In the wake of the 9/11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center a group of twenty-seven dogs braved the hazards of the world’s biggest pile of toxic rubble for a collective total of just over 15,000 hours.
Though other dogs sporadically joined them in their labors, these 27 were monitored as part of a collaborative study undertaken by the Animal Medical Center in New York. Their acute injuries, environmental toxin exposure and long-term (five-year) health were reported in a paper in the July 1st edition of JAVMA (Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association).
Fatigue, lacerations, dehydration, respiratory symptoms and decreased appetite were recorded in the initial stages of their work, when caustic quantities of dust choked the site and the frenzy to uncover survivors was first in full swing.
Yet toxicology reports of their hair and blood were unremarkable. And later, when their long-term health effects were noted, they were found to be minimal.
It’s great news. None of the dogs died as a result of their service roles. Indeed, 21 were still alive after five years, six having succumbed to natural causes not considered relevant to the study. None of the dogs succumbed to the debilitating chronic respiratory diseases akin to those some Ground Zero workers have reported.
All in all, these dogs have dodged a massive bullet, it would seem. So we should rejoice in this minor miracle, right?
But what does their survival in excellent condition (save the relatively minor acute injuries they suffered in the initial stages) mean to us as citizens of a 9/11 attack-besieged nation?
Does it showcase the resilience of a nation capable of handling even the worst of crises with heart, health and vigor?
I guess it would if the findings of this study weren’t likely to be used to discredit the chronic health conditions suffered by some of the human WTC site workers.
I don’t know how we as a nation should handle the claims of individuals who report debilitating respiratory effects after months of Ground Zero cleanup, but I do know one thing: I would hate to see this study assist in the invalidation of their claims, financial or otherwise.
So doing would smack of the same hypocrisy and self-serving public policy that plagues us in other areas. Our dogs’ salubrious legacy doesn’t deserve to be twisted into the service of such exculpatory thinking, science or no science. After all, dogs are not people. And they don’t have families to feed.
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Thank you for reposting this, I was disappointed when the link would not work. It is truely amazing the dogs were healthy years after the work that was done. I would have completely thought the opposite. I am sure the government will try to extrapolate the study to humans and try to discredit the claims of health issues of the WTC workers. It is such a shame considering the truely wonderful work that those men and women did that day and continue to do today.
goose June 30th, 2008 03:49:00 PM
Do you have any theories about why humans would be more susceptible to respiratory effects than dogs? Some physiological difference? I guess I would have thought it might have been the other way around given the way that dogs use their noses! But perhaps humans are in general more susceptible to respiratory diseases.
Arlene June 30th, 2008 05:21:00 PM
I wonder if the search dogs, having humans who forced them to stop working when they noticed it was time to take a break and have rest and food -- had a more healthy difference in that most of the people kept pushing themselves even more past exhaustion, becoming more physically vulnerable to disease, doing even more work than any person could allow a search dog to do... not wanting to mistreat the dogs. It has to be stressful, some of the searchers there knew some of the people they were looking for and had the added stress of, "if I stop looking now, maybe someone else will die because no one was able to get to them in time"...
rose June 30th, 2008 11:36:00 PM
Funny timing, but this article was on Yahoo news today. One of the rescue dogs is going to be cloned and he suffers from a neurological disorder that they claimed may be linked to the WTC site.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20080701/sc_afp/usatta...
goose July 1st, 2008 05:15:00 PM
Thanks, Goose. I wish the article had more info on the disease he's suffering. The paper in JAVMA only dealt with dogs that lived in the New York City area. Other S&R dogs were left out because they were not so easy to keep tabs on. Also because the NYC dogs were the ones with the most exposure to the potential toxins--they were on site longest.
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