspects of smell
and taste loss. But hyposmia is the reduced ability to smell.
But that would be one way --
BY MS. KEAYS: Q. Is this a definitive test? What do they do? I thought
that olfactory, you went from 200 to one. How can you --
A. No. There's no -- one of the problems with
multi chemical sensitivity is that there's at this moment no definitive
test. It's really still a disease being defined by clinical -- by symptoms
and some clinical signs.
Q. No, I meant for the olfactory testing that you recommended for this
town. Is this a definitive test?
A. Oh, there's -- there a whole bunch of different
type of ones that can be done. Some of them, like the University of
Pennsylvania Smell Identification test is something that's been well
standardized and we've done it on over 10,000 people for instance and
it's probably been done in thousands more than that. So this is something
that a physician could easily do in the office. That's just one example.
Or something that could be done as part of the community. That way
you could use it to help screen individuals and then once you find
the smell loss you can go from there.
Q. And that simple. You just go in and they say smell this or?
A. Well, no, it's a 40 question scratch and sniff
so you scratch and say this smells most like. You know, these are four
choices -- it'll scratch and it'll say this smells most like gasoline,
banana, root beer, leather and then you'd have to choose and then be
able to grade it.
Q. Okay. So one of the -- another thing that I would like to ask is
does hydrogen sulphide anaesthetize the nose?
A. Well, that's a good question. Actually I wrote
an article that just appeared this last month, Long Term Effects on
the Olfactory System of Exposure to Hydrogen Sulphide, which appeared
in some -- can't tell the name of the journal here but it appeared
in the journal this last month. And the answer -- the answer to your
question is yes, it does -- hydrogen sulphide -- here's what happens.
You smell it at low levels. You can smell it. It smells, like we all
think of it, right? Rotten egg smell? And then as the level goes up
higher it develops a sweet smell. As it goes up higher you can't smell
it. Next thing you're knocked down. It's called knock down but really
you pass out.
If you are continually exposed to a low level
of hydrogen sulphide you lose your sense of smell -- first you adapt
to it so you may even lose your -- you may -- you won't -- if you're
continuously exposed to this low level where you're just detecting
the rotten egg smell, when it goes higher, next the sweet smell, the
next thing you'll do is you'll be knocked out. Chronic exposure to
low level of hydrogen sulphide or acute exposure to a very high level
for a very short period of time can wipe out permanently the olfactory
ability of an individual.
Q. All right.
A. So it is one of the -- it acts very much like
cyanide on the olfactory apparatus.
Q. Would that cause, like, near fainting episodes or is that -- you
can't say obviously?
A. Yeah. It would depend. Near fainting, so many
things can cause that. It's hard for me to give you an assessment on
it.
Q. Okay. Well, in one of the pieces of information that Mr. Cassidy
sent to us, he said that -- he used the term psychogenic for, I believe
it was in reference to something that had neurogenic inflammation of
the nasal passages. Are those two terms interchangeable? Are you crazy
if your nerves are inflamed from --
A. Well, you could -- let me -- it's a very --
maybe I can clarify.
THE CHAIRPERSON: Excuse me. Do you know -- what are you referring to
specifically?
MS. KEAYS: I don't have it with me.
THE CHAIRPERSON: Is it in the material that was filed with the --
MS. KEAYS: It was in the material that he gave us and -- I can let that
one go.
THE CHAIRPERSON: If you have it that's fine. We just need the reference
so we can --
MS. KEAYS: Where will we find it?
Q. Okay. Now, you said that in -- you described that near a pulp mill
that there is a clear -- that you examined people -- when you did your
pulp mill examination, that they were at a clear potential risk. Could
you -- for cardiovascular, respiratory, immune. Now, is that -- this
was just one pulp mill? Is that H2S everywhere
or is it --
A. Well, that's -- that is a good, very good question.
I mean, clearly H2S
is there. We see a lot of different things in pulp mills very similar
to what we see at your pulp mill. And the problem is each of them are
a little bit different. The other problem is that we have a lot of
things that they just sort of group together as VOCs or as total sulphur
compound. I mean, what you do is you have some big ones and you have
a lot of little ones and we're not altogether sure which one is causing
the effect. Because what you end up having is you have this big, for
better term, soup. It's all soup of different compounds that are causing
the impact and when we can identify a single one it's great. But usually
we can't. Usually it's a whole mixture and it could be that the mixture
is having the effect. The mixture is causing the bad odour and the
bad odour, we're seeing the secondary results of the bad odour.
Q. You have studied more than one pulp mill or you've read information
for more than one pulp mill.
A. Oh, yes.
Q. But you've just published on one pulp mill; is that --
A. Well, we wrote about one there and I've talked
about and --
Q. You've evaluated?
A. Oh, yes.
Q. Oh. You've evaluated a lot. Okay. My last -- can you become sensitized
-- you used the term sensitization a couple of times. Would you just
define that a little bit clearer for me?
A. Sure. There -- okay. There are different --
this is a difficult physiology concept but I'll try to sort of make
it brief. But there's a phenomena of adaptation, you know, where you
put on a cologne or perfume, you put it on and you smell it. Smells
fine to you, right? Twenty minutes later you notice you go in an elevator
and people come next to you and say, "Oh my goodness, so much
perfume or so much cologne." That's a phenomena of adaptation,
where after ten, twenty minutes you can't sense it any more and other
people notice it.
One form of what sensitization is called is when
you put -- when you have an odour, let's say, and you are able to detect
it because you're attuned to it and watching out for it, you're able
to detect it at a much lower level than you would have otherwise; that's
one form of sensitization.
Another form of sensitization is when you're able
to detect an odour of chemical because on a physiological basis your
receptor sites have now improved so now you may not be detecting any
better but because you've grown more receptor sites you're able to
detect the odour.
Another form of sensitization is where the same
level of odour that you have, or same level of toxin or whatever it
is that you're exposed to you have, you now develop symptoms from --
you otherwise would have developed symptoms from and then there's something
that happens with that that's called generalization where it expands
not just from -- the symptoms expand not just from the first odour
but from many, many different odours. So, for instance, sometimes we'll
see individual who develops severe headaches, migraine headaches, as
a result of exposure to a volatile compound, let's say tetrachloroethylene
or something, and that causes a migraine headache. But over time what
happens is they then begin to develop headaches in response not to
just that odour but to other similar odours and that generalization
effect is sometimes what we call sensitization.
There's another -- whole other concept which is
that one odour causes you to respond when it's presented at the same
time as the second odour to generalize the effect but I would sort
of leave it like that.
So, depending upon the framework within which
you're talking about it has different meanings, and I have to apologize,
because I sort of -- I was very loose in my phraseology but that's
the basic concepts.
MS. KEAYS: Thank you.
THE CHAIRPERSON: Mr. Robb? No, Mr. --
MR. CASSIDY: Usually I go ahead of them. Doesn't matter to me.
THE CHAIRPERSON: Okay.
MR. ROBB: I don't know, we've been switching back and forth.
THE CHAIRPERSON: No, no. He goes next.
MR. ROBB: I'll go whenever.
THE CHAIRPERSON: You go last.
MR. CASSIDY: All right. That's fine. I'm delighted to go last.
CROSS-EXAMINATION BY MR. ROBB:
Q. One of the first things you provided evidence on was the effects
of malodourous -- am I speaking loud enough? Okay. The effect of malodourous
compounds on local residents of Powell River and you cited a number of
effects that you observed. I just wondered if you can give us some information
how you came to those conclusions. Like, is it surveys or what data did
you rely upon?
A. Sure. I'm happy to. Again, I have to -- let
me start off by telling you that we looked at just six people here
who were involved and what I did with them is I talked with them and
was able to get a perspective in discussion with them, getting their
old history and their current complaints. In an ideal world I would
have liked to have done further examinations and different physiologic
tests supporting it and further delineating their diagnosis. But, given
what we had, this is the best that I could do in the time constraints.
Q. So you took their diagnosis, I'm sorry, or did you --
A. No, I took their histories and -- their histories
of their old -- their past medical histories and their histories of
their exposure and was able to delineate these individual functional
diagnosis.
Q. Okay. So they referred to you their symptoms and then you made conclusions
on what had occurred? I'm not --
A. They talked to me. I asked them questions about
what was going on with them, their past medical history, what currently
was going on with them, what was happening when they were exposed to
it, what the odours smelled like, the frequency of the odour exposure
and then I was able to ascertain that these were the diagnosis that
best fit into what they had.
Q. So, for example, the ones where people have realized a drop in their
ability to smell -- chemosensory deficit, is that what you call it?
A. That's correct.
Q. That was based not upon tests or anything like that; that was based
on verbal information?
A. We did a -- that was based on history but it
was based on history consistent with what you'd expect to see in an
individual who's lost their sense of smell. For instance, if you haven't
lost your sense of smell, most people don't realize that they can't
taste either. Okay? So people who come in saying, "Oh, I can't
smell," and they really can. They'll say, "Yeah, I can't
smell, I can't smell," and then I'll ask them about how food tastes
and they'll say, "Oh, food tastes fine," you know, no problem.
Well, we know that's probably not real.
In the two individuals who appeared to have chemosensory
loss as a result of the exposure, they complained, "Yeah, I can't
smell," and they were telling me about their smell. They both
said, oh, you know, and they can't -- and food, doesn't have any taste
any more. It's bland. It's flavourless. The sorts of things that you'd
expect to see for somebody who really has smell loss as opposed to
somebody who's just making it up.
Q. Okay. But it's not like a double-blind test or anything like that
that --
A. No. No. Those are all things that in an ideal
world one would do.
Q. Okay. And, similarly, your observation of other effects was based
on similar types of information communicated to you?
A. That's right.
Q. And your ability to ferret through various questions and come to
a conclusion based on their information they provided you; is that correct?
A. That's correct.
Q. All right. And the next question is, you talked about synergy occurs
between different compounds.
A. Yes.
Q. And do you ever get masking between different compounds?
A. Yes, you do. You do get masking and that's
a very interesting question. Let me tell you the masking story because
the whole question of masking came up when we were consulting by the
pulp mills to help them with masking of their odours.
For those of you who are not in the world of smell, the concept of masking
is this, that you take a bad smell and you add either a good smell and it eliminates
the bad smell or sometimes you add a bad smell, you add the second bad smell,
and the combination together is pleasant or at least it's not as unpleasant.
So the concept of masking is that you can take one odour and mix it with another
and inhibit the negative effects of it. And, yes, you can do that. You can
do that with -- you can try do that with malodours. We do it all the time.
The worst one, we were called by the City of Buffalo
Grove, Illinois. We were called because they had a pig farm across
the street from a bank -- across the street from -- yeah, from a bank
and they were complaining, the people in the bank were complaining
that, "My God, this is horrible. I can't stand the way this smells." The
workers didn't like the way it smelled. They said -- they called us
up. They said, "What can you do to get rid of this bad smell from
the pig farm?" Now, you know, I have to tell you that's not something
we learn about in medical school but I figured, well, let's give it
a try. What we suggested, we added chlorophyll to the pig chow and
it worked. It changed the way the pigs -- the smell that came from
that and eliminated the bad odour and they were able to do it. Now,
eventually they tore down the pig farm and put up a used car sales
lot and we still have problems but what can you do.
But masking does come about, yes.
Q. And chlorophyll added to pig chow will actually reduce the --
A. That's right.
Q. I deal with all other sectors, too. Agriculture as well.
A. That's right. That's correct. There are other
interesting problems, too. Sometimes in masking we have a problem --
some people call in a more serious light from nursing homes 'cause
they have the uriniferous smell sometimes that's very difficult for
-- not for the residents who often can't smell so much but for the
workers there and sometimes you can use an odour to temporarily mask
that.
Q. Okay. My next question is -- there's two, I guess, parts of it --
one is, I'm looking at the effect of other contaminants in the environment
and my personal experience here is, like, my hotel room, I walk into
it. I walk in from the outside. I don't like the smell inside my hotel
room, not having been there for a while and stuff like that, so I'm just
wondering, indoor air pollutants -- there's more and more concern about
those -- do they have the same kind of effects?
A. Well, you know --
Q. And I wanted to add in tobacco in there, tobacco smoke.
A. In the United States the current belief is
that -- at the current time in the US indoor air pollution may be of
a greater health risk overall than outdoor air pollution in the US
as a whole. Part of the reason has to do with the number of people
who stay indoors for the duration of time they stay indoors. I think
the last data was they're outside, actually outside outside like less
than two hours a day, something like that, and they're inside either
at work or at home all the rest of the time or inside their car. So
indoor air pollutants are a potential problem depending upon where
you are. Most of the -- most people will do things to try and eliminate
the malodours from the indoor environment.
Tobacco smoke is a very serious problem and the
one thing I can encourage everybody in the audience is -- while I can't
do anything to stop the mill, you can do something -- you yourself
can take control and stop smoking because smoking causes a whole host
of different neurotoxic effects, both in terms of neurologic and respiratory
systems and olfactory toxic effects and it would be a well worthwhile
thing to do is to quit smoking. I know it's very easy to say. Sometimes
it's hard to do. But with some of the newer medications, like, globutrin,
SR, it's much easier to do so I would encourage you to do that. But,
you're right, both indoor and secondary effects of passive smoking
cause marked impact.
Q. And I just wanted to make sure I understood what you felt was a good
action to take on behalf of the community doctors, would be to do some
testing of olfactory response and the type of testing, you said a scratch
and sniff, which sounds to me like a qualitative test as opposed to a
quantitative?
A. Well, no. That's actually a quantitative test
because you get numbers based on the 40 responses and you're able to
classify them as being --
Q. Oh, 'cause they're different concentrations they result in?
A. No. What it is, each one is a different odour
and since it's been used on so many people you're able to -- based
on the number correct you're able to identify whether they're anosmic,
no sense of smell, hyposmic, reduced sense of smell, normosmic, or
malingering and you're able to categorize people in those patterns.
That's something that I think would be well worthwhile to do, especially
where you're in an area where there's a high likelihood of there being
a problem.
