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Health See other Health Articles Title: Hydraulic fracking linked to hospitalizations in Pennsylvania PHILADELPHIA, July 17 (UPI) -- A study by the University of Pennsylvania and Columbia University has linked hydraulic fracking to hospitalizations for heart conditions, neurological illness and other conditions. The new study came out barely a month after the Environmental Protection Agency released its five-year study, which found fracking has not had widespread impact on drinking water. EPA researchers, though, said the report was not a statement on fracking overall and only considered the oil drilling technique's potential effect on water sources. Unlike traditional oil drilling, fracking involves pumping chemicals into the ground at high pressures in order to jar loose oil caught in rock formations so that it can be pumped from the ground. Researchers in the new study, published in PLOS ONE, analyzed data collected by the Pennsylvania Healthcare Cost Containment Council on about 198,000 hospitalizations between 2007 and 2011. The hospitalizations were in three counties -- Bradford, Susquehanna and Wayne -- in northeastern Pennsylvania. RELATEDEPA: Despite risk, fracking has had limited impact on drinking water The Marcellus Shale formation underlies the three counties, which is why they are home to 598 wells. Wayne County was chosen as a control because it does not have any wells. In Bradford and Susquehanna counties, researchers found 18 zip codes with an average of 0.79 oil wells per square mile. RELATEDFracking may cause air pollution, respiratory issues Based on the hospital data, those zip codes saw a 27 percent increase in cardiology inpatient treatments compared to Wayne County. The data also showed increases in prevalence of neurologic inpatient rates and increased hospitalizations for skin conditions, cancer and urologic problems in the two counties with wells. Researchers said the study does not prove hydraulic drilling has caused an increase in medical conditions, but the increase in a short time dovetails with the dramatic rise of hydraulic fracking in the area, showing that something is going on there. "This study captured the collective response of residents to hydraulic fracturing in zip codes within the counties with higher well densities," said Dr. Reynold Panettieri, Jr., a professor of medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, in a press release. "At this point, we suspect that residents are exposed to many toxicants, noise and social stressors due to hydraulic fracturing near their homes and this may add to the increased number of hospitalizations." Like Us on Facebook for more stories from UPI.com Related UPI Stories 2 million pounds of frozen chicken recalled for salmonella risk Study: Cannabis helps to heal bone fractures Mixing antidepressants, painkillers linked to bleeding Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Tatarewicz (#0)
See? We're a toxic species that's grown vastly, insanely beyond what we should have. We're fracking and destroying mountains because energy needs are 7 times what they could have been and wrecking water quality at a frightening pace. We are unnatural!
Uber has the best answer; make every car an Uber ride -haring taxi with Uber providing communications to match rider with driver's destination. Share ride, share cost. Just the dust pollution from tire wear in the one-car-occupant system should be a matter of concern.
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