Ask Dr. Lamb by Dr Lawrence E Lamb i Iy cau a rt ? DEA EADER: HPV means "hum n p pillom vir ," nd it ca arts. Althou h there re many different ty of th virus, only. fe ty h ve ctually been linked to causin cervical cancer. And not all enital warts are t e type th t m y becom cervical c ncer ither. T know for ure, a complex and expe ive procedur to type the rt virus i needed. TIle virus i usu Ily transmitted sexually, but it can be spread by other means, including damp towels th t h ve the virus on them. The virus must first penetrate the surf: ce and inv de deeper cell. It may remain dormant there for some time. H it survives, it may attack dj cent cell and ta e over their genetic material. Remember that viruses can only multiply within cells. The cells that are attacked move to the surf ce and become the wart. Such warts often are invisible to the naked eye. That is wby an abnor­ m I P P smear may need to be fol­ lowed by bathing the cervix with vinegar or acetic acid, which chan­ ges bnormal tissues to a white color. Then the cervix is examined with a magnifying instrument. The proce .. dure is called colposcopy. Suspi­ cious reas re biopsied. Often, the biopsy itself will remove the entire involved area, nd it i cured'. How­ ever, there may be other wart viruses still deep in the cells that may surface la1er. Because of u. .... �-�- • r��� �MI�" .... � necessary, and ",ova ue repeat:� •••••• -.&.; occur. Eventually, some w.arts may disappear, perhaps even without treatment, just as warts on the hand may one day disappear for unknown reasons. I am sending you Special Report 108-WS, Pap Test and Early Cervi­ cal Cancer for more information on how such problems are managed. Others who want this r port can send $3 with a long, stamped (52 cents), self-addressed envelope for it to THE HEALTH LETTER! 108- WS, P.O. Bo'x 5537, Riverton, N.J. 08077. ; Ask Dr. lamb by Dr. Lawrence E, Lamb WHY ARE BLOOD PRESSURE RE DINGS ABNORMAL? DEAR DR. LAMB: PIe ex- plain "bolated 51 totic hyperten­ sion," where the top r�adin • above 160 and th lower reading is belo 90. Mine h hovered for the p t three years between 160 and 200 ror the top readinl and the 10 er re din in the r n e of4O to 60. The V h s d Hied ith variou medical' to no avail. Currently I'm on verapamil and lisinopril. DEAR READER: I do not know nough about you to y for certain what your blood pressure readings mean. My first thought would be that. your aorta has lost its elasticity. That happens in some old r individuals. The most common cau is from the deposit, of cholesterol in the wall of the large aorta. All of the oxygenated blood the h art pumps into your arteries goes directly out the heart into the aorta. In young person with a very elastic aorta, as the blood is pumped into it with each contracti n of the heart, th aorta expands easily like a balloon. That keeps the ys­ tolic pr ssure (the top reading) from rising high. The contraction of the elastic a rta then helps to continue to propel blood thr ugh your art rie . But if the aorta is rigid, when the h art c ntracts and jects blood into the aorta, th aorta cann t ex nd nearly as much and the pre ur rises. The end r . ult i high systolic pressure. The other condition that n eds to be considered, nd I'm ure your doctors know if you hav it r n r, i leaky rtic valve, which is m t often from pr viou rht"umatic heart disease. This i the val 'e that huts to pr vent blood from r�tming .back­ w rd into th h art aft r It has ejected blood into the orta. To compe te . for the leak, the heart mu . ct 1 mor bl into the rta, th y tolk pr ur to ri • LAN I G-On a bright, blue d y, Michigan logger i hard at wor with hi ch in aw In the green woods. He ldllfully guid it deeper into the tree trun wdu twirl arowlct him. he concentrate , he chew on plug of tob ceo tucked in his chee . It i m ho habit keeping him afe, e believe, b pi • S fe from t .... dangers of mate , open flame d fire. But he che witlr'a fal e sense PATRICIA COLBERT II E, \ I JTII "TOB ceo I being recog- nized major problem no matter how it i ed," d Bert ote tin, health educator for the Di trict Health Departme t o. 3 in Peto - oy. "Chewers tend to be more of the d tprev I nt However, tobacco use in th home has proven to be th o. 1 re on children develop the habit, Wall ce said. Wallace aid that a 1 87 tudy of four 1Jpp r Peninsula communities showed that venth-grade boys were mo t likely to ch w tobacco if their ootnote of o the program are geared tow Ed a broad udience of mokers," , id Andrea Poniers, ff per on Ior the Tobacco Free Michigan Action Co lition in lans­ ing. 