Q. You also mentioned that people can have malodourous impacts from
chronic exposure to, for example, low levels of H2S
or an acute exposure?
A. That's correct.
Q. And I was wondering, I know no two people's noses are the same and
stuff, but, you know, I was just wondering if you're able to give us
some idea of what kinds of concentrations you're talking about where
these effects may occur, the chronic one? Are we talking about hundreds
of ppm? Are we talking about parts per billion?
A. Yeah. That's -- I have a -- I thought you were
going to ask that question and there were so many chemicals involved,
I can tell you from the literature -- I can provide the literature
if you want it. Unfortunately I only have one copy of each of the articles
I had sent here. John Amore, it's A-m-o-r-e, wrote two articles, and
he just recently died, but one was entitled Effects of Chemical Exposure
on Olfaction in Humans and the other one is entitled Odour as an Aid
to Chemical Safety, Odour Thresholds Compared with Threshold Limit
Values and Volatiles for 214 Industrial Chemicals in the Air in Water
Dilution. And in these articles he goes through what the literature
talks about for the lowest -- both lowest levels of toxics that have
effected the olfactory ability and he also goes through the literature
talking about the lowest levels of chemicals that are the olfactory
threshold and your trigeminal threshold for the different odours.
Q. Trigeminal, that's the one where you start to get some response like
tearing?
A. That's right. Actually there's another
trigeminal article, too. The Oregon Lung Association, and if you want
-- unfortunately I didn't bring that amongst the rest of the articles
but I'd be happy, if you call me in the office, I'd be happy to provide
you the reference for that one.
Q. Okay. So -- but for H2S, for example --
A. Okay. I can tell you the article -- well, as
a matter of fact -- well, I'll try and dig that our for you now. For
hydrogen sulphide, for acute exposure, for a second at 100 parts per
million has been shown to cause anosmia.
THE CHAIRPERSON: I'm sorry, could you just repeat that.
A. I'm sorry. For hydrogen sulphide at 100 parts
per million for a second it causes anosmia, a total loss of sense of
smell. For chronic exposure -- I'm just trying to go through the charts
here -- it may take me a little bit of time to go through the charts
but they talk about the chronic exposure as well. I know in our article
we talk about a level for chronic exposure as well and I don't recall
what that level was right now.
THE CHAIRPERSON: We'll give you a minute, if you'd like, to find it
'cause I think it would be useful to have that number.
A. Yeah. In --
THE CHAIRPERSON: Five. We can take a five minute break because we want
you to find the number so --
--- PROCEEDINGS RECESSED AT 2:08 P.M.
--- PROCEEDINGS RESUMED AT 2:20 P.M.
THE CHAIRPERSON: Okay. Quiet, please.
CROSS-EXAMINATION BY MR. ROBB (Cont'd.):
A. I don't have an answer for you because the
article of Amore was actually another one. The one I brought only dealt
with the acute exposures. The chronic one was an article by Amore in
the textbook Smell and Taste in Health and Disease edited by Getchell
and all and -- but I'd be happy -- I have that back in Chicago. I'd
be happy to send a copy of that chapter to you where he talks about
chronic facts of the exposures and that's where he has the numbers.
I only brought -- amongst all of these things I didn't bring that one.
I, also, in the -- but one thing I did find for
you while in the process is a reference, which I couldn't find the
reference for, for the article I wrote on effects of hydrogen sulphide
on olfaction, in the journal Occupational and Environmental Medicine,
Volume 56, 1999, so that was the article that I wrote on it. But, again,
for the level for long term effects of H2S
on olfactory impairment, I'd have to reference you back to that which
I left in the office and I'm sorry, I don't have a number for you.
It's clearly going to be under 100 parts per million.
Q. Hundred times less? A thousand times?
A. It would be speculative for me because I just
don't remember. Amongst all these different numbers I'm lucky to remember
my phone number.
MR. ANDREWS: Madam Chair, could I ask for a spelling of Getchell?
A. G-e-t-c-h-e-l-l. I'm sorry, it's G-e-t-c-h-e-l-l.
MR. ANDREWS: Thank you.
BY MR. ROBB: Q. Might as well get the name of the textbook again, too?
A. Smell and Taste in Health and Disease.
Q. Smell and Taste in Health --
A. ...in Health and Disease.
Q. Okay. You don't have anything that masks mushroom composting odour,
eh?
A. Mushroom compost? We've never actually looked
for that.
Q. That's fine. I actually didn't want to diverge too much. If you had
a quick one, fine.
My last question is, I'm just wondering whether in your opinion you
think it's appropriate to set different objective levels for the ambient
environment in different communities with different pulp mills or should
there be -- is this the kind of assessment that should be done for setting
an objective for a province or a country, some kind of objective standard
that should be met to deal with the types of concerns that you're --
A. You know, that's more of a public policy issue
than my expertise. I could tell you that --
Q. Well, the way I should rephrase it then is, is it likely -- are there
likely to be different needs between different communities? I guess one
aspect of that, I guess, you mentioned that people that are particularly
prone to psychological dysfunction might be exceptionally prone but,
other than that kind of thing, is --
A. Or asthmatics, let's say, if you had a lot
of asthmatics, people with chronic diabetes so, I mean -- you know,
I think that you have to be sensitive to the community -- unfortunately
what's happened in the States, this is what's been happening, is that
in areas, like in the suburbs, you have very high standards. They would
never allow anything like this to occur in the suburbs and what you
have is in the inner cities and in the rural areas where there's not
the same sort of influence, that's where all the sites end up being
placed. But I think you have to be sensitive to the community standards
for each one. I mean, theoretically personally I'd like to see a single
very reasonable standard to be nation wide but that's not very realistic.
Q. But, say a rural standard in one area of the province shouldn't be
different than a rural standard in another area because, I mean, the
people have the same kind of effects.
A. Well, you know, I think it depends -- a lot
of factors impact upon what happens in different areas. You know, they
have -- in Nevada they have a big nuclear waste dump site right near
an Indian reservation. I wouldn't really want that near me so you'd
have to sort of -- it has to be met from spot to spot. I think, in
an ideal world you'd have the same standards throughout the whole world
but it's rarely that --
Q. So people should be afforded with equal level of environmental protection
though?
A. That's what I -- I mean, again, this is not
my area of expertise. I'm not a public policy person but that's how
I would approach it.
Q. But people's needs are similar, I guess, although there's --
A. Yeah. That's right, except for certain groups
that tend to be more sensitive than others. But, you know, the problem
is throughout our population we have that. Just like with children,
because their blood brain barrier isn't as well developed, are more
sensitive to the neurotoxins so that they need greater protection than
anybody else.
Q. Presuming that there's children in all communities, I mean, the same
level of protection should be required for all communities?
A. Yeah. One would hope that they're protected
throughout, that's right.
MR. ROBB: Thanks. That's it for my questions.
