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Chapter 17 Human Health and Environmental Risks
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Citizen Scientists Norco, Louisiana, Old Diamond District Surrounded by Chemical plant and oil refinery – both owned by Shell Oil Company Health concerns: So what happened? 1989 –Margie Richard organized Concerned Citizens of Norco Fight against Shell took 13 years 2002 – Shell purchased the homes and pay additional $5 million for community development 2007 – Shell agreed it had violated air pollution regulations at several Louisiana plants Maggie Richard – received Goldman Environmental Prize
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Three categories of human health risks Physical Include – Biological – associated with disease Disease – Chemical – due to exposure to chemicals
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Leading Causes of Death in World
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Biological Risks Infectious diseases- those caused by infectious agents, known as pathogens Examples: Pathogens include: parasitic worms called helminths and… Diseases fall into two categories: Chronic disease- slowly impairs the functioning of a person’s body Acute diseases- rapidly impair the functioning of a person’s body
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Biological Risks Risk Factors for Chronic Disease Differ significantly between LDC and HDC LDC - poverty HDC – lifestyle choices
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Biological Risks
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Historical Diseases Epidemic – when a pathogen causes a rapid increase in disease Pandemic Historically important diseases Plague – caused by Yersinia pestis bacteria Symptoms – swollen glands, black spots on skin, extreme pain Malaria – caused by protists of genus Plasmodium Symptoms – flu-like Tuberculosis –caused by bacterium Mycobacterium tuberculosis Symptoms – weakness, night sweats, coughing Easily treated with antibiotics for ~1 year
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Emergent Diseases Emergent infectious diseases – infectious disease that were previously not described or have not been common for at least the prior 20 years ~1 emergent disease worldwide each year since 1970 Some common emergent diseases: HIV/AIDS Ebola hemorrhagic fever Mad Cow Disease Bird Flu West Nile Virus
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Transmitting Pathogens Various ways to infect humans
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Combating Disease LDC Improve nutrition Increase availability of clean drinking water Improve sanitation Continued education Development of rapid response plans to combat emerging disease HDC Promote healthier lifestyle choices: Increase physical activity Eat balanced diet Limit excess food consumption Limit tobacco use Continued education Development of rapid response plans to combat emerging disease
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Chemical Risks Neurotoxins- chemicals that disrupt the nervous system Carcinogens- chemicals that cause cancer Mutagen – carcinogens that cause damage to the genetic material of cell Teratogens- chemicals that interfere with the normal development of embryos or fetuses Thalidomide Allergens- chemicals that cause allergic reactions Endocrine disruptors- chemicals that interfere with the normal functioning of hormones in an animal’s body
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Dose-Response Studies Dose response studies – expose animals or plants to different amounts of a chemical and then observe a variety of possible responses including mortality or changes in behavior/reproduction Acute studies vs. chronic studies LD50- lethal dose that kills 50% of the individuals ED50- effective dose that causes 50% of the animals to display the harmful but nonlethal effect
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Testing Standards in US Effects of chemicals in US regulated by EPA Toxic Substance Control Act of 1976 – gives EPA authority to regulate many chemicals, but excludes food, cosmetics, and pesticides Testing done on a few species: a birds, mammal, fish, and invertebrate that are believed to be most sensitive Testing not always done on amphibians/reptiles Safe concentrations For most animals - determine by dividing the LD50 value by 10 For humans –scientists use rats and mice and extrapolate the results to humans
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Terminology Epidemiology – field of science that strives to understand the causes of illness and disease in humans and wildlife populations Retrospective studies – monitor people who have been exposed to a chemical at some time in the past Prospective studies – monitor people who might become exposed to harmful chemicals in future Synergistic interactions- when two risks come together and cause more harm that one would
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Routes of Exposure Complex – exposure from a variety of sources Solubility – how well a chemical dissolves in a liquid
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Bioaccumulation Bioaccumulation- an increased concentration of a chemical within an organism over time Synthetic chemical do not metabolize well Example – mercury accumulation in fish
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Biomagnification Biomagnification- the increase in a chemical concentration in animal tissues as the chemical moves up the food chain Aka – biological magnification Image – biomagnifcation of DDT
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Persistence Persistence- how long a chemical remains in the environment Synthetic chemicals Natural decomposers (bacteria) have not evolved a way to break it down
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Risk Analysis Environmental hazard – anything in our environment can potentially cause harm Follow 3 steps to assess risk of environmental hazards:
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Risk Assessment: Qualitative Risk Assessment Making a judgment of the relative risks of various decisions based on perception, NOT probability Probability - the statistical likelihood of an event occurring and the probability of that event causing harm Judgments based on perception may not match actual risk
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Probability of an individual dying from… In US
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Risk Assessment: Quantitative Risk Assessment The approach to conducting a quantitative risk assessment is expressed as: Risk= probability of being exposed to a hazard X probability of being harmed if exposed
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Risk Acceptance and Risk Management Risk acceptance - level of risk that can be tolerated Very difficult step – precise amount of acceptable risk is open to heated disagreement Risk management – seeks to balance possible harm against other considerations Includes other factors – economic, social, ethical and political issues
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Worldwide Standards of Risk Chemical regulation guided by either:
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Stockholm Convention 2001 – a group of 127 nations gathered in Stockholm, Sweden, to reach an agreement on restricting the global use of some chemicals 12 chemicals were to be banned, phased out, or reduced Include DDT, PCBs, and certain chemicals that are by-products of manufacturing processes All known endocrine disruptors 2009 – 9 additional chemicals added, several more suggested
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REACH 2007 – 27 nations of EU put into effect agreement on how chemicals should be regulated within EU Stands for: registration, evaluation, authorization, and restriction of chemicals Embraces precautionary principle
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