Chapter 15 Environmental Health, Pollution and Toxicology.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
CH 11 RISK, TOXICOLOGY and HUMAN HEALTH 21.1 What is Risk? Probability that _______ A.Diff b/n risk assesment and risk managemnt 1.Risk assesment-__ 2.Risk.
Advertisements

By: Brian Oldakowski Shane DeStefano Jeff Schmidt & Dustin Schneider
Paracelsus “The dose makes the poison ”. MSDS Environmental Hazards and Human Health Chapter 17.
1 ESC110 Chapter Eight: Environmental Health and Toxicology Principles of Environmental Science - Inquiry and Applications, 2nd Edition by William and.
Lesson 8: Environmental Health, Pollution, and Toxicology Big Question: Why Are Even Tiny Amounts of Pollutants a Major Concern?
Environmental Effects on Health Pollution causes illnesses directly and indirectly. Pollution may cause illness by poisoning us directly, as in the cases.
Chapter 17 Human Health and Environmental Risks. Three categories of human health risks physical biological chemical.
Environmental Health, Risk, Pollution and Toxicology
Environmental Hazards, Risk, & Human Health. Leading Causes of Mortality.
Chapter 15: Environmental Health, Pollution and Toxicology.
APES Get out Ecological Footprint Assignment. Chapter 17 Environmental Hazards & Human Health.
Chapter 17 Human Health and Environmental Risks
Risk, Toxicology, and Human Health
1 Chapter 8: Environmental Health and Toxicology Hong Kong residents concerned about SARS Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required.
Chapter 17 Human Health and Environmental Risks. What is Risk? Risk: possibility of suffering harm from a hazard.
What risks do these pollutants pose to us? To determine this we need to understand the following.
Human Health, Pollution and Toxicology
Chapter 15: Environmental Health, Pollution and Toxicology
Chapter 7 Human Health and Environmental Toxicology
Key Concepts  Types of hazards people face  Methods of toxicology  Types and measurement of chemical hazards  Types and effects of biological hazards.
Bioaccumulation and Biomagnification. Bioaccumulation This is the way materials become concentrated in the tissues of a living organism. Biomagnification.
Chapter 15 & 16 Lecture Risks and Pests. Hazard vs. Risk Hazard Anything that causes: 1.Injury, disease, or death to humans 2.Damage to property 3.Destruction.
Chapter 15 Environmental Health, Pollution and Toxicology.
Environmental Hazards & Human Health
Environmental Hazards and Human Health Chapter 17.
Health Hazards Instructional Goal
Human Health and Environmental Risks
Chapter 15: How the Environment Affects our Health.
Pollution and Human Health
Chapter 15: Environmental Health, Pollution and Toxicology.
Chapter 17 Hazards and Risks. Questions for Today What is Risk and how do we handle Risk? What is a Hazard? What is Toxicology? What affects Toxicity?
Chapter 17 Human Health and Environmental Risks. Three categories of human health risks physical biological chemical.
Environmental Health and Toxicology
Chapter 15.3 Risk Assessment 2002 WHO report: “Focusing on risks to health is the key to preventing disease and injury.” risk assessment—process of evaluating.
Chapter 17 Environmental Hazards & Human Health
Environmental Health, Pollution, and Toxicology
Environmental Health, Pollution and Toxicology Unit 5: AP Environmental Science (Chapter 15)
Toxicology Toxicology—measure of how armful a substance is – Potential harm is dependent on Dosage Bioaccumulation—some molecules are absorbed & stored.
Chapter 15 Environmental Health, Pollution, and Toxicology.
USING SCIENCE TO ADDRESS ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEMS Chapter 2.
Chapter 4 Human Health and Environmental Hazards.
Environmental Hazards and Human Health. Are Baby Bottles & Food Cans Safe To Use? 1.Some synthetic chemicals act as hormone mimics and disrupt the human.
Chapter 17 Human Health and Environmental Risks. Three categories of human health risks physical biological chemical.
Chapter 15: Environmental Health, Pollution and Toxicology.
Human Health and Environmental Toxicology Chapter 7.
Chapter 17 Human Health and Environmental Risks.  Key Ideas  Three major categories of human health risk: – physical – biological – chemical  Historical.
Chapter 17 Human Health and Environmental Risks
Chapter 17 Human Health and Environmental Risks
Chapter 15 & 16 Lecture Risks and Pests
Environmental Health, Pollution and Toxicology
THE DOSE MAKES THE POISON
Chapter 17 Human Health and Environmental Risks
APES 4/10 1. Unit 11B Notes 2. Introduce Risk Lab- pick groups 3
Environmental Toxicology
Three categories of human health risks
Chapter 17 Human Health and Environmental Risks
Chapter 17 Human Health and Environmental Risks
Chapter 17 Human Health and Environmental Risks
Chapter 17 Human Health and Environmental Risks
Module 57 Toxicology and Chemical Risks
Risk, Toxicology, and Human Health
Risk, Toxicology, and Human Health Chapter 11
Topic 4: How Much is Too Much?
Risk, Toxicology, and Human Health
Chapter 17 Human Health and Environmental Risks
Apes Ch 11 Risk, Toxicology, and Human Healthy
Risk, Toxicology, and Human Health
Environmental Health, Pollution and Toxicology
Chapter 17 Human Health and Environmental Risks
Chapter 17 Human Health and Environmental Risks
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 15 Environmental Health, Pollution and Toxicology

Terminology Pollution: introduces harmful materials or produces harmful conditions to the environment - introduced through a) Point Sources: b) Area Sources: c) Mobile Sources: Contamination: making something unfit for a particular use through the introduction of desirable material Toxicology: the science that studies chemicals that should be toxic Carcinogen: a type of toxin that increases the risk of cancer Synergism: the interaction of different substances resulting in a total effect greater than the sum of the effects of the separate sources

Measuring Pollutants Measuring depends on the substance Common Units –ppm: Parts per million –ppb: Parts per billion –Micrograms per cubicle meter (measures air)

Categories of Pollutants Infectious Agents Toxic Heavy Metals Organic Compounds Radiation Thermal Pollution Particulates Asbestos Electromagnetic Fields Noise Pollution Voluntary Exposure

Toxic Heavy Metals Travel through toxic pathways Biomagnifications: the accumulation or increase in concentration of a substance in living tissue as it moves through a food web.

Organic Compounds Organic Compounds: composed of carbon Synthetic Organic Compounds: used in industrial processes Persistent Organic Pollutants: Synthetic organic compounds often containing chlorine, that do not easily break down in the environment. Hormonally Active Agents: Chemicals in the environment able to cause reproductive and developmental abnormalities in animals

General Effects of Pollutants - Changes in Abundance - Changes in Distribution - Changes in Birth Rates - Changes in Death Rates - Changes in Growth Rates

Concept of Dose and Response The effect of a certain chemical on an individual depends on the does Individuals differ in their response to chemicals Dose-Response Curve: - LD-50 - ED-50 - TD-50 Threshold Effects: - the level below which effects are not observable and above which effects become apparent

Ecological Gradients Changes in vegetation with distance from a toxic source Tolerance: The ability to resist or withstand stress resulting from exposure to a pollutant or harmful condition - Behavior vs. Physiological Acute and Chronic Effects

Risk Assessment 4 steps 1. Identification of the hazard 2. Dose-Response assessment 3. Exposure assessment 4. Risk characterization

Precautionary Principle The idea that in spit of the fact that full scientific certainty is often not available to prove cause and effect, we should still take cost-effective precautions to solve environmental problems where there exists a threat of potentially serious and/ or irreversible environmental damage