Fishermen, cleanup workers and residents of Gulf Coast believe they are being sickened by toxic chemicals from BP spill.
Increasing numbers of people across the Gulf Coast are reporting symptoms that doctors and toxicologists are linking to chemicals from the BP oil disaster [GALLO/GETTY]
James Miller, a commercial shrimper, lifelong fisherman in Mississippi and former BP oil response worker, is horribly sick.
"I've been vomiting, my head feels like it's going to explode, diarrhea, and I keep passing out," Miller, who worked in BP's so-called Vessels of Opportunity (VOO) oil response program, said from his bed at Biloxi Regional Hospital on November 5.
Four days earlier, Miller, his wife and dog were boating on the Gulf
of Mexico near one of Mississippi's barrier islands when all three of
them fell ill.
"My wife and I felt the chemicals immediately and
my dog even started hacking like he was trying to cough up a bone,"
Miller explained.
Later that day he began vomiting and experiencing a severe headache
and diarrhea. Then on November 4 he passed out in the shower. Concerned
by his uncontrollable nausea and bleeding in his esophagus, his wife
took him to the emergency room.
"The doctor just told me I have
acid reflux," Miller, who has been experiencing many of his symptoms
since joining the VOO program, said. "They don't even know what this
is. I told him I needed to be tested for toxic chemicals. I'm in a major
hospital and they are telling me they don't know what this is."
Miller's friend, Chris Balius, also a former VOO worker, was in a boat near Miller's on that same day out on the Gulf.
"I was hit by it too," Balius explained. "Headache, nausea, diarrhea, and now my eyesight is failing. When I was in the VOO program, I had to let someone else run my boat after 30 days because I got so sick. Every time I go on the water I get sick, so I no longer go, and don't allow my family to go anymore."
Joseph Yerkes, who lives on Okaloosa Island, Florida, was in BP's VOO program for more than two months, during which time he was exposed to oil and dispersants on a regular basis.
"I worsened progressively," Yerkes said. "Mid-September I caught a cold that worsened until I went to a doctor, who gave me two rounds of antibiotics for the pneumonia-like symptoms, and he did blood tests and found high levels of toxic substances in my blood that he told me came from the oil and dispersants."
Increasing numbers of people across the Gulf Coast are suffering from symptoms that doctors and toxicologists are linking to chemicals from the BP oil disaster that began last summer when the blowout of the Macondo well gushed at least 4.9 million barrels of oil into the Gulf.
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