Grenfell survivors want 'intensive testing' as blaze firefighters start to die

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Grenfell Tower in West London the morning after it was destroyed by a fire in 2017 (Image: Daily Mirror)
Grenfell Tower in West London the morning after it was destroyed by a fire in 2017 (Image: Daily Mirror)

Grenfell Tower survivors have been told their health monitoring will be reviewed after we revealed firefighters who attended the blaze were dying.

But locals still haunted by the 2017 disaster told The Mirror they want intensive tests so they can stop “living in fear” of deadly diseases from Grenfell’s toxins.

Nina Mendy, 42, told how her mum Clarrie Mendy, 61, died in 2020 of motor neurone disease, which she believes was linked.

She said: “My mum died of a terrible illness and we spoke to professionals who agreed that it was caused by the fire.

"We need toxicology tests, blood tests, hair strand tests. Just looking at the data is pointless, some diseases don’t appear for years.”

Surprising symptom that 40% of women suffer weeks before a heart attack qhiquqiqetikeinvSurprising symptom that 40% of women suffer weeks before a heart attack

Recently we revealed how up to a dozen hero firefighters at the tower block in West London, had been diagnosed with terminal cancers after being exposed to contaminants.

Grenfell survivors want 'intensive testing' as blaze firefighters start to dieNina Mendy at home in North London holding a memorial candle in memory of her mother Clarrie Mendy who recently passed away (David Dyson)

In the US, more than 60 types of cancer and about two dozen other conditions related to the 9/11 terror attacks have been identified.

It was discovered about 500,000 people breathed in toxins for months near Ground Zero.

NHS North West London Integrated Care Board said their data so far had not identified “any evidence of increases in cancers”.

They told us: “We recognise why the community are so worried and we are keen to work alongside them to address their very real concerns.”

Grenfell survivors want 'intensive testing' as blaze firefighters start to dieJoe Delaney, a local Kensington resident who was evacuated from his home during the June 14 Grenfell Tower fire disaster, speaks as he leaves after attending the opening statements of the Inquiry into the Grenfell Tower fire (AFP via Getty Images)

But Joe Delaney, 42, who lived in a building that was evacuated opposite Grenfell, said: “There is nothing that has been promised that wasn’t promised to us first in 2018, then 2019 and now in 2023.

“I don’t think anyone’s health has been monitored around here.”

Lucy Thornton

Grenfell Tower fire, Motor neurone disease, Terror attacks, Heart disease, Joe Delaney, 9-11 attacks

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