'However, there i om good inform tion on mokele tobacco for ki , nd the dental comrnunity is big on the is ue." "They (d nti ts) e the effects of it by the ncers it caus ," h aid. HUll V L Contrary to what we believe, love i not always a many splendored thing. Later il\ life, orne find themselves Ingle through the death of a loved one or for a reason as simple as 11- ing it quits. For some, being single is the epitome ofl>liss, .,hile others feel that they are less then a person without the company of the opposite sex. Women were taught that the most important thing in life was to ' become the perfect housewife. Over the years things have changed. In the past, women were taught that the most important thing in life was to become the perfect housewife. - either celebrating 1heir golden an­ niversaries or have become too old, ick or tired to enter into any new relationship. Mo t single individuals would rather remain single, than to put up with orne of todays tandards and in mo t instances, love has nothing to do with it. In the past, an expl nation I for being Single, was simple as not being able to find Mr. or Ms. Right. HOWEVER, BEING SINGLE today can carry many different labels. Labels uch as, selfishness, I got it made, and most popular of them all, "I am set in my ways." The 1 tter preventing any potential relationship a� destroying many existing ones. I guess the "I am set in my ways theory can work if you're young, beautiful and successful, but looking .. beyond that perhaps you will grow old, in a house, that is not a home. Someone once said, "No man i an island. At some point in time most of us have to have someone to inter­ act with whether it be social, sexual or intellectual. BEST' CHANCE: nd programs about tob ceo g re in prog , d ta on chew- in tob cco i di ieult to find. Stanley Robin, ociology profe or t We tern Michigan University, h en involved with an ongoin tudy of alcohol and drug us in h 01 . Although the tudy contains data on mo el tob ceo use, much of ,; tanu ,typhoid, yellow fever and the --- airbom di a diphtheria, influenza Subtrop'cal c irnate and meningococcal m ningiti Bring own food, ter enables di ase- ioo rnosouit .Oi a caused by contaminated and t r purifying C8r!Ylng mosqui os, food ana water nd a basic lack of equlpm nt .. _ fhes and fleas to thrive. _ .. _ ... _-- nitation: dian1l an mic dy ntery, h patiti A, typhoid 1i e prophylactic medic ne • • Mefloquine tablets • I. Gamma globulin booster -, -- Behave appropr tely Ori� o.f water Malaria. caused by mosquito bit Hepatiti (other than type A), caused by contaminated blood products and h�rmic need s .. - � Avoid animals; kill rabid ones ____,:_J I your work plac ma , r Schistosomiasis, spread by a parasite found in snails; treated with drugs ing you • IC ? • pily ever after. ' Many believed it than but a minority believe it today. Wake up!. Unfortunately for women, men washed up by the tides of time are By MONICA SANCHEZ Sp.c'.' to the Mlchlll.n Citizen There are many crises facing our nation at present: a troubled economy, higher rates of violent crime, the spread of AIDS, and an inadequate health care system, are among them .. I'hey all clamor tor our attention. # Every nuance of their develop- ment is reported on the nightly news and their solutions are constantly debated by experts, protesters and politicians. Yet, another grave prob­ lem affec..ts countless numbers of workers throughout the country - occupational diseases. "We are in the midst of an un­ recognized epidemic of occupational disease, which is di proportionately affecting African American, Latino, Asian American, Caribbean American, and Native American worker as well a low-wage workers." That is the warning Dr. George Friedman-Jimenez, Director of the Bellevue Occupational and Environ­ mental Health Clinic at the Bellevue Hospital Center in New York City, gave the New.York State As embly at a public hearing on "Minoritie and the Environment" in 1991. C,ORDI o Match Jan. 13 Lotto Ticket Dr. Friedman-Jimenez contend that since only a Worker' Compen- ation claim will allow the en e to be officiall counted a an occupati nal disea e, exi ting tati tic greatly un­ derestimate the problem for the e workers. ND PART of the problem i profes ional will n t diagn e an occupational di ease as uch b cause of all the red tape involved. "Doctors are very reluct nt to et 'involved with Worker's Cornpcnsa­ tion," ay Dr. Friedman- imcnez. In addition, mo t health care provider have inadequate knowledge of ccup a ti nal medicine. C n cquently, ace of occupational asthma, for example, will mo t likely be treated and li ted as just thma. II] fact, Mount Sinai' 0 cupa­ tional and Envir nrncntal Health Clinic in New York ity cstirnat that 95-97 per ent of occupation, 1 disca e death and 62- ' 9 per' cnt f in ident ca 'C f upati nal di - ease arc n t reported" uch. The re .ult i that the conditi n which auscd me pr blcm are not inve tigatcd and many other work rs continue to be e po cd and at ri .k. All f the e fact rs can del y or prevent the orrect di n i f c­ cupational di ea e, making effc ive treatment and prevention mu h lcs likely. PRE. VI. T1 DEPE D b' ic right and that they might have to take action to guarantee their own health and afety." Dr. Friedman-Jimenez tells of a fact ry in Connecticut where pr duction workers. had often come into e nta t with a chemical solvent that when ab orbed through the skin and into the I od en ed damage to th liver. "Seventy- ix percent of the pr duction worke . had evidence of liver damage at any iven time. This' went n f r 1 to 15 years, but no one knew a ut it ex cpt the workers, 93 percent [whom were Latino," he explains. After m nths of a trike, manage­ ment decided to change the olvent and hired the Yale Occupational Health Clinic to do r gular urveil- ance of worke . After two years, there wa nly one case of liver dama e. ' DR. 'RIEDMAN-JIME .. Z sees this case a an example 0 failure of current method monitoring employer mpliance with afety regulations. Ms. Hill agrees, "That' why we are pushing for the OSHA Reform bill to be pa ed, whic'h will strengthen the law and give it new teethandnew ub tance thatit an provide greater protection for workers." Dr. Friedman-Jimenez believe that part of the solution i informing workers of th ir options. "If they knew they could come to us f r help, we could treat them and begin to document the problem and e tim te the full extent of the cpidemic."- Maybe then thi unrecognized epidemic would inally be brought to the forefront of our natior.al con­ science. study: "Current M itude (If Oc­ cupational Disease in the United State ," by PJ. Landrigan arnr S. Markowitz, every year there are ap­ proximately 350,000 new ca and 50,000 to 70, deaths due to oc­ cupational di ea e in the United State. Although this'data was not reported by race or elhnicity, Dr.' Friedman-Jimenez feels that other evidence clearly ugge t that minoril}lltWorkers are at higher ri k for occupational disea e. For ex­ ample, U.S. Cens and Bureau of Labor tatistics how that minoritie are overrepresented in higher risk jobs, but underrepresented in lower risk positions. Jaribu Hill, a Safety and Health Specialist for the New York Com­ mittee for Occupational Safety and Health (NYCOSH), feels the main reason for this disparity is racism. "It is a complicated issue, but the fact i people of color are still relegated to second class citizenship. There i' no real concern for these workers' because historically they have been denied many of the right enjoyed by white workers." Dr. Friedman-Jimenez agrees. He cites, as an example, a study of lung disease in textile mill workers which ound that African-American laborers had been regularly assigned to areas where the concentration of textile dust was highest, putting them at a much higher risk for developin brown lung disease. 1989 D PI E UCH VID N E occupational disease statistrcs remain carce, particularly as they pertain to minority workers. "Part of the problem is the structure of Worker' Compensation [which] i by nature adversarial," explains Dr. Friedman-Jimenez. "Onc a worker file for Worker' Compensation, the employer's in- urance company hires lawyers and doct rs to fight the claim." The result i that minority w rkers, for fear of 10 ing their job ,often do not file. And for megal immigrants, the additional concern ofpossible depor­ tation make filing for 'Worker' Compensation les attractive. A urvey of patients, with work related injurie in New York, howed that while 46 percent of the injured whi te workers had filed for Worker' Compen at ion, no ian worker had filed and only about 26 per nt of Latin and 37 percent of African American workers had filed. up n identi fyi ng the cau 1 ex­ pure and liminating them. Thi I where workers can do the m t t help themselve . . Hill (\!) ert that it i rare for an employer t plemcnt trategic on hi own. "Mo tempi ye e not in m- pliance [with a[ety law], 0 it i important that the w rke them el­ ve understand that they have certa.n