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|    Message 55,609 of 55,615    |
|    b.s.66 to All    |
|    'Parkinson's is a man-made disease' (3/3    |
|    03 May 25 04:20:46    |
      [continued from previous message]              system built around predefined methods and industry-supplied data. “We       assess risk based on what we’re given, and what the framework allows us to       assess,” Url said. “But science evolves faster than legislation. That’s       always the tension.”              EFSA also works under constraints that its pharmaceutical counterpart, the       European Medicines Agency, does not. “EMA distributes money to national       agencies,” Url said. “We don’t. There’s less integration, less shared       work. We rely on member states volunteering experts. We’re not in the same       league.”              Url didn’t sound defensive. If anything, he sounded like someone who’s       been pushing against institutional gravity for a long time. He described       EFSA as an agency charged with assessing a food system worth trillions —       but working with limited scientific resources, and within a regulatory       model that was never designed to capture the risks of chronic diseases       like Parkinson’s.              “We don’t get the support we need to coordinate across Europe,” he said.       “Compared to the economic importance of the whole agri-food industry …       it’s breadcrumbs.”              But he drew a sharp line when it came to responsibility. “The question of       what’s safe enough — that’s not ours to answer,” he said. “That’s a       political decision.” EFSA can flag a risk. It’s up to governments to       decide whether that risk is acceptable.              It was a careful way of saying what Bloem had said more bluntly: Science       may illuminate the path, but policy chooses where — and whether — to walk       it. And in a food system shaped by powerful interests, that choice is       rarely made in a vacuum.              “There are gaps,” Url said, “and we’ve said that.”              But gaps in science don’t always lead to action. Especially when the cost       of precaution is seen as an economic threat.              The doctor who won’t slow down       Evidence from the field is becoming harder to ignore. In France, a       nationwide study found that Parkinson’s rates were significantly higher in       vineyard regions that rely heavily on fungicides. Another study found that       areas with higher agricultural pesticide use — often measured by regional       spending — tend to have higher rates of Parkinson’s, suggesting a dose-       response relationship. In Canada and the U.S., maps of Parkinson’s       clusters track closely with areas of intensive agriculture.              The Netherlands has yet to produce comparable data. But Bloem believes       it’s only a matter of time.              “If we mapped Parkinson’s here, we’d find the same patterns,” he says. “We       just haven’t looked yet.”                     In fact, early signs are already emerging. The Netherlands, known for       having one of the highest pesticide use rates in Europe, has seen a 30       percent rise in Parkinson’s cases over the past decade — a slower increase       than in some other regions of the world, but still notable, Bloem says. In       farming regions like the Betuwe, on the lower reaches of the Rhine River,       physiotherapists have reported striking local clusters. One village near       Arnhem counted over a dozen cases.              “I don’t know of a single farmer who’s doing things purposely wrong,”       Bloem says. “They’re just following the rules. The problem is, the rules       are wrong.”              To Bloem, reversing the epidemic means shifting the regulatory mindset       from reaction to prevention. That means requiring long-term neurotoxicity       studies, testing chemical combinations, accounting for real-world       exposure, genetic predisposition and the kind of brain damage Parkinson’s       causes — and critically, making manufacturers prove safety, rather than       scientists having to prove harm.              “We don’t ban parachutes after they fail,” Bloem says. “But that’s what we       do with chemicals. We wait until people are sick.”              His team is also studying prevention-focused interventions — including       exercise, diet and stress reduction — in people already diagnosed with       Parkinson’s, in one of the most comprehensive trials of its kind. Still,       Bloem is realistic about the limits of individual action.              “You can’t exercise your way out of pesticide exposure,” he says. “We need       upstream change.”              Bloem has seen it before — the same pattern playing out in slow motion.       “Asbestos,” he says “Lead in gasoline. Tobacco. Every time, we acted       decades after the damage was done.” The science existed. The evidence had       accumulated. But the decision to intervene always lagged. “It’s not that       we don’t know enough,” he adds. “It’s that the system is not built to       listen when the answers are inconvenient.”                     The clinic has grown quiet. Most of the staff have left for the day, the       corridors are still. Bloem gathers his things, but he’s not finished yet.       One more phone call to make — something he’ll take, as always, while       walking. As we stand up to go into the hallway, he pauses.              “If we don’t fix this now,” he says, “we’re going to look back in 50 years       and ask: ‘What the hell were we thinking?’”              He slips on a pair of black headphones, nods goodbye and turns toward the       exit. Outside, he’s already striding across the Radboud campus, talking       into the cold evening air — still moving, still making calls, still trying       to bend a stubborn system toward change.              https://www.politico.eu/article/bas-bloem-parkinsons-pesticides-mptp-       glyphosate-paraquat/              --- SoupGate-DOS v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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