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Disability-Adjusted Life Year (DALY) combines premature deaths and loss of healthy life resulting from illness or disability. (1.4 billion a year) 90%

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Presentation on theme: "Disability-Adjusted Life Year (DALY) combines premature deaths and loss of healthy life resulting from illness or disability. (1.4 billion a year) 90%"— Presentation transcript:

1 Disability-Adjusted Life Year (DALY) combines premature deaths and loss of healthy life resulting from illness or disability. (1.4 billion a year) 90% of DALY occur in developing countries WHO reports 50% due to communicable disease For most of human history, the greatest health threats have been pathogenic organisms, accidents, and violence.

2 EMERGENT DISEASE – Never known before or has been absent for 20 years or more Spreads Rapidly – modern travel means Example – FOOT & MOUTH DISEASE  Infectious diseases are still responsible for about 24% of all disease-related deaths. Majority of these deaths in poorer countries with poor nutrition, sanitation, and vaccination programs.  AIDS now largest single cause of communicable death in the world.

3 Risk Assessment & Management Risk = probability of exposure x probability of harm Risk Assessment 1)ID potential hazard 2)Probability of occurrence 3)Determine how much damage (social; env; economic) Controversy over assessments – WHY? Disputes over variables such as - # exposed, level of exposure, and impact due to age/health/sex of organism 1)How Serious? 2)Can it be reduced? 3)How can it be reduced? 4)$$ to clean it up? Risk Management After Assessment

4 4 Main Types of Hazards smoking (case study), unsafe working conditions, diet, drinking, driving, poverty! Cultural Chemical synthetic chemicals from water & air pollution – human body contains over 500 syn.chemicals not known prior to 1920 ionizing radiation, earthquakes, volcanoes, hurricane, tornadoes pathogens (bacteria, viruses, parasites), pollen and other allergens; animals (bees, snakes) Physical Biological

5 Biological Hazards Epidemiology – the study of factors affecting the health and illness of a population Dose Response Curve – Non-Transmittable Disease – not caused by living organisms and does not spread from person to person Cardiovascular disease, obesity, diabetes, most cancers, bronchitis – Transmissible Disease – caused by living organisms (bacteria, protozoa, and parasites) and viruses Pathogens (disease causing organisms) spread through water, air, food, insects, & body fluids - VECTORS

6 TRANSMISSIBLE DISEASE According to the WHO & UNICEF 2 million children in developing countries die each year due to preventable infectious disease. 80% of the infectious disease is spread through waterborne infections (diarrhea, hepatitis, typhoid fever, and cholera) Seven Deadliest Infectious Disease: 1)Tuberculosis (TB) bacterial disease 2)Malaria – protozoa 3)Respiratory Disease – mostly pneumonia (bacteria and viruses) 4)Diarrheal Disease – bacterial & viruses (unclean water) 5)Measles – viral 6)Hepatitis – viral 7)HIV/AIDS – Viral

7 CHEMICAL Hazards Immune Systems – protects the body against disease Disruptors – viruses, bacteria, parasites, malnutrition, ionizing radiation, synthetic chemicals Nervous System – brain; spinal cord; peripheral nerves Neurotoxins – synthetic chemicals = chlorinated hydrocarbons (DDT, PCBs, dioxins); organophosphates (malathion); formaldehyde; heavy metals (mercury, lead, cadmium) Endocrine – glands and hormones that regulate body functions Disruptors – (HAA’s – hormonally active agents) = can mimic or block natural hormone responses – many synthetic chemicals such as atrazine, DDT, PCB’s Endocrine disruptors have major impacts on reproductive systems

8 1)Size of the dose over time 2)How often exposure occurs 3)Who is exposed 4)How well the body’s detox system works 5)Genetic make-up of organism Factors affecting Toxicity Toxicity – measure of how harmful a substance is. Dosage – the amount inhaled, absorbed, or ingested

9 EXAMPLES: DDT (synthetic organic pesticide), PCB’s (oils used in electrical equipment); Mercury (heavy metal) Many chemicals are used because of their long persistence or resistance to breakdown: plastics, CFC’s, Chlorinated Hydrocarbons (DDT) This also means they have a lasting impact on the environment Bioaccumulation – chemicals are stored in specific organs or tissues at levels higher than normal Biomagnification – levels of toxins in the environment are magnified as they pass through food chains

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11 DANGEROUS CHEMICALS Dangerous chemicals are divided into two broad categories:  Hazardous - Dangerous - Flammable, explosive, irritant, acid, caustic.  Toxic -Harmful - Can be general or very specific. Often harmful even in dilute concentrations. Poison – has an LD 50 of 50 mg or LESS

12 Allergens - Substances that activate the immune system.  Antigens - Allergens that are recognized as foreign by white blood cells and stimulate the production of specific antibodies. Neurotoxins - Special class of metabolic poisons that specifically attack nerve cells. - Heavy Metals kill nerve cells. - Chlorinated Hydrocarbons disrupt nerve cell membranes. (DDT, PCBs, dioxins) - Organophosphates inhibit signal transmission between nerve cells. (malathion) Insecticides

13 Mutagens - Agents that damage or alter genetic material.  Radiation (x-ray equipment) Teratogens - Specifically cause abnormalities during embryonic growth and development.  Alcohol - Fetal Alcohol Syndrome  PCB’s, steroids, lead & mercury Carcinogens - Substances that cause cancer.  Cigarette smoke, dioxins, radon gas, asbestos

14 100 million Antibiotic doses prescribed each year in the US – many unnecessary ANTIBIOTICS More than ½ of the antibiotics manufactured in the US are fed to farm animals to stimulate weight gain RESISTANCE Many protozoans and insects are now immune to most antibiotics & pesticides (rapid evolution) Humans overuse and therefore add pressure to adapt and change.

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16 Solubility - One of most important characteristics in determining the movement of a toxin. Chemicals are divided into two major groups: - Those that dissolve more readily in water. - Those that dissolve more readily in oil.  Water soluble compounds move rapidly through the environment, and have ready access to most human cells. RATE OF MOVEMENT & DISTRIBUTION

17 Animal Testing  Most commonly used and widely accepted toxicity test is to expose a population of laboratory animals to measured doses of specific toxins. - Sensitivity differences pose a problem.  Dose Response Curves  LD50 - Dose at which 50% of the test population is sensitive.

18 LD 50 = median lethal dose: the amount of a chemical received in one dose that kills exactly 50% of the organisms in a population (typically in a 2 week period of time) Animal Testing Takes 2-5 years – costs between 200,000 – 2 mil Threshold = dosage amount at which no negative effects are seen

19 WhatWhereexample


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