Local doctor doubts report on Fort Chipewyan cancer rates
Last Updated: Tuesday, July 25, 2006 | 3:58 PM CT
CBC News
Related
A provincial report showing no spike in cancer rates in Fort Chipewyan is considered inadequate by the community's only doctor and medical examiner.
Dr. John O'Connor is calling for a more comprehensive report on the health of the northern Alberta community's 1,200 residents.
"I would be very, very happy if they said the rates of disease, cancer included, are no higher in Fort Chip than a comparable community elsewhere," he said.
"I would absolutely accept it, if I saw they had done a complete analysis … had all the information that they needed, and had the report peer reviewed prior to publishing it."
Alberta Health and the Alberta Cancer Board launched the investigation after O'Connor said in March he was seeing unusual diseases, including a rare and fatal form of cancer affecting the bile duct.
Elders say they didn't see these kinds of diseases until the oil industry started production near their homes on the southwestern tip of Lake Athabasca.
The board's findings were presented on July 17 to the province's Energy and Utilities Board, which is currently considering an application by Suncor Energy Inc. to expand its operations in the oilsands, doubling the amount of oil it can produce.
Fort Chipewyan is downstream from those operations.
'Very thorough review,' said health minister
Health Minister Iris Evans said Monday she is standing by the review.
"This was not so much a study, as it was an analysis, very thorough review by epidemiologists," she said.
Researchers used provincial and Alberta Cancer Board files, along with statistics and medical records from the community, she said.
Fort Chipewyan community leaders are meeting Tuesday with provincial and federal government officials. If the group calls for an expanded study, they will get one, Evans added.
Not comprehensive enough: town doctor
O'Connor accuses Alberta Health of rushing the report to have it ready in time for the hearings into the Suncor expansion.
He says he was told it would take months to do a comprehensive study, not weeks.
He was not contacted for information, nor were the area's First Nations communities, he said. Without community input or involvement, the process has not been transparent, he added.
Last week, Dr. Yiqun Chen, the head of disease surveillance at the Alberta Cancer Board who did the initial research in the investigation, told CBC News on Tuesday she did not have "the complete data set for 2005, and less complete for 2004" when she reached her conclusion.
However, a spokesperson for Alberta Health said the department recognized the problem and reached its conclusion after cross-referencing other databases to look for unusual cancer cases.
Share Tools
Latest North News Headlines
- Fort Smith, N.W.T., man charged with arson
- A 19-year-old Fort Smith man has been charged with arson in the New Year's Day fire that destroyed the town's old visitors' centre. more »
- Cambridge Bay airport runway to be widened
- The airport runway in Cambridge Bay, Nunavut, will be widened to meet safety standards, says Nunavut's deputy minister for Economic Development and Transportation. more »
- Rankin Inlet gets CanNor cash for port business plan
- Rankin Inlet, Nunavut, is getting almost $28,000 from the Canadian Northern Economic Development Agency to put towards a business plan for a port. more »
- Yukoners need to change poverty perceptions, says report
- A new report on poverty in Yukon is calling for action from the territorial government. However, poverty activists are also calling for Yukoners to adjust their attitudes. more »
Top News Headlines
- Everest victim's husband says family not seeking government help
- The husband of a Toronto woman who died trying to climb Mt. Everest on Saturday says his family is not seeking government help to cover the cost of bringing his wife's body home. more »
- Employment Insurance review boards to be scrapped
- The federal government is scrapping two review boards used by people appealing decisions made about their employment insurance. more »
- Teens share bullying tales in confession booth
- Raw stories about bullying emerged when a video booth was set up inside a Quebec high school. more »
- Serial carjacker gets life term for fatal crash
- An Ontario judge was moved to tears while delivering a life prison sentence to a serial carjacker who killed a woman and injured five others after driving a stolen van into her car during a 2010 police chase. more »
- Investigation finds 3 electoral violations in N.W.T. riding
- Iqaluit man pleads guilty to drug and sex offences
- Head of Nunavut Impact Review Board not re-appointed
- Yukoners need to change poverty perceptions, says report
- Whitehorse man appeals drunk driving conviction
- N.W.T. budget calls for $74M surplus
- Hudson Bay polar bear numbers increase
- N.W.T. commissioner's goals for the territory
- Nunavut communities seek cellphone service

