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Bacteria, parasites are making people sick in Cahokia Heights. Its sewers may be the cause

Raw sewage flows out of a pipe in Cahokia Heights.
Derik Holtmann
/
Belleville News-Democrat
What appears to be raw sewage and storm water are being pumped out of a pipe in the 200 block of North 82nd Street in Cahokia Heights, formerly Centreville, in February 2020. Neighbors complain about the stench when the temperatures are warm. Tampons, toilet paper and other items can be seen in the water and on the ground near the pipe.

Editor's note: This story was originally published in the .

Cahokia Heights residents are being exposed to bacteria and parasites possibly spreading because of chronic in their community, preliminary findings from an ongoing health study showed.

It has made some people sick, and researchers want to expand their study to get a better understanding of the potential scope.

鈥淪ewage backups are a big risk factor for these infections to spread,鈥 said Washington University professor Theresa Gildner.

Gildner and Tara Cepon-Robins from University of Colorado are conducting the study, with analysis help from a Washington University microbiologist.

They collected stool samples from 42 adults as well as 28 soil samples in Cahokia Heights last summer.

One of their major preliminary findings is that over 40% of the adults sampled tested positive for Helicobacter pylori, or H. pylori, infection.

that is thought to spread through contact with feces or contaminated food or water. It infects the stomach lining. In severe infections, it can cause ulcers.

Gildner said some recent research also linked long-term H. pylori infection to a possible higher risk of developing gastric cancers.

The percentage from the small sample of people in Cahokia Heights is higher than the estimated national average for H. pylori infection, which is about 30%.

Gildner discussed the preliminary findings with residents at the Cahokia Public Library on Saturday. Former Cahokia Heights resident Carolyn Taggart said the conversation with Gildner led her to think differently about her own health history.

Doctors diagnosed her with H. pylori in the mid-90s when she lived in Cahokia Heights, but she didn鈥檛 consider until Saturday that could have caused her illness.

鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know where it came from,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey didn鈥檛 tell me where it came from. They just gave me medicine.鈥

Failing infrastructure in Cahokia Heights has caused raw sewage to back up in homes, yards and streets for decades.

Officials have been working to find funding for repairs since media coverage and lawsuits starting in 2020 drew more attention to the issue. by the end of the year with some of the money they received.

Taggart and her husband Maurice lived in Piat Place in the former city of Centreville, one of two neighborhoods where most residents have had sewage backups and flooding. They moved out in 2003 because of the infrastructure issues. Centreville consolidated into Cahokia Heights two years ago.

鈥淚t鈥檚 shocking to hear this now after all these years,鈥 Maurice Taggart said.

Carolyn and Maurice Taggart said they still own and maintain their Cahokia Heights home, and a relative lives there now.

They are plaintiffs in a that was filed against the city of Cahokia Heights and the government agencies that operated its sewage and levee systems.

The sun shines on sheets of plywood blocking resident Earlie Fuse鈥檚 exposed basement on Monday, Aug. 22, 2022, in Cahokia Heights. Infrastructure issues in the former city of Centreville have caused countless homes sewer lines to back-up and flood. In Fuse鈥檚 case, the water has caused his home鈥檚 foundation to crack and multiple basement walls to crumble.
Brian Munoz
/
漏 2024 外网天堂
The sun shines on sheets of plywood blocking resident Earlie Fuse鈥檚 exposed basement on August 2022 in Cahokia Heights. Infrastructure issues in the former city of Centreville have caused countless homes sewer lines to back-up and flood. In Fuse鈥檚 case, the water has caused his home鈥檚 foundation to crack and multiple basement walls to crumble.

Infections usually in poor communities with failing infrastructure

Some people think of bacterial and parasitic infections as a problem in other countries but not in the United States, according to Gildner. She said research on infections within the U.S. dwindled after the 1980s, especially for parasites. It鈥檚 one of the reasons they鈥檙e studying it now.

鈥淭here鈥檚 kind of a perception in the U.S. that we鈥檙e a very wealthy country, we don鈥檛 have these issues like you see in other parts of the world 鈥 even though we have in the past and there鈥檚 not really evidence it went away,鈥 Gildner said.

Cahokia Heights resident Yvette Lyles said she was hospitalized for 10 days because of an infection about five years ago. Doctors asked her about international travel after they discovered she had H. pylori.

鈥淭hey asked me, 鈥楬ad I traveled abroad?鈥 I said, 鈥楴o, I was at home,鈥欌 Lyles said.

She said her son and four or five of her neighbors have also had H. pylori. She lives across the street from the Taggarts鈥 Cahokia Heights home in Piat Place, and she is also a plaintiff in the federal lawsuit.

U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-IL), center in dark blue, and Radhika Fox, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency鈥檚 Assistant Administrator for Water, right, and other state and federal officials survey damage from historic water infrastructure issues on Monday, Aug. 22, 2022, in Cahokia Heights.
Brian Munoz
/
漏 2024 外网天堂
U.S. Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-IL), center in dark blue, and Radhika Fox, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency鈥檚 Assistant Administrator for Water, right, and other state and federal officials survey damage from historic water infrastructure issues on August 2022 in Cahokia Heights.

Despite perceptions, Gildner said bacterial and parasitic infections are usually found in communities with low-income residents who might lack access to resources like nutritious food, health care, a functioning sewage system or clean water.

Another major, early finding from the health study is that the adults sampled in Cahokia Heights had much higher levels of intestinal inflammation than Gildner said she has seen in other parts of the world, including Ecuador where she tested children from an indigenous group.

More severe bacterial or parasitic infections can cause a lot of inflammation, according to Gildner.

Almost a quarter of the adults sampled in Cahokia Heights had high levels of intestinal inflammation and 40% had moderate inflammation.

鈥淭hat was quite striking,鈥 Gildner said.

Beyond H. pylori infections and intestinal inflammation, researchers found the presence of harmful parasites in the soil they collected last year in Cahokia Heights from schools, parks and places where they thought sewage might have flooded. They didn鈥檛 release the specific locations.

Gildner said the most concerning finding was an that can cause necrosis or severe skin and eye infections. It was found in a soil sample collected from a playground.

The most common was the microscopic , which can cause nausea, vomiting, fever or muscle pain. It was found in over 80% of soil samples, as well as about 5% of stool samples from study participants.

Platyhelminthes, or parasitic worms, were also found in two of the soil samples.

Gildner said parasites can generally cause nutritional deficiencies. In children, they can cause growth delays. People with severe infections can also experience more serious symptoms like intestinal blockages or organ failure, but it鈥檚 rare, according to Gildner.

At the Cahokia Public Library on Saturday, Maurice Taggart asked Gildner what the community could do about the bacteria and parasites the researchers found.

鈥淗ow do you get rid of it?鈥 he said. 鈥淚 mean, what do you do?鈥

In the short term, Gildner said they want to alert people to any infections they might have so they can get treatment.

Long-term, they鈥檙e trying to raise awareness of the issue because it鈥檚 going to take structural fixes, according to Gildner.

Lexi Cortes is an investigative reporter with the Belleville News-Democrat, a news partner of 漏 2024 外网天堂.