SODIUM
AZIDE, COFFEE - USA:
(MASSACHUSETTS)
*******************************************
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[1]
Da
te: Sun 25 Oct 2009
Source: Boston Herald [edited]
<http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1207102
>
Poisoning at Harvard: 6 lab workers sickened by
coffee
------------------------------------------------------
Harvar
d University Medical School is locking down its New
Research
Building, installing new surveillance cameras and
imposing tighter
security after researchers in the pathology
department of the Boston
building drank poisoned coffee and
were hospitalized.
The 6 victims -- a group of scientists and
students at Harvard
Medical School -- used a communal,
single-serve coffee machine on the
8th floor near their
pathology lab 26 Aug 2009, according to an
internal memo.
Seconds later all 6 reported symptoms such as
dizziness and low
blood pressure. One victim's ears were ringing and
another
passed out.
All 6 were taken to Beth Israel Deaconess Medical
Center, where they
were treated and released. One was held
overnight for observation.
The coffee maker was removed for
testing, a Harvard spokesman told
the Herald.
Harvard
University Police, as well as Boston police and fire
units,
responded to the poisoning, and immediate testing by
hazardous
material crews found no traces of poison. But a later
test revealed
that the presence of sodium azide, a common
preservative used in
labs, is what sickened the researchers, an
internal Harvard memo
released Friday [23 Oct 2009]
reads.
Sodium azide is listed as a 'potentially deadly chemical
that exists
as an odorless white solid' by the federal
government.
"While we do not yet know how the incident occurred,
we have recently
learned that sodium azide ... was present in
the coffee consumed by
the 6 employees," the Friday memo [23
Oct 2009] reads. "As the
investigation continues, we are being
prudent and taking additional
precautionary measures to ensure
the well-being of our community."
One of the victims, contacted
and their identity confirmed by the
Herald, said they were told
by the university not to speak about the
incident. Privately,
however, they said they do not feel it was an
accident, though
they could not say why someone would target
that
group.
The researchers all work in the Harvard
Medical School's pathology
department using mice to investigate
how diseases interact with the
immune system.
Harvard
spokesman David Cameron refused to discuss the poisoning,
but
said no student or employee has been disciplined. The
Suffolk
District Attorney's Office said it was not aware of the
incident, and
the Boston Police Department is not
investigating.
According to the internal memo, the investigation
includes the
federal Occupational Safety and Health
Administration as well as the
Boston Public Health Commission.
The Health Commission told the
Herald they were called by
Harvard to discuss best practices and
policy looking
ahead.
The memo, written by Daniel G Ennis, executive dean
for
administration, and Richard M Shea, associate dean for
physical
planning and facilities, does not say whether the
poisoning was
accidental or intentional. But the university
drafted a tough new
security plan to make sure it doesn't
happen again.
"We are in the process of installing additional
security cameras
throughout our buildings, and we are
strengthening the security
systems that manage access to the
laboratories during both normal
business hours and off hours,"
the memo states.
[Byline: Adam Smith, O'Ryan
Johnson]
--
Communicated by:
Greg Koblentz
<gkoblentz**At_Symbol_Here**gmail.com>
***
***
[2]
Date: Sun 25 Oct 2009
Source: TheBostonChannel.com [edite
d]
<http://
www.thebostonchannel.com/news/21421216/detail.html>
Harv
ard tightening security after 6
poisoned
--------------------------------------------
Harvard
University Medical School will increase security and
install
new video cameras at its laboratories this week [week
of 26 Oct 2009]
as police work to determine whether 6 people
were intentionally
poisoned at a research building.
The
scientists and students fell ill on 26 Aug 2009 after consuming
a
potentially lethal chemical that was present in their
coffee,
according to an internal memo sent to medical school
students on
Friday [23 Oct 2009].
All 6 people had used
a single-serve coffee machine near their
pathology lab at
Harvard's New Research Building to prepare the
coffee, and all
later reported dizziness and low blood pressure.
Testing
revealed the presence of sodium azide, a common
preservative,
in the coffee, the memo said. Sodium azide is an
odorless white
solid, according to the Centers for Disease
Control.
One person became unconscious. All 6 were taken to Beth
Israel
Deaconess Medical Center for treatment. None suffered
long-term
consequences from the poisoning. The university said
it does not know
if the poisoning was deliberate or accidental.
"While we do not yet
know how the incident occurred, we have
recently learned that sodium
azide ... was present in the
coffee consumed by the 6 employees," the
memo
reads.
Many workers and students who frequent the building said
they had not
yet heard about the incident. "I'm actually kind
of surprised," one
said.
Swallowing the chemical can
cause rapid breathing, dizziness, and
nausea, according to the
CDC.
The federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration
and the
Boston Public Health Commission are
investigating.
"We are in the process of installing additional
security cameras
throughout our buildings, and we are
strengthening the security
systems that manage access to the
laboratories during both normal
business hours and off hours,"
the Harvard memo said.
--
Communicated
by:
ProMED-mail
<promed**At_Symbol_Here**promedmail.org>
[Sodium azide is a rapidly acting, potentially deadly chemical
that
exists as an odorless white solid. When it is mixed with
water or an
acid, sodium azide changes rapidly to a toxic gas
with a pungent
(sharp) odor. It also changes into a toxic gas
when it comes in
contact with solid metals (for example, when
it is poured into a
drain pipe containing lead or copper). The
odor of the gas may not be
sharp enough, however, to give
people sufficient warning of the
danger.
Sodium azide is
best known as the chemical found in automobile
airbags. An
electrical charge triggered by automobile impact causes
sodium
azide to explode and release nitrogen gas inside the
airbag.
Sodium azide is used as a chemical preservative in
hospitals and
laboratories. Accidents have occurred in these
settings. In one case,
sodium azide was poured into a drain,
where it exploded and the toxic
gas was inhaled.
Sodium
azide is used in agriculture (farming) for pest control. It
is
also used in detonators and other
explosives.
Following release of sodium azide into water,
exposure could occur
through drinking the contaminated water or
by ingestion of
contaminate food. Inhalation exposure may occur
through dust or gas.
Contact with skin will also cause
symptoms. People exposed to a small
amount of sodium azide by
inhalation, absorption, or consumption may
have some or all of
the following symptoms within minutes: rapid
breathing,
restlessness, dizziness, weakness, headache, nausea
and
vomiting, rapid heart rate, red eyes (gas or dust
exposure), clear
drainage from the nose (gas or dust exposure),
cough (gas or dust
exposure), skin burns and blisters
(explosion or direct skin
contact). Exposure to a large amount
of sodium azide by any route may
cause these other health
effects as well: convulsions, low blood
pressure, slow heart
rate, loss of consciousness, lung injury, and
respiratory
failure leading to death. Showing these signs and
symptoms does
not necessarily mean that a person has been exposed to
sodium
azide as other conditions and diseases can produce the
same
clinical signs and symptoms. Survivors of serious sodium
azide
poisoning may have heart and brain damage.
What is
more intriguing is that the University successfully kept a
lid
on this exposure on 26 Aug 2009 until now (25 Oct 2009).
While
their caution is to be appreciated, as well as the
respect for the
victims, this same incident could have/may
have/ occurred at other
institutions and they should be aware
of such incidents. There are
communication channels between the
various universities in the
nation, but there may have been
other institutions other than
universities that were not aware
of the incident and should have been.
It would be extremely
unusual for this product to be in only one
coffee pot or
container of coffee if it were not an
intentional
incident.
Portions of this comment have been
extracted from
<http://w
ww.bt.cdc.gov/agent/sodiumazide/basics/facts.asp> -
Mod.TG]
[The New England state of Massachusetts can be located on
the
HealthMap/ProMED-mail interactive map of the US
at
<http://healthmap.org/r/00XE>.
-
Sr.Tech.Ed.MJ]
...................................sb/tg/mj/lm
*#
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