APES ENVIRONMENTAL RISK AND HAZARD
why is risk acceptance the most difficult to do
- Scientific assessments are considered with economic, social, and political needs and values - Comparing costs and benefits is hard a. Benefits are economic and easy to calculate b. Health risks (costs) are hard-to-measure probabilities of a few people being affected
Fewer than ___% of synthetic chemicals are government regulated
1
Silent Spring
1. Brought together studies to show DDT risks to people, wildlife, and ecosystems 2. In the 1960s, pesticides were mostly untested and were sprayed over public areas, assuming they would do no harm 3. The book generated significant social change
benefits of Precautionary principle approach
1. Far fewer recalls 2. Identifies troublesome toxicants before they are released
Evaluating Environmental Risk by regulatory agencies or companies involves three steps:
1. Risk Assessment 2. Risk Acceptance 3. Risk Management
Only _____% of synthetic chemicals have been tested for toxicity
10
Infectious diseases kill _________ people per year
15 million
2009 - ___% of Americans smoke 1965 - ___% