Our Stake in Promoting Healthy Environments Where Children Live, Learn and Play Maryann Suero, PhD US Environmental Protection Agency Region 5 (IL, IN, MI, MN, OH, WI) Disclaimer: Information provided here does not necessarily reflect the views and policies of the USEPA. Mention of trade names or commercial products or the inclusion of web links to non-USEPA sites does not constitute USEPA endorsement or recommendation.
What do you think about when you hear the word “Environment?”
Did Your View of “Environment” Include a Person? 1.Yes 2.No
Environment????
Environment!!!!!
Our Environment OutdoorIndoor 10% 90% Opportunity
Objectives: To learn about How and why children are more susceptible to environmental exposures than adults Why individuals / institutions should take steps to protect children from environmental hazards
PUTTING THINGS INTO CONTEXT
What’s the difference? ToxicityExposure How bad? How much? RISK TIMING Susceptibility Lifestage
Safe Unsafe
Safe Unsafe
A Child’s Environment Is All Around Them Eating Drinking Breathing Touching
Children Are Not Little Adults Children’s Increased Vulnerability Windows of Vulnerability in Development Differences in Behaviors Differences in Physiology
Exposure Differences : Physiology Increased Exposures Relative to Adults Pound for pound, kids breathe more air than adults drink more water than adults eat more food than adults have increased surface area to body mass ratio relative to adults May also have different metabolism routes, speeds due to enzyme availability or activity
How many twelve ounce drinks/day would an adult male need to consume in order to take in proportionately as much as an infant?
Exposure Differences : Behaviors Increased Exposures Relative to Adults Closer to the ground Diet and eating habits differ Newborns - breast milk or formula Infants / Toddlers - more fruit and milk products “Fussy Eaters” abound “Grazing” is common
How many times more apples does an average child eat compared to an adult, not accounting for child’s smaller size? Adults eat more apples than children
Exposure Differences : Behaviors Increased Exposures Relative to Adults Engage in more potentially high-risk behavior increased hand contact with “stuff” increased mouthing behaviors more time spent outdoors
Why We Care: Indoor / Outdoor Environmental Pollutants Can lead to neurodevelopmental disabilities, e.g. Mental retardation, ADHD, Poor Impulse Control Can cause or worsen respiratory diseases Can increase risk of cancer Can affect hormone systems Implicated in adult diseases May affect multiple generations
Environmentally Attributed Childhood Healthcare Costs IllnessCost Lead Poisoning$ 50.9 Billion Asthma$ 2.2 Billion Neurobehavioral Disorders $ 23.4 Billion Cancers$ 0.01 Billion $76.6 Billion Represents ~ 3% Total US Healthcare Costs Trasande, L. and Liu, Y., Health Affairs, 2011, 39,
The Significance of Small Effects: Effects of a Small Shift in IQ Distribution in a Population of 300 Million I.Q. mean million "gifted" 6.9 million “developmental disability"
The Significance of Small Effects: 5 Point Decrease in Mean IQ mean million " gifted " 9.4 million “ developmental disability " 57% INCREASE I.Q.
Estrogenic agents and obesity Healthcare costs due to Obesity ~ $190 Billion / year. If only 1% attributable to environmental exposures, accounts for nearly $2 Billion
Region 5 Center for Children’s Environmental Health , Co-funded by EPA and ATSDR Serves as a Regional resource to: evaluate, treat and prevent environmental illness in children train pediatricians and others in environmental health issues promote children’s environmental health in communities
Framework for Rest of Today’s Sessions Children are more susceptible to environmental exposures than adults Indoor environments account for large % of childhood exposures Individual / Institutional opportunities to reduce Toxicity Exposure Be Open to New Ideas / New Approaches!