We're about to find out if Mississippi hurricane victims have been living through a toxic crisis. On Thursday, FEMA and the Centers For Disease Control announced plans to test the air quality in 500 ...
NEW ORLEANS – The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention should have reacted sooner to concerns about hazardous fumes in government-issued trailers housing thousands of Gulf Coast hurricane ...
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) posted on Wednesday two reports from its work related to assessing the levels of formaldehyde in the indoor air of travel trailers used by the ...
In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, FEMA provided either mobile homes or travel trailers to displaced Gulf Coast residents who had lost their homes. Residents of these units have raised concerns ...
As CBS News first reported last spring, FEMA has been under heavy fire for failing to acknowledge then adequately address health problems like respiratory illness associated with the toxic chemical ...
There's no way around this: Ebola is scary. Ebola fears are sweeping the nation triggering moon suits, press conferences and a good amount of worry. So when a group of five CDC trailers suddenly ...
A federal scientist said Tuesday his bosses ignored pleas to alert Gulf Coast hurricane victims earlier about severe health risks from formaldehyde in government-issued trailers and once told him not ...
Recent tests of 519 trailers and mobile homes in Louisiana and Mississippi showed an average of about five times the level of formaldehyde found inside most modern homes, the Centers for Disease ...
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