PUBLIC HEALTH ASSESSMENT
Saipan Capacitors
(a/k/a Tanapag Village (Saipan))
Tanapag Village, Saipan, Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas Island
EPA Facility ID: MPD982524506
August 31, 2004
Prepared by:
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE
Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry
Division of Health Assessment and Consultation
Atlanta, Georgia
TABLE OF CONTENTS
List of Figures
Acronyms
- Summary
- Public Health Issues
- Background
- Where is Tanapag Village
- Who lives in Tanapag Village?
- What are PCBs?
- What are health concerns of exposure?
- When and how did PCBs come to Tanapag Village
- How did the PCBs spread throughout Tanapag Village?
- What has been done to understand PCB contamination in Tanapag Village, and what has been done to remove contamination?
- How is ATSDR involved in Tanapag Village?
- Who lives in Tanapag Village?
- Data Sources and Quality Assurance
- Nature and Extent of Environmental PCB Contamination
- Potential Exposure Situations
- What is meant by exposure?
- How does ATSDR determine which exposure situations to evaluate?
- If someone is exposed, will they get sick?
- Who was/is exposed to PCBs in Tanapag Village?
- When did exposures begin? What is the exposure duration?
- How often were/are people exposed?
- How could people be exposed to PCBs in surface soil?
- How could people be exposed to PCBs in locally harvested foods?
- How could people be exposed to PCBs in surface water and sediment?
- How could people be exposed to PCBs in groundwater?
- How does ATSDR determine which exposure situations to evaluate?
- Evaluation of Pubic Health Impact of PCB Contamination
- Community Concerns
- How long ago did you have to be exposed for PCBs to show up in blood, tissue or breast milk?
- If blood results are out of the normal range, is it safe to breast feed my baby?
- If blood results are out of the normal range, is it safe to have children?
- If blood results are out of the normal range, should breast milk or fat tissue be sampled?
- Is there treatment available for PCB exposure?
- If my children play outside, will they get sick from PCB exposure?
- Is it safe to visit the cemetery?
- Is it safe to eat fish and crabs?
- Are foods like taro and yam safe to eat?
- If blood results are out of the normal range, is it safe to breast feed my baby?
- ATSDR's Child Health Initiative
- Conclusions
- Recommendations
- Public Health Action Plan
- References
- Appendices
- Tables and Figures
- ATSDR Activity Time line
- ATSDR Glossary of Environmental Health Terms
- Oral bioavailability of polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) residues in soil
- Exposure history survey form
- Data Analysis Methods for Exposure History Survey
- Health consultation: Evaluation of Land Crab Contamination, July 2001
- Response to Public Comments
Report Authors
- List of Tables
- Table 1. Surface soil sampling for PCB in Cemetery 1 area.
- Table 2. Surface soil sampling for PCB in Community Church area.
- Table 3. Surface soil sampling for PCB in Tanapag Beach area.
- Table 4. Surface soil sampling for PCB in Cemetery 2 area.
- Table 5. Surface soil sampling for PCB in Other Tanapag Village areas.
- Table 6. Biota sampling results.
- Table 7. Exposure situations and pathways summary.
- Table 8. Serum PCB distribution by consumption of land crab caught in Tanapag.
- Table 9. Relative risk of having detectable serum PCB concentrations ( 5 ppb) for those reporting past contact with capacitors, capacitor oils, or contaminated soil.
- Table 10. Comparison of total vs. congener-specific serum PCB sampling results.
- Table 2. Surface soil sampling for PCB in Community Church area.
- List of Figures
- Figure 1. Saipan location map
- Figure 2. Tanapag location map
- Figure 3. EPA Multi-matrix sampling survey map: PCB Sample Locations - May 2000
- Figure 4. Tons of PCB-Contaminated Soil Removed from Tanapag Village, Saipan
- Figure 5. Maximum Pre-excavation PCB Concentrations in Surface Soil, Tanapag Village, Saipan
- Figure 6. Distribution of Serum PCB Concentrations Among Tanapag residents, May 2000
- Figure 7. Average Serum PCB Levels in Tanapag Residents by Age and Gender
- Figure 8. Lipid Corrected Serum PCB Comparison
- Figure 9. Landcrab Sampling Locations (December 2000)
- Figure 2. Tanapag location map
ACOE | U.S. Army Corps of Engineers |
---|---|
ATSDR | Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry |
CERCLA | Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act |
CNMI | Commonwealth of Northern Mariana Islands |
DEQ | Department of Environmental Quality |
DERP-FUDS | Defense Environmental Restoration Program - Formerly Used Defense Sites |
DOD | Department of Defense |
DPH | Department of Public Health |
DPW-LBY | Department of Pubic Works-Lower Base Yard |
EI | Exposure Investigation |
EPA | U.S. Environmental Protection Agency |
NACCHO | National Association of State and Territorial Health Officialsy |
NCEH | National Center for Environmental Health |
PCB | Polychlorinated biphenyl |
PHA | Public Health Assessment |
ppb | parts per billion |
ppm | parts per million |
RCRA | Resource Conservation and Recovery Act |
SVOC | Semi-volatile organic compound |
TSDF | Treatment, Storage, and Disposal Facility |