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HEALTH DIRECTORY:
Fluoride Linked to Death
DIRECTORY: FAN
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Accidents
> Annapolis, Maryland 1979
EVENING CAPITAL (Annapolis, Maryland)
November 29, 1979
Fluoride Linked to Death
by Mary Ann Kryzankowicz
Staff Writer
Fluoride poisoning has been definitely linked to the death of a
65-year-old kidney dialysis patient who became ill during a blood
cleaning process Nov 11.
State Medical Examiner Dr. (illegible) Guard has ruled that Lawrence
Blake, 65, of Arundel Road, suffered a toxic reaction leading to
cardiac arrest. Excessive levels of fluoride were found in Blake's
body during an autopsy.
Blake was one of eight patients who became ill during the renal
dialysis process at the Bio-medical Applications Inc. center on
Forest Drive Nov. 13.
In addition, state health department authorities said at a press
conference to Baltimore yesterday that tests conducted on the other
seven patients also showed high levels of fluoride in their bodies.
One of the seven surviving patients, Donald Konrad of Pasadena,
is in stable condition at Johns Hopkins University today. Another
of the patients who suffered minor symptoms during the dialysis
treatment, is at Arundel General Hospital where he is being treated
for an unrelated medical problem.
State authorities said yesterday that the accidental spill of 1,000
gallons of fluoride into the city's drinking water supply probably
would have gone undetected if the kidney patients had not become
ill.
The effects of the fluoride overdose is unprecedented because spills
have never occurred in a city where a dialysis center is located.
The spill occurred Nov. 11 when a worker at the city's water filtration
plant inadvertently left a central valve open for 11 hours, allowing
10 times the normal amount of fluoride to escape into the water
supply. The accident was discovered Nov. 12 but state authorities
were not notified.
When public works personnel first noticed an increase in the acid
level of the water after the spill, lime was dumped into the system
to neutralize the water as proscribed by normal procedures.
Public Works Director Joseph Axelrod said the lime was introduced
to combat the high acidic levels caused by the high amounts of fluoride
while the plant personnel were tracking down the cause of the problem.
However, he said, none of the lime escapes into the drinking water.
It settles in storage tanks, he said, and is eventually removed
with other sediment.
If the lime, which Thomas Crabtree, the plant superintendent, said
did return the water to a more neutral state, had escaped into the
drinking water, it would have presented no dangers to residents,
health department officials said.
Axelrod and Crabtree were unable to say how much lime was put into
the water.
Under the federal Safe Drinking Water Act, the health department
must be notified within 48 hours of any incident that...
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EVENING CAPITAL (Annapolis, Maryland)
October 30, 1982
City sued in fluoride spill
by Mary Ann Kryzanowicz
Staff Writer
A $480-million lawsuit has been filed against the City of Annapolis,
three water treatment plant employees and the designers of a fluoridation
system blamed for the November 1979 poisonings of kidney dialysis
patients.
The lawsuit is believed to be the largest claim ever filed against
the city.
Donald C. Konrad, allegedly brain-damaged after receiving a dialysis
treatment with fluoride contaminated water, and his wife Jacquelyn,
of 218 Atlanta Road, Riviera Beach, are seeking damages from the
mayor and aldermen, water treatment plant employee Robert Moccia,
supervisor Thomas Crabtree, and former Deputy Public Works Engineer
John Eick; and seven persons from Whitman Requardt and Associates,
the Baltimore firm that designed and approved plans for the fluoridation
system.
The lawsuit contains 32 separate counts, seeking $60 million from
each of the employees, $90 million from Whitman Requardt, and $210
million from the mayor and aldermen.
City attorney Frederick Sussman said the lawsuit was not a surprise
to city officials, although they have not yet received copies of
the lawsuit.
"I'm not surprised," Sussman said. "We've been waiting
for it. As far as the amount is concerned, anybody can sue for anything.
It doesn't mean they'll get it."
The Konrad's lawyer, Joel L. Katz, had notified the city in December
1979 that the couple would file a lawsuit. Litigants are required
to notify municipalities within 180 days of the incident that they
intend to sue, but the actual lawsuit can be filed at any time within
the statute of limitations.
The statute of limitations for fluoride-related claims expires
Nov. 11. Sussman said no other claims are expected.
He said the lawsuit will be forwarded to the city's insurance carrier
attorneys.
The city will go to court in April on a $1.5 million claim filed
by the widow of Lawrence Blake, an elderly dialysis patient who
died as a result of fluoride poisoning.
About 1,000 gallons of fluoride enterred the city's water supply
when Moccia inadvertently left open a control valve. He was demoted
after the incident, and Crabtree and Eick took payroll reductions
for allegedly failing to notify authorities of the spill.
The Konrads claim in the lawsuit that the defendants discovered
the high concentration of fluoride but failed to take "corrective
action" or warn superiors and consumers that the city water
supply was contaminated.
The lawsuit claims Eick knew of the spill on Nov. 13, but did not
notify his superiors until Nov. 21.
Eight patients receiving blood-cleansing treatments at Bio-Medical
Applications on Forest Drive became ill during the treatments Nov.
13. Konrad suffered "cardiac arrest, fluoride poisoning, brain
damage and other serious, painful and permanent injuries,"
the lawsuit states.
The Konrads claim the city "carelessly, recklessly and negligently
employed Moccia, Crabtree and Eick (knowing) they lacked the background,
training, experience and judgment to perform the duties and functions
for which they were employeed... in an emergency situation..."
They also charge the city failed to properly train and supervise
the employees.
The lawsuit also claims the city violated implied warranties that
the water supply was safe and fit for consumption.
The Konrads also charge that the city and its water treatment plant
employees were liable for actions constituting "an offensive,
unhealthy, hazardous and dangerous nuisance that persisted over
the course of several days..."
Whitman Requardt and Associates, a Baltimore engineering firm and
seven employees are named as defendants in the lawsuit because they
"designed, prepared, developed, analyzed, recommended and approved
designs... for construction work and/or improvements and modifications
to the plant." The firm and the individuals are charged in
the lawsuit with negligence in designing and approving a system
that permitted treated water to enter the city supply "without
any method or means of testing or determining whether the water
(in recycling tanks) contained impurities, contaminants or other
hazardous and dangerous substances."
The lawsuit charges the engineering firm "failed to perform
the work according to sound engineering principles and with reasonable
care, skill and diligence..." The Konrads claim the firm also
failed to meet the terms of an agreement for "correcting and
abating an existing unhealthy and unsanitary pollution conditions
resulting from the drainage of backwash water into a natural creek
that threatened the health and welfare of the public."
The city also is charged in the lawsuit with failing to adopt policies
and procedures for notifying the public of the danger due to water
contamination or other incidents that pose a health hazard.
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