| Pulse Oximeters and Spirometers Used in Appalachian Health Surveys |
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| Student Volunteers Organize for Appalachian Health Surveys |
Alex Garrish volunteered for this unconventional spring break from Samford University in Alabama. She was astonished at what the devices revealed. "To see some of the numbers, the age of people's lungs and their pulse rates and their oxygen levels, to see how their health has been affected negatively...later on the data can be used to show the ways people are suffering in quantifiable ways."
Tessa Davis came from Anderson University in Indiana. "There was a time when we were interviewing a coal miner and he had soot all over his face. And I see his face. And I just thought it was surreal seeing it all over him...and just writing down some of the ways his own health was affected and some of those who live in his house were affected, it was kind of heartbreaking in a way because we see the physicality of it all. It's so real and so I think that was pretty shocking for me."
Wesley Rieth had traveled from Hope College in Michigan. As a student of both political science and environmental studies, he's also interested in how people's lives are affected. "I think this is really important work, from a policy standpoint, from an economic standpoint, down to the level that we're looking at which is impacting people's livelihood and their health."
Sarah Yonts from Carson-Newman University in Tennessee shared, "what this trip means is really a hope for the community."
The student volunteers worked in small groups, traveling from house to house, sometimes stopping to pray for those whose lives they'd touched for just a short while. Sometimes, the reality of why they'd been called to this unusual mission work hit too close. Some students related that in revisiting houses to conduct more surveys, they were told that a toddler who'd struggled his whole life with a heart problem, had recently died.
| Mountaintop Removal Mining near Black Mountain in Virginia |
Christians for the Mountains spokesman Rev. Robert Sage Phillip Russo has been advocating for coalfield residents for several years. While scientists crunch the numbers that come in from health surveys, Russo stresses that there's long been a pattern of people getting sicker and sicker in areas near mountaintop removal mining. "We've heard it said that it's okay for an area to be a sacrifice zone for the nation's energy. We say it's not okay for the land to be used as a sacrifice zone and it's not okay for people to be used as sacrifice for the nation's energy. We've got to care for them as whole people." Russo say faith motivates him to want to help. "We really hope that people would be recognized for who they are that live here. That people in Congress and industry say, 'oh, there's people here and these are the effects.'"

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