CROSS-EXAMINATION BY MR. CASSIDY:
Q. Dr. Hirsch, I think you were talking about -- in response to the
questions about chronic you were unable to come up with a number, but
you referred back to your study on the long-term effects on the olfactory
system and exposure to hydrogen sulphide, and in there the workers were
exposed to --
A. 243 parts per million.
Q. 243 parts per million so that would be acute exposure then?
A. Well, the problem with -- let me tell you the
problem with that. They had long-term exposure. They were working with
-- these were in the Virgin Islands and in Texas I think. And they
were working in a construction site and working with hydrogen sulphide,
not infrequently they were exposed to this, what's called sour case
is what they call it. And so you had a long term of exposure, low level,
with occasionally bursts of high level and that's why I referred to
John Amore's article in Getchell's book that talks about chronic effects
at lower levels.
Q. So the 243 then to those workers was acute then?
A. That was -- that's right. That was --
Q. That's right?
A. I think we said like four hours at 243 parts
per million. But we know it can't have been four hours because they're
still alive.
Q. Yeah, I wasn't asking about duration. I was asking about whether
or not you considered that to be acute exposure.
A. No, I think -- yeah, I think, the way I wrote
is that they had both chronic and acute exposure there.
Q. So 243 is either chronic or acute?
A. No. The 243, that was -- the one, that four
hour period, that was acute 243 --
Q. Okay.
A. -- and we know it wasn't the whole four hours
because they're still here with us because it would have been lethal
for them.
Q. And in that study there's also a reference to some troy workers exposed
to amounts of 2873 parts per million. I guess that's really acute exposure;
isn't it?
A. Well, they also had -- that was in Texas and
--
Q. Yes, I know where it was but that was also -- that's pretty acute;
isn't it?
A. Well, they had it for a short term, that's
correct, and it's a relatively high level, yes.
Q. I think the word's acute, isn't it, Dr. Hirsch?
A. Acute means short term.
Q. Do you have a problem with calling that acute?
A. No. Acute means short term and the level you're
talking about is the extent of exposure.
Q. Right. So that's an acute exposure they'd suffered?
A. Yeah. You see, one of the problems is both
those groups had acute exposure, a short-term exposure, as well as
a long-term exposure.
Q. Right. And in that study you refer to there being confounding factors
that may prevent you from concluding that that was unrelated to exposure
to H2S, for example, several workers had ingested
alcohol at the time; is that right?
A. You'll have to let me just look at the paper
--
Q. Sure.
A. -- so I can correctly refer to it. Yes, some
of the -- I'll read from it.
Some of our construction worker patients had histories
of considerable toxic exposures, including use of alcohol, which we've
shown can induce olfactory deficits. It seems possible that our findings
of olfactory deficits are unrelated to exposure to H2S and that, instead,
are associated with confounding factors such as collateral toxin exposures.
Q. Can you tell me more about these confounding factors?
A. Sure.
Q. In fact, as I understand it, the loss of smell can be caused by things
other than TRS emissions; is that correct?
A. Oh, by all means. As a matter of fact, chronic
alcohol use can cause olfactory loss. Acute can cause transient loss.
We did a study for the court system in the State of Illinois where
we took workers for the State of Illinois and had them drink and got
them drunk and with State Troopers there standing watching and as they
got drunk -- and we measured their blood alcohol levels as they took
more and more drinks, and as they got drunk their olfactory ability
kept dropping as they drunk until one of the persons passed out before
she reached the legal level of intoxication in the State of Illinois,
but the other ones all reach the legal level of intoxication and had
impairment of olfactory abilities as they became intoxicated. When
they -- when they were -- when their levels went back down to normal
in the next day, when they were sobered up, their olfactory ability
was back to normal suggesting that you can cause transient olfactory
impairment when you drink.
Q. So in fact one of the difficulties in your field, I guess, one of
the sources of ongoing research in your field is trying to sort out what
is the cause of olfactory loss, whether or not it's things such as exposure
to H2S or exposure to other chemicals or exposure
to other forms of lifestyle or whatever; is that fair to say? That's
a subject of ongoing research?
A. One of the things that we like to do, and that's
why I said six people does not a study make, 'cause one of the things
we like to do is we like to see if -- make sure that there's no potential
confounding things occurring that may be affecting them all. You know,
all of us do different things. For instance, the one thing I encourage
everybody to do not only is not smoke but to always wear your seat
belt because the number one cause of smell loss that we see is from
motor-vehicle accidents, from head trauma, so if you wear your seat
belt you substantially reduce your risk of that happening so I always
encourage everyone to wear their seat belt. But you're exactly right:
there are many potential confounders that occur and that's why one
of the things you want to do is you want to look at many people around
the same site because it's much less likely that many people have the
same confounder.
Q. In fact that probably makes it somewhat difficult to extrapolate
from six people to a whole community; is that fair to say?
A. If it was just the six people here that we
saw today and I didn't have any prior knowledge of things I would be
-- it would be very hard. As it is, it's difficult. But we know that
around pulp sites olfactory impairment occurs. And so that is -- we
already know that happens and with these six, even looking at these
six, we're suggesting that two of them appear to have -- at least two
appear to have olfactory impairment but I would suspect a lot more
in the community do as well. I would strongly suspect that.
Q. Well, I'm interested in that because I looked at your paper, which
is Exhibit 17, and you say -- just said that we know pulp mills cause
this and yet when I look at your paper, Exhibit 17, on Negative Health
Effects of Malodours in the Environment, A Brief Review, the only reference
I could find to pulp mills was in the reference under "Negative
Health Effects" on the first page of the paper and the reference
to chemosensory loss, chronic exposure to malodours from pulp mills can
cause permanent olfactory loss. And you're referred to your work around
pulp mills that I guess you've done and yet when I look at the cite you've
got there there is no reference to any of your work. There's only a reference
to Maruniak, a reference by Maruniak. Why have you not referenced in
your own work your apparently extensive studies on pulp mills?
A. Well --
Q. As part of that statement.
A. Oh, sure. Well, one, I think Maruniak's work
was good in terms of that; two, we haven't written up specifically
our work with the pulp mills.
Q. So none of that's peer reviewed then?
A. Well, other than this one article that we have
here.
Q. Right. But other than that none of your work has been peer reviewed?
A. Oh, no. I mean, that's not the case. Many of
our articles have been peer reviewed.
Q. In respect of pulp mills?
A. Oh, in respect of pulp mills, no. This is the
only article that I specifically referred to pulp mills in I believe.
Q. All right. And so I went back and looked and Mr. Maruniak's document,
because it appears to be the only thing you're relying on in that paper.
Did everybody get one? Can't forget the Union. And I looked at it and
you cited page 463 of that paper and I looked at page 463 of this paper
and all I can see is the last paragraph as being reference to pulp mills
and it starts, and I'm going to read it:
Data from the aforementioned studies suggests that people living in
conditions in which there is a single continuous dominant odour may run
the risk of changes in their olfactory bulbs. It is not known what impact
such hypothetical changes in the bulbs may have on their olfactory ability
or that such changes will be reversible or if other consequences of such
stimulation might arise. Furthermore there are no data to be able to
address the question of whether odour stimulation has to be continuous
in order to produce such effects. It is possible, for example, that living
and working in some of environments, such as around a pulp mill, may
produce chronic exposure to a single dominant odour sufficient to cause
olfactory bulb changes.
