We're about to find out if Mississippi hurricane victims have been living through a toxic crisis. On Thursday, FEMA and the Centers For Disease Control announced plans to test the air quality in 500 ...
NEW ORLEANS — The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention should have reacted sooner to concerns about hazardous fumes in government-issued trailers housing thousands of Gulf Coast hurricane ...
(Adds comments from FEMA paragraphs 4-5, manufacturers 14th paragraph, House hearing 17th paragraph) By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Editor WASHINGTON, July 2 (Reuters) - Pressed wood products such ...
NEW ORLEANS The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention should have reacted sooner to concerns about hazardous fumes in government-issued trailers housing thousands of Gulf Coast hurricane ...
Federal health officials on Thursday urged hurricane victims to move out of trailers supplied by FEMA after tests showed dangerous levels of formaldehyde fumes. Tests by the Centers for Disease ...
Federal health officials have confirmed that high levels of formaldehyde gas pose health risks to hurricane victims housed in 38,000 government trailers on the Gulf Coast, and will recommend that ...
WASHINGTON (AP) - April 1, 2008 Christopher De Rosa, a top scientist at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's toxic substances agency, said his bosses told him that his warnings of a ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results