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Trump ousts Kristi Noem from DHS; Rural CA community colleges deploy AI to keep students on track; Algae-powered concrete earns University of Miami project top prize; As Ukraine war lingers, ND sponsors press for speedy work approvals.

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Kristi Noem is fired from her position as Homeland Security Secretary, but moves to a new and unclear role. The Senate Majority Leader blames Democrats for the ongoing DHS shutdown and the House fails to advance a war powers resolution for Iran.

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Advocates for those with disabilities in Idaho and nationwide are alarmed by proposed Medicaid cuts, programs that provide virtual crisis care are making inroads in rural South Dakota and Wyoming, and the mighty bison returns to Texas.

Coughing, Headaches, Fatigue, Earthquakes: Is Fracking to Blame?

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Monday, December 17, 2012   

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. - As hydraulic fracturing or "fracking" spreads throughout the nation, so do questions about its affects on health. The process involves using water and sand mixed with chemicals to fracture shale formations and unlock reservoirs of oil and gas.

The president of the Greene County, Ohio, Medical Association, Dr. Deborah Cowden, says throughout the fracking process, hazardous air emissions are released from multiple sources. They can cause respiratory problems, blood disorders and neurological symptoms, she explains.

"That can includes headache, horrible fatigue, people fainting. Fainting is a huge issue - it means your brain has shut down because of the level of toxicity that is hitting it. You can get convulsions. You can get temporary limb paralysis."

Cowden cites a study from the Colorado School of Public Health that found air pollution caused by fracking may contribute to acute and chronic health problems for those living near natural-gas drilling sites.

Information from two new studies presented in early December at the annual meeting of the American Geophysical Union tie a recent increase in earthquakes in the midcontinent region of the United States to reinjection of wastewater fluids from unconventional oil and gas drilling. One of those studies, by a U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) team, concludes that in the Raton Basin of southern Colorado and northern New Mexico, the majority of the earthquakes since August 2001 were triggered by fracking.

The Colorado study is available at ScienceDirect.



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