Now, my understanding of science is that when people use words like "may", "it
is possible" and "suggest", it's no where the definitiveness
with which you've shown it today and said that TRS causes the emissions
consequences that you were talking about. Do you agree with me or not?
A. I would suggest to you that I don't think that
my statements were definitive this is definitely this or that, but
that there was a high degree of probability that that was the case.
Q. I'm asking you what evidence do you have to rely on it. You've produced
no clinical studies. There's no control study you've produced. The only
study that you have done is actually a literature review, and in fact
the only cite you've got is from a document that uses words like "may" and "suggest" and
you translate that into high probability?
A. Let me backtrack.
Q. I would be interested in you backtracking, Dr. Hirsch.
A. Let me try and answer your question to the
best of my ability. Number one, diagnosis is based on one's experience,
of which we have substantial in the area; it's based on history which
we obtained; the physical examination which we weren't able to obtain;
as well as on site tests which we were not able to obtain; and also
is further confirmed based on material that's available in the literature.
This is one of the documents that's available in the literature. Other
literature that talks about the effects of pulp mill effects on malodour
-- or, I'm sorry -- effects of pulp mill malodour on olfactory ability
comes from material that was performed when the National Geographic
survey was conducted where, again, as I mentioned, there were over
a million respondents and as a result what one is able to do is to
look at different areas of the country, as well as in Canada and the
world, and correlate where there is sites of pulp mills and where there's
olfactory impairment and that's what's been found.
Q. Did you do a physical examination of any of these Appellants?
A. No, I did not.
Q. When did you arrive in Powell River?
A. This morning.
Q. Had you ever been here before?
A. No, I had not.
Q. So you've had at most two hours to meet the Appellants; is that correct?
A. No. I spoke with one, Janet Morrison, a few
weeks ago, 6/5/99, and then the others I spent time with this morning,
a few hours this morning.
Q. Right. And that's the extent of it?
A. That is correct.
Q. Did you ask to see their medical histories provided by their physicians?
A. I asked if that was available to be looked
at.
Q. And was it?
A. It was not available.
Q. They never produced anything to you, did they?
A. That is correct.
Q. That would have been helpful presumably because you asked for it,
wasn't it?
A. Yes, I would have liked to have had that. Any
information that one can get is betterment.
Q. Yet, notwithstanding that, you were prepared to come here and make
that strong probability and strong prediction that you can extrapolate
to these six to the community at large?
A. No. I first wanted to talk with them to be
able to assess that so I wasn't ready to come and state without talking
to them first. Again, my suggestion to you is that it's well worthwhile
for us to look at the community as a whole. Unfortunately it's not
an ideal world. Based on the complaints, hearing about the odour and
complaints, reading all the material that I was provided describing
the odour complaints and where the odours were reported, the different
times the odour was reported and the frequency with which the odours
were reported, plus the toxins that were reported to be released, all
was consistent with this concept that we were dealing with malodour
induced variety of different deficits including neurologic, chemosensory,
immune and respiratory.
MR. CASSIDY: I have no further questions.
MR. J. KEAYS: Excuse me. The language of science is cautious. This is
badgering. You say in science "possible carcinogen". You don't
say "absolute". To accuse somebody like this of claiming to
be certain when they didn't say they were certain because of words like "may
be" -- "may be" is the language of science. People who
are doing science don't say "absolutes" and this is badgering.
I object.
THE CHAIRPERSON: We have his testimony on the record and we can review
that and we will. So, okay, Mr. Andrews, do you have any re-direct?
MR. ANDREWS: I don't.
THE CHAIRPERSON: Okay. Questions from the panel?
QUESTIONS BY DR. CAMERON:
Q. Has it been your experience, Dr. Hirsch, that you found smokers to
be more sensitive to odours than other people?
A. No. Well, it's a very good question. It's very clear that there's
a direct correlation between duration of smoking and olfactory ability.
The more you smoke for the longer period of time the worse your ability
to smell. After you stop smoking, after a period of time your sense of
smell begins to come back but you're asking -- there's another issue
that you bring up that I think is a very good one and that is that former
smokers describe when they smell cigarette smoke they get the urge to
smoke. They feel sensitive to it and actually their ability to smell
is no better but their just more consciously aware of it and the addiction
feels like it's coming out. So, you're right. Cigarette smoking clearly
impairs an ability to smell and I encourage everybody to quit smoking.
One of the difficulties is that we always have, if there's impaired ability
to smell because of cigarette smoke it's already down, so it takes a
little more for it to even become that much worse because they've already
used up their reserve. Assuming that all of us have a certain level of
reserve of ability to smell and then cigarette smoking drops it down,
it doesn't take very much more for it to even drop down further.
Q. I guess I should have phrased my question a little more clearly I
think. What I really meant wasn't their ability to smell. It was whether
or not they were more sensitive to harm from odours.
A. Yes.
Q. That really was my question.
A. The answer is yes. They are -- the belief is
that because they already have smell loss, it may be an artifact. And
let me tell you why I say that, is we have norms for ability to smell.
Let's say from here to here it's bad -- here to here it's bad and from
here to here it's considered normal, so you can -- let's say you have
a toxin but you drop from here to here, no big deal. But let's say
you have cigarette smoke and it's already dropped you to here, the
toxin doesn't make it much -- it doesn't take much to drop you even
to the abnormal level. And you, as an individual -- I wrote a paper
about this called "Subjective Hyposmia" where people will
come in and complain that they can't smell and we test them and their
normal but they're just the low end of normal and our hypothesis is
that our tests aren't so -- there's such a wide variation of normal
we're inadvertently calling people who probably are deficit normal.
So, but, yes, it makes them more sensitive, just like -- there's a
theory of the weak link in the chain in neurology where if there's
any damage in a certain area the additional damage -- if you have any
additional damage that's what will manifest.
Q. There was some discussion about this scratch and sniff test.
A. Yes.
Q. And I got the impression that you were saying that this was a quantitative
type of test and I want to question that because it seemed -- when I
think about something quantitative I speak of being able to identify
a concentration, a number.
A. Okay. Sure. And I guess there's two ways of
looking at that. You're right. One form of quantitative test is like
threshold tests of Amore where they take -- where you have different
bottles and you're able to see at what level the person is able to
detect a chemical, you know, whatever chemical it is and you say, okay,
they're able to get it at 35 deci-smells or 50 deci-smells or whatever.
That's one quantitative measurement and that tests detection threshold.
The opposite, the scratch and sniff test, tests
recognition threshold and what it does is it basically -- you're able
to quantitate it because you're able to say, okay, they got 40 right
out of 40 and given the normative values for age and sex you're able
to plot where they fall in the population. It's sort of like the difference
between a test of memory, how many digits can you remember forward,
five or seven or how ever many, and the IQ test where it comes with
a single number.
Q. Yeah. So the scratch and sniff is a recognition threshold?
A. Exactly.
Q. Okay. And I don't know whether you have got the information to answer
this question but we're using total reduced sulphur as a measure, essentially
sort of a control measure or a measure to see whether or not there is
a pollution problem. Do you think that that is an appropriate, or do
you have the experience to answer, is that an appropriate measure for
the types of compounds or chemicals that might be coming out of a pulp
mill?
A. Personally I don't like that. I mean it's --
and, again, I'm probably speaking out of turn but I'll tell you what
I don't like about that is because that's a mixture of a lot of different
chemicals and it's got hydrogen sulphide mixed with capstans. I mean,
that's one of the -- that's my big -- so the problem is you're going
to have a very toxic level of a compound in it and less of a toxic
and that's what you're measuring. I mean, I prefer having separate
ones for each, if it's possible. You know, it's not possible, but that's
my own -- I like it simple and easy to understand.
Q. Yeah. That was my next question then. If that isn't acceptable, then
what is practically? I think you said several times we're living in a
real world.
A. I mean, this is not uncommon. This is -- in
Europe they use the same levels and we've seen it used other places
in other articles so, I mean, it's not -- it's used but -- and, if
that's as good as you have that's what you can use, but, I mean, I
like individual compounds myself.
Q. Okay. So do you have any experience at all in standards that might
be set in other parts of the world or the United States, what things
are being measured as evidence of air pollution problems?
A. Well, I have -- yeah, and I actually brought
-- well, there's a whole bunch of different standards. You have TLVs
which are threshold limit values where what's allowed for a worker
in a 8-hour day, you know, 40 weeks a year or something like that or
40 hours a week for 50 weeks a year, and those are levels that many
people use. There's also a level called a community standard level
--
Q. Yeah, but those are TLVs of what?
A. Of all the -- of a whole bunch of different
compounds, each one --
Q. Yeah, it's compounds I was after.
A. They have hydrogen sulphide; they have the
TLVs for hydrogen sulphide; they have TLV for the recaptures; they
have TLV for each of the different chemicals. That's not necessarily
the best evidence. There's also lowest community standard, or something
like that. There's like community standard ones and NIOSH has come
out with one for -- there are a whole host -- there's also emergent
levels where if you're exposed to them for 15 minutes it's unacceptable,
you know, so they have different levels for each different chemical.
To me, that's easier, a simple way that's much easier for me to understand.
Q. Okay. So just so I'm clear in my head here, you're aware of situations
for pulp mills where the -- for lack of a better word -- the pollution
control permit, okay, allows a discharge of various contaminants and
the concentrations allowed are for a whole series of different things
at say a TLV or something like that?
A. That's my understanding. I'm not sure if it's
pollution board or what but that's -- regulatory agencies, that's my
understanding, yes.
Q. Okay. So that it's fairly common then in the United States not to
just have, say, one thing like this total reduced sulphur but several
things?
A. That's right. That's my understanding. You
would subdivide off -- you would also have a sub-group of VOCs, a level
for VOCs so you'd have -- for most of them you'd have individual level
that was allowed.
Q. Do you have any idea of what the concentration of the threshold odour
value of H2S is, just roughly, compare with that
100 part per million and one second acute exposure thing?
A. Yeah. I have it right here. Well, for hydrogen
sulphide, depending upon who you read, the odour detection threshold
might be five parts per billion or it might be 1.1 part per million.
It depends on who you're reading. The odour recognition threshold is
about 47 parts per billion and the -- so there's a difference there
between -- in other words, you detect -- the difference is -- and this
is where it becomes somewhat important. I can detect an odour is present.
I know there's a smell there. I can't tell if it's skunk or perfume
but I know there's a smell there. At one point in time I could recognize
it smells like rotten eggs.
MR. ROBB: Could I ask that he repeat? I didn't quite get the --
THE CHAIRPERSON: Yes.
A. Okay. The odour detection threshold is, dependent
upon who you read, either is 5 parts per billion, although depending
on who you read, it could be as high as 1.1 part per million. The odour
recognition threshold is about 47 parts per billion.
BY DR. CAMERON: Q. Now, one more number, if you've got it, and effect
level for H2S?
A. Well, okay, this is -- okay. Let me define
it for you. If we use the threshold limit value, the lowest level that
a worker can be exposed to without in theory having effects for eight
hours a day, 40 hours a week is, at one point, and this is several
years old, it was thought to be set at 2 parts per million.
Q. That would be higher than the threshold odour value?
A. That's correct.
Q. Do you have any numbers for anything other than the eight hour per
day, 40 hour per week exposure?
A. Not with me. Well, not that I have easy access
with me. There's a -- not that I have easy access to.
DR. CAMERON: Okay. Well, that's -- we won't get into that then. That's
fine, thank you.
THE CHAIRPERSON: Ms. Mayall?
QUESTIONS BY MS. MAYALL:
Q. Just, in the pulp mill that you were looking at, do you know what
the permit -- first of all, were they just measuring the TRS and particulates
or were they looking at other --
A. Well, the one that -- well, the one I looked
at in Ohio, they looked -- we had all sorts -- the whole listing out
of must have been 30 different chemical compounds and they were concerned
-- they were meeting the criteria in Ohio for their community in terms
of pollution problems but they were having a problem with the odour
in the community so they were concerned about the impact of the ambient
odour and wanted to know what we could do to get rid of the ambient
odour.
QUESTIONS BY THE CHAIRPERSON:
Q. And in a number of situations, both pulp mills and other plants,
is your sort of -- is it the case that usually these operations are meeting
criteria and then you're looking at an odour problem that exists at the
same time or are you looking at sites where they may be in exceedances,
or is it both?
A. It's both. Usually the pulp mill ones are usually
meeting criteria and we're having a problem with the -- so they're
already meeting it here but they're having the secondary effects of
the odour. The EPA Superfund site, you know, it's already a superfund
site so that's not an issue, but with the pulp mill that's exactly
what happens.
Q. And what material were you provided for as far as a list of chemicals?
A. I was provided with these two (indiscernible)
journals here, a whole host of different ones --
Q. Just in relation to this -- okay. I don't know where you --
MR. ANDREWS: Not all of that has been admitted to evidence.
A. Oh, I'm sorry. Okay.
BY THE CHAIRPERSON: Q. No, I was just wondering if you were referred
to a specific document that we -- with a list of chemicals that you looked
at.
A. Well, I marked off -- as I say, after -- I
marked off some of these. The chemicals I thought were provided from
the pulp mill or from their monitoring sites.
Q. Okay. That's what I -- if you're referring to some source just want
to make sure we're all at the same -- working from the same list.
A. Well, yeah, like, here's --
Q. Okay, just so we have the title of the document and then we can --
A. One is title PAH/NOx Trace Metals Emissions,
Survey Monitoring Report, Pacifica Papers Inc.
Q. Okay. So those are the -- okay, you looked at that and that's --
A. Yeah. That's one of them and then the other
ones were -- that went through the different metals and it was those
sorts of things. Here's one that -- this one had PAH/CDD/PCDF Emission
Survey, Monitoring Report, March 1995 Survey.
Q. We have that.
A. Yeah, go through a whole bunch of those.
THE CHAIRPERSON: And I think -- yes.
QUESTIONS BY DR. CAMERON:
Q. Just a follow-up question that Ms. Vigod asked. You said that the
Ohio plant was meeting the air standards, right?
A. That's correct.
Q. But that there was an odour problem?
A. That's correct.
Q. Okay. Were there any health problems?
A. There -- there seemed to be, seemed to be health
problems, particularly ones that we looked at appeared to be -- we
looked at clearly had olfactory loss around the site. We didn't assess
them for the neurologic deficits and the psychiatric deficits because
there was another issue involved and we were trying to deal with the
olfactory problems that were involved.
Q. Okay. The mill was basically -- they were just concerned about the
odour though?
A. That's right. That's right. The plant was concerned
about that and what would be the best way of getting rid of the odour.
Q. So with the olfactory losses then I guess there would be the spectre
of the possibilities that you raised about accidents in cars and things
like that, weight gain and --
A. That's right. There were a lot of -- there
were a lot of -- the more that we looked into the more problems arose,
exactly.
DR. CAMERON: Okay. Thank you.
THE CHAIRPERSON: Just one follow-up to that.
QUESTIONS BY THE CHAIRPERSON:
Q. Did the regulatory agencies take any steps to follow up on that particular
--
A. Not on that -- not on that one. It was -- I
think my involvement was a preemptive involvement to prevent any sort
of regulatory involvement. They did -- in Illinois they did take charge
and close down the site that we were involved with.
Q. What were your recommendations in that Ohio site?
A. I suggested that -- and this is a summary with
respect to advice -- I suggested that they somehow change the processing
so that they can change around the amount of olfactory toxins that
were being emitted, the use of the hydrogen sulphide and somehow affecting
the NOx but it was -- that area of the technical component was a little
beyond my expertise and I was able to evaluate and say we're having
a serious problem here and I can't -- masking alone, which was really
what they wanted us to do, wasn't going to do it.
Q. All right. And -- okay. So the kind of community test that could
be done here, what do those results tell you?
A. Well, what I would -- well, if I was asked
to come in what I would do is I would come in and I would do the --
test maybe random people who live around the sites, pulling it from
a phone book or something, use random people, test their -- start off
with some very simple survey form plus the simple olfactory testing.
If we found that there was substantial olfactory impairment it would
confirm the belief that this is a major community problem and I would
-- it would again confirm that, continue stopping the plant from functioning.
You could also use that as a baseline so if the
plant continues to function you could watch and see as it's continuing
to pollute and contaminate the environment and the people who are there,
you could see continued health effects.
Q. Would you recommend a progression of tests as well or --
A. Ideally -- in an ideal world what I would do
is I would stop -- in an ideal world we'd have it already bagged --
stop right now. We'd stop the emission and do testing and I would do
serial tests to see, you know, over years and watch and see, to continue
to watch and see if there's any improvement in olfactory ability or
to see if there's -- as well as the other neurologic effects.
Q. I was thinking more if you did sort of the first, if you like, the
scratch and sniff test --
A. Right.
Q. -- and then if that told you that a percentage fell into your class
-- there was a concern --
A. Right.
Q. -- then would there then be a second level of a more complex test?
A. Oh, yes. You could do it that way, too. You
could do it where you do just a simple test like that and if you saw
problem then you can do more positive testing and identify a larger
population and do more detailed olfactory testing to determine the
extent of it.
Q. Okay. So get more into a more quantitative study?
A. That's right, exactly, which is much harder
to do. You can't send those bottles but whereas the scratch and sniff
things are much easier to do.
THE CHAIRPERSON: Thank you very much.
MR. ANDREWS: Just one very simple question arising.
RE-EXAMINATION BY MR. ANDREWS:
Q. You used the term NIOSH, that the National Institute of Occupational
Safety and Health; is that right?
A. That's correct.
THE CHAIRPERSON: Yes.
MS. KEAYS: I, too, have a couple of questions.
MR. J. KEAYS: I have, too.
THE CHAIRPERSON: Oh, sorry. John?
CROSS-EXAMINATION BY MR. J. KEAYS (Cont'd.):
Q. I need clarification. The detection is one part per billion but workers
were exposed for many years to 1.1 part per million under regulation?
A. No. You're talking about for H2S,
what the TLV is?
Q. Yes.
A. I think the TLV -- unless I copied it wrong
the TLV is two parts per million hydrogen sulphide --
Q. The level at which you can detect it?
THE CHAIRPERSON: That's the threshold limit value.
BY MR. J. KEAYS: Q. That's the threshold level but one part -- I've
got ppb here -- part per billion for detection.
A. Yes, part --
Q. So I can smell it at one part per billion?
MS. KEAYS: No, that's detection. You can smell it at --
A. Detected. For H2S
you can detect it at 5 parts per billion.
BY MR. J. KEAYS: Q. Per billion?
A. Per billion. Or -- or -- or you can detect
it at 1.1 part per million, depending upon the study you read.
THE CHAIRPERSON: So there was a range, right?
A. Exactly.
THE CHAIRPERSON: I think he said according -- just to clarify -- according
to the literature he said --
MR. J. KEAYS: I thought people were being exposed regularly to high
levels under some authority. I got it.
A. Well, they might be. They might be exposed
-- almost -- there's some issue on the TLV and that's a relatively
old article and the TLV may have dropped since that -- since that time
but I'm pretty sure the TLV in that article suggested it was two parts
per million -- the average exposure over an eight hour period.
Q. And people in this community are whining at a thousand times less?
That's what I feel I'm missing. We're at two parts per billion.
A. I know.
Q. And I'm injured.
A. There's some reasons for that. Number one,
talking about healthy worker effect. Healthy workers can be exposed
and they don't demonstrate the deficits because people who are injured
by it leave. That's one of the reasons. Second reason it has to do
is you're dealing with a mixture of chemicals rather than a single
chemical so you're not seeing the synergistic effects. And those are
-- and also, that level of TLV, I'm pretty sure it's been reduced since
that article was written substantially and they have been continuing
to do so.
MR. J. KEAYS: Thank you.
CROSS-EXAMINATION BY MS. KEAYS (Cont'd.):
Q. My question is that -- okay, I have to think for just a second. 99
per cent of the sulphur that's detected coming out of the recovery boiler
stack is in the form of SO2 not TRS. Would all
this extrapolate only be kind of linearly more with SO2 or
is it less or are they similar or --
A. Well, SO2 has
actually been demonstrated to have effects on cognition, for instance,
and in thinking processes, levels that are below detection threshold
and I think it was -- going to have to -- they talk about health effects
and SO2 at
35 micrograms per cubic metre which --
Q. Much lower?
A. Well, I don't know what that translates to.
The odour detection threshold of SO2 is
about 2,700 parts per billion so I don't know when you convert parts
per billions of micrograms, my chemistry is not so good when it has
to do with the molecular weight of it.
Q. So this would be -- SO2 is -- has more cognitive
difficulties than H2S or more olfaction difficulty
than --
A. SO2 has
both cognitive and olfactory deficits. H2S
-- you know, when you think about hydrogen sulphide think about cyanide
because you're talking almost one and the same. It's really a very
toxic compound and it's -- it blocks the mitochondrial electron transport
chain. It's very, very toxic. In SO2 it
doesn't have the same level of toxicity because -- but it's still not
a very good compound to have around.
Q. Together? Synergistic?
A. Synergistically those combined with other chemical
compounds have a hyper-additive effect.
MS. KEAYS: Okay. Thank you.
THE CHAIRPERSON: Mr. Robb?
CROSS-EXAMINATION BY MR. ROBB (Cont'd.):
Q. I'd like to show you something from Exhibit 13. You see the part
on TRS?
A. Yes.
THE CHAIRPERSON: What page is that?
MR. ROBB: Oh, sorry. It's the Ambient Objectives. Page 11.
THE CHAIRPERSON: Okay. That's what's happened to us.
BY MR. ROBB: Q. And I just wanted to clarify, you felt the odour detection
level for H2S was in the range of 5 parts per billion
to one part per million; is that correct?
A. 1.1 part per million.
Q. Okay, roughly one part per million. And of the TRS, total reduced
sulphur compound, H2S is the most toxic?
A. That's correct.
Q. Okay. So the number that is in column "A" which is our
most protective level for the one-hour average, can you see what it is
in ppm with the subscript "B"?
A. Is it the 0.005 parts per million?
Q. Yeah. So that would be --
A. It would be 5 parts per billion.
Q. Which you advise is at the low end of the detection range that's
been reported for hydrogen sulphide?
A. Correct.
Q. So would you consider that to be a protective level for TRS in the
ambient environment?
A. No.
Q. No?
A. No. Because -- the reason is -- there's several
reasons. One reason is because the detection threshold, when you're
talking about it like that, means the person's awake, alert and looking
for it. It's been shown that if people are not paying attention, not
looking for an odour you can see levels up to a thousand times higher
until they're able to detect something is present so that would be
one of the reasons for it. The other has to do with --
Q. So people can't detect the odour but they can have effects? I'm not
--
A. Yes. That toxic -- you can have an effect without
people consciously detecting the odour and I think that's what -- we
referenced before regarding SO2.
Q. Okay. So do you have a number that would, in your opinion, be protective
for hydrogen sulphide?
A. I don't know as we sit here today what level
-- what number it would be. Clearly you're going to want it less than
5 parts per billion, less than or in that range.
Q. So less than people can detect with their nose would be protective?
A. Yeah. You want to see it in or less than that
range of 5 parts per billion but less than they can detect, that's
correct.
Q. And how about for the other total reduced sulphur compounds?
A. I don't -- well, I don't have a number for
you. I do for methyl mercaptan, at least what the TLV is. It's 0.5
parts per million.
Q. So I just want to be clear. You feel that there will be malodourous
effects -- effects from malodourous compounds at levels below which people
can detect? I'm having trouble with that concept.
A. Yeah. It's a -- it remains an unclear area.
There's literature suggesting that sub-threshold levels can still cause
the toxic effects for some of the chemicals we're talking about. If
we're talking about it as --
Q. And they're malodourous type --
A. Yeah, these are some of the same ones we've
been talking about today. If you're talking about effects of the malodour,
clearly they have to be able to detect an odour.
Q. So from an odour perspective, is that 5 ppm protective, do you think?
Or 5 ppb, sorry.
A. From an odour perspective that would be --
from an odour -- you see, why this is becoming such a difficult issue
is because of our original dichotomy between the effects of the odour
and effect of the neurotoxin itself. If I can't smell at all, I can't
smell -- let's say I have anosmia -- I can't smell at all -- and I
can be exposed to hydrogen sulphide at high levels, I won't even detect
it until I'm killed. Does that mean that it's not -- that it doesn't
have a malodour effect? Well, it doesn't have a malodour effect because
it's just a straight neurotoxic effect.
Some chemicals, the odour is greater than the
recognized neurotoxic effect levels. Some, the odour is lower than
the recognized neurotoxic levels. So, for instance -- does that help
explain it at all?
Q. Well, my understanding of why there's a limit for TRS is 'cause it's
stinky stuff; people don't like the smell of it. So it's not so much
the health impact. That's what I understand. PM10's health; TRS, mostly
it's objectional stuff so we've put in a number to deal with the odour
issues. When these criteria were developed it was intended to protect
the environment, to protect people from experiencing unpleasant odours
and so --
A. And so what I would suggest to you is that
the unpleasant odours that they are experiencing is not just unpleasant
odours, that it's having both a direct effect, a neurotoxic effect,
and then there's secondary effects, when they smell bad odours it causes
secondary psychological effects with the associated impact.
Q. But your expertise mostly is with respect to the connection between
the bad odour and the, whatever, effect?
A. And also the low level toxins and whatever
the effect is, correct.
Q. My understanding is that TRS number is not there to protect human
health as much as it is to deal with objectionable odours.
A. I don't know --
Q. So from the objectionable odour perspective, would that be protective?
If the detection limit is 5 ppb and that's what our Level "A" standard
is for a one-hour average --
A. If the purpose of TRS is to just avoid objectionable
level, forgetting about health effects of having the bad odour, and
you can't detect it then you're right. If you can't detect it then
it's going to be acceptable which in theory would mean of everyone
around the plant loses their sense of smell you can go as high as you
want and people wouldn't be able to detect it.
Q. But normal people, the range that's been reported in the literature
--
A. Yes.
Q. -- what you say is that normal people, 5 ppb is the low end of the
range what people can detect.
A. That is correct.
Q. I think the TRS compounds is actually a little lower but maybe not
hydrogen sulphide.
A. That is correct. Methyl mercaptan they talk
about 1.6 parts per billion.
Q. All right. So your conclusion is that to protect people from malodourous
effects, 5 ppm for TRS is unacceptable?
A. Well, if you're going to include methyl mercaptan
in it then you'd have to drop down to 1.6 parts per billion so you'd
have to drop -- I mean, because TRS is a combination of all those together,
is my understanding.
Q. Yes.
A. So you'd probably have to drop it down by half
or so.
Q. Yeah, I think generally they say around one part per billion is what
people can detect the group of TRS compounds. We set the standard at
seven, recognizing that we're setting a standard higher than what people
can detect -- sorry. I'm talking micrograms per cubic metre, not actually
ppm. But any ways, as far as H2S goes, which you've
said is the nastiest of the TRS group --
A. In terms of the -- nasty in terms of being
damaging to the body. Not nasty in terms of being malodourous.
Q. Okay. So other ones in the TRS --
A. Are also malodourous.
Q. But still the range on TRS is 5 to 1 ppm; the standard there -- or,
sorry -- the range on hydrogen sulphide is 5 to 1.1 ppm; the standard
in there is 5. So if it was all H2S it would be
protective from the malodourous effect?
A. That's correct.
MR. ROBB: Okay. Thanks.
THE CHAIRPERSON: Thank you very much. Yes, we should mark that handbook.
That would be Exhibit 19. That's the handbook of olfaction and gustation.
--- EXHIBIT 19: Handbook of Olfaction and Gustation
--- (Witness Excused)
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