Untitled Document
A 41-year-old paramedic who worked at a morgue for months after the
Sept. 11, 2001, attack on the World Trade Center was buried Monday after dying
of an asbestos-related cancer.
Deborah Reeve, a 17-year paramedic, died on March 15 of mesothelioma, a lung
cancer associated with exposure to asbestos, her family said. Reeve developed
a cough in late 2003 and retired at the end of 2004 after becoming too ill to
work.
Her doctors and family say her cancer was caused by exposure to toxic dust
from the World Trade Center site. City health officials say it's too early to
definitively link trade center exposure to respiratory illnesses.
A pending lawsuit alleges more than 20 deaths have been linked to ground zero
exposure.
Reeve is survived by her husband, also a paramedic, a 10-year-old daughter
and a 6-year-old son.