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Environmental Hazards, Risk, & Human Health
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Leading Causes of Mortality
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Public Health – Some Definitions Morbidity: incidence of disease in a population Mortality: incidence of death in a population Environment: combination of physical, chemical, and biological factors Hazard: anything that can cause injury, death, disease, damage to personal/public property, or deterioration or destruction of environmental components Risk: probability of suffering a loss as a result of exposure to a hazard
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What Are Environmental Hazards? They Can Be: –Cultural (food choices, smoking, alcohol) –Biological (bacteria, fungi, viruses, etc.) –Physical (tornadoes, hurricanes, earthquakes) –Chemical (cleaning products, pesticides, fuels, etc.) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NWm6PUGpfVU
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Biological Hazards Not generally a consequence of choice Causes: –Pathogenic bacteria –Fungi –Viruses –Protozoans –Worms Is drinking untreated water from a mountain stream a cultural or biological hazard?
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TB 2001 Does the pattern on this map look anything like the patterns we saw elsewhere?
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Malaria, 1996
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Physical Hazards Weather-related: hurricane, tornado, flood, fire, etc. Non-weather-related: earthquake, tsunami, volcano Cannot be avoided, can be mitigated: –Building sites –Building design –Preparedness
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Chemical Hazards Industrialization Increased Exposure Industrialization also Increased Awareness What’s Important? –Exposure: Inhalation, ingestion, skin absorption –Dose –Examples?
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Potential Chemical Hazards in the Environment Urban Air: –lead –VOCs –NOx, sulfur oxides –Particulates –Ozone –CO Food and Water: –Pesticides –Heavy metals –Lead Indoors: –Particulates –CO –Asbestos (maybe) –Household product residues/fumes Land: –Heavy metals –Dioxins, PCBs, etc
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What are the Concerns? Acute Exposure: immediate health consequences –Serious, but often easily treatable Chronic Exposure: health consequences over time –Serious, less easy to treat Carcinogenic: initiates changes in cells –Read about Carcinogenesis in the text
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Example: Tobacco Use 442,300 deaths associated with smoking per year from 1995-1999
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Toxic Risk Pathways Indoor Air Pollution: –Both developed and developing countries –Sources are furniture, equipment, paint, etc –Building are sealed (saves energy) –Population spends more time indoors Added Concern in Developing Countries: heat/cook with biofuels –Respiratory infections, lung disease, lung cancer, birth related problems Asthma and worms…
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Risk Assessment What is it? –The process of evaluating risks associated with a particular hazard before taking some action where the hazard is present. –Any examples in your life?
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Chemical Hazard Risk Assessment Historical Data – takes time Animal Testing –Is the animal a good model? –Cost –Ethical issues Chemical Structure –Chemical groups associated with hazards
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Dose-Response Dose: concentration exposed to Response: effect LD50 –Lethal dose that causes 50% of organisms to be affected/die Another Problem: is the chemical hazard chemically distinct or mixture? –Benzene vs. gasoline –Nicotine vs. cigarette smoke
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Exposure Who is exposed? How often? Route of entry? Dose? Duration? Food for thought: if you were exposed to the quantity of radiation received in your 3.75 HS years of television viewing in one minute, you would likely have negative consequences
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Risk Characterization Using previous data (LD50, risk assessment, exposures) to determine risk and uncertainties Expressed as a probability of fatal outcome (risk factors for causes of disease, 14.9% underweight in LDC) EPA and cancer risk: – Clean Air Act (1990) requires regulation of chemicals with > 1/1,000,000 cancer risk
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Risk Management Cost-Benefit Analysis: –Example: emission controls (cars-yes, lawnmower-no) Risk-Benefit Analysis: –Examples: medical X-rays, mountain biking Public Preference (risk perception) – tolerance for risks that they can control
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Risk Perception Familiarity – bees vs. sharks Voluntary – driving car vs. contaminated drinking water Public Impression – coal vs. nuclear Morality – wrong to destroy a coral reef Control – driving car vs. airplane flight Fairness - coal mine neighbor vs. coal mine owner
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