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Assessing elemental mercury vapor exposure from cultural and religious practices.

Use of elemental mercury in certain cultural and religious practices can cause high exposures to mercury vapor. Uses include sprinkling mercury on the floor of a home or car, burning it in a candle, and mixing it with perfume. Some uses can produce indoor air mercury concentrations one or two orders...

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Autores principales: Riley, D M, Newby, C A, Leal-Almeraz, T O, Thomas, V M
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2001
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1240404/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11564612
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author Riley, D M
Newby, C A
Leal-Almeraz, T O
Thomas, V M
author_facet Riley, D M
Newby, C A
Leal-Almeraz, T O
Thomas, V M
author_sort Riley, D M
collection PubMed
description Use of elemental mercury in certain cultural and religious practices can cause high exposures to mercury vapor. Uses include sprinkling mercury on the floor of a home or car, burning it in a candle, and mixing it with perfume. Some uses can produce indoor air mercury concentrations one or two orders of magnitude above occupational exposure limits. Exposures resulting from other uses, such as infrequent use of a small bead of mercury, could be well below currently recognized risk levels. Metallic mercury is available at almost all of the 15 botanicas visited in New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania, but botanica personnel often deny having mercury for sale when approached by outsiders to these religious and cultural traditions. Actions by public health authorities have driven the mercury trade underground in some locations. Interviews indicate that mercury users are aware that mercury is hazardous, but are not aware of the inhalation exposure risk. We argue against a crackdown by health authorities because it could drive the practices further underground, because high-risk practices may be rare, and because uninformed government intervention could have unfortunate political and civic side effects for some Caribbean and Latin American immigrant groups. We recommend an outreach and education program involving religious and community leaders, botanica personnel, and other mercury users.
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spelling pubmed-12404042005-11-08 Assessing elemental mercury vapor exposure from cultural and religious practices. Riley, D M Newby, C A Leal-Almeraz, T O Thomas, V M Environ Health Perspect Research Article Use of elemental mercury in certain cultural and religious practices can cause high exposures to mercury vapor. Uses include sprinkling mercury on the floor of a home or car, burning it in a candle, and mixing it with perfume. Some uses can produce indoor air mercury concentrations one or two orders of magnitude above occupational exposure limits. Exposures resulting from other uses, such as infrequent use of a small bead of mercury, could be well below currently recognized risk levels. Metallic mercury is available at almost all of the 15 botanicas visited in New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania, but botanica personnel often deny having mercury for sale when approached by outsiders to these religious and cultural traditions. Actions by public health authorities have driven the mercury trade underground in some locations. Interviews indicate that mercury users are aware that mercury is hazardous, but are not aware of the inhalation exposure risk. We argue against a crackdown by health authorities because it could drive the practices further underground, because high-risk practices may be rare, and because uninformed government intervention could have unfortunate political and civic side effects for some Caribbean and Latin American immigrant groups. We recommend an outreach and education program involving religious and community leaders, botanica personnel, and other mercury users. 2001-08 /pmc/articles/PMC1240404/ /pubmed/11564612 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Riley, D M
Newby, C A
Leal-Almeraz, T O
Thomas, V M
Assessing elemental mercury vapor exposure from cultural and religious practices.
title Assessing elemental mercury vapor exposure from cultural and religious practices.
title_full Assessing elemental mercury vapor exposure from cultural and religious practices.
title_fullStr Assessing elemental mercury vapor exposure from cultural and religious practices.
title_full_unstemmed Assessing elemental mercury vapor exposure from cultural and religious practices.
title_short Assessing elemental mercury vapor exposure from cultural and religious practices.
title_sort assessing elemental mercury vapor exposure from cultural and religious practices.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1240404/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11564612
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