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CBR Detection, Decontamination and Information Systems Branch 1 Issues with Use of Toxicity Values For Emergency Response by Timothy Bauer Naval Surface Warfare Center Dahlgren Building 1480 Room 227 4045 Higley Road Suite 346 Dahlgren, VA 22448-5162 540-653-3091 Fax: 540-653-8747 8 th Symposium on the Urban Environment AMS 89 th Annual Meeting 11 - 15 January 2009 Phoenix Convention Center, Phoenix, AZ
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CBR Detection, Decontamination and Information Systems Branch 2 Introduction Emergency responders must have a reasonable estimate of the location and size of the hazard area resulting from a TIC incident Modern hazard assessment models provide comparable concentration versus location and time estimates Includes both open terrain and urban models Current approach in applying model output to estimating human toxicity effects is not appropriate Many different toxicity values Some values are for occupational or lifetime exposure or for chronic effects Most values are for the most sensitive sub-population Concentrations are normally for an assumed 1 hour exposure at constant concentration Expected value toxicity estimates are needed for proper emergency response support
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CBR Detection, Decontamination and Information Systems Branch 3 Toxicity Concentrations REL = Reference Exposure Level for no effects lifetime GPL = General Population Limit lifetime TLV-TWA = Threshold Limit Value, Time-Weighted Average 8 hours WPL = Worker Population Limit, equivalent to TLV-TWA 8 hours EEGL = Emergency Exposure Guideline Level 1 – 24 hours TLV-STEL = Threshold Limit Value, Short Term Exposure Limit 15 min TEEL-0, 1, 2, 3 = Temporary Emergency Exposure Limit 1 hour ERPG-1, 2, 3 = Emergency Response Planning Guideline 1 hour AEGL-1, 2, 3 = Acute Exposure Guideline Level 10 min - 8 hours IDLH = Immediately Dangerous to Life and Health 10 min LC LO = Lowest Lethal Concentration 1 hour LC 50 = Median Lethal Concentration 1 hour
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CBR Detection, Decontamination and Information Systems Branch 4 Current Hazard Estimation Estimates for emergency planning and response are normally based on ERPG-2 or 1-hour AEGL-2 concentrations ERPG-2: The maximum airborne concentration below which it is believed that nearly all individuals could be exposed for up to one hour without experiencing or developing irreversible or other serious health effects, or symptoms that could impair an individual’s ability to take protective action. AEGL-2: The airborne concentration (expressed as ppm or mg/m 3 ) of a substance above which it is predicted that the general population, including susceptible individuals, could experience irreversible or other serious, long-lasting adverse health effects, or an impaired ability to escape. Approach seems reasonable, but ends up being impractical when applied to real-world incidents
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CBR Detection, Decontamination and Information Systems Branch 5 Example Scenario Baltimore, MD population = 631,000 at 2800 persons/km 2 Incident involving release of 2500 lb HCN from a rupture in a tanker truck located near city center Could be a terrorist attack or just a transportation accident 1-hour AEGL-2 = 8.0 mg/m 3 = 7.1 ppm 3 m/s wind speed, 30 C air temperature, neutral stability, and urban terrain Hazard assessment models (e.g., ALOHA, DEGADIS, HPAC) predict maximum distance to which ERPG-2/AEGL-2 is exceeded Area is displayed as circle, 60 degree angle fan, or contour
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CBR Detection, Decontamination and Information Systems Branch 6 Baltimore Incident Hazard Areas Typical concentration hazard area estimates 22,182 people 3697 people 1288 people 1588 m length/radius
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CBR Detection, Decontamination and Information Systems Branch 7 Baltimore Incident Conc. Contour Typical concentration contour estimates 1288 people 1588 m length, 345 m width
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CBR Detection, Decontamination and Information Systems Branch 8 Dosage Output Toxic effects are a result of concentration plus exposure duration Threshold effects may be just a function of concentration Constant concentration: D = C t Dosage is actually the integral of concentration versus time Does not require a constant concentration Frequency should not be less than human breathing cycle of ~ 5 seconds HCN 1-hour AEGL-2 dosage = 480 mg-min/m 3
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CBR Detection, Decontamination and Information Systems Branch 9 Baltimore Incident Dosage Toxic area represented by dosage 223 people 730 m length, 131 m width
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CBR Detection, Decontamination and Information Systems Branch 10 Toxic Load Output Toxic effects are actually more complicated than just dosage Human and animal systems are able to process or remove almost all toxic substances A low concentration over a long period of time is handled better than the same dosage from a high concentration over a short period of time Dosage is then a function of exposure duration with longer durations requiring higher dosage values Represented by toxic load equation K = C N t As with dosage, can integrate toxic load over time Toxic load constant is independent of duration HCN toxic load exponent is 2.0, so AEGL-2 toxic load constant is 3840 mg 2 -min/m 6
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CBR Detection, Decontamination and Information Systems Branch 11 Baltimore Incident AEGL-2 Toxic Load AEGL-2 toxic load area 393 people 945 m length, 179 m width
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CBR Detection, Decontamination and Information Systems Branch 12 Expected Value Toxicity AEGL-2 does not represent adverse health effects for average person Safe-sided for most sensitive sub-population Young, old, immune compromised, pregnant Need toxic load parameters to represent average person Median effective toxic load represents where 50% of exposed persons will experience adverse health effects Reanalysis of existing toxicity data being conducted to determine expected values HCN expected severe effects toxic load values: EC 50 = 128 mg/m 3 = 114 ppm, N = 2.0, t = 60 min, K = 983,000 mg 2 -min/m 6
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CBR Detection, Decontamination and Information Systems Branch 13 Baltimore Incident EC 50 Toxic Load EC 50 toxic load area 34 people 301 m length, 36 m width
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CBR Detection, Decontamination and Information Systems Branch 14 Probability of Effect EC 50 toxic load parameters only provide area within which 50% of persons will experience severe health effects What about persons further inside or outside of area? Probit slope is final toxicity parameter needed Determines percent of population affected as toxic load increases or decreases away from median effective value 84% and 16% effects represent 1 standard deviation 2.5% and 97.5% represent 2 standard deviations HCN probit slope is 12 Casualties can now be estimated Simple approach: Differential contour area times population density times percent affected; sum for all contours Integral approach: Compute percent affected at each grid location, multiply by grid element area and population density, and sum for all grid locations
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CBR Detection, Decontamination and Information Systems Branch 15 Baltimore Incident Casualty Estimate Toxic load areas for 1 and 2 standard deviations 32 casualties
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CBR Detection, Decontamination and Information Systems Branch 16 Conclusions Current approach of using concentrations results in areas too large for effective emergency planning and response Dosage provides a better hazard area representation, but toxic load is even better Use of AEGL-2 or ERPG-2, even with toxic load, is not appropriate because of safe-sided interpretation New expected value toxic load parameters will significantly improve area estimates Addition of probit slope to calculations allows generation of areas by percent of population expected to have toxic response Realistic areas are much smaller and allow effective emergency planning and response Evacuation versus sheltering-in-place planning guidance Search and rescue for casualties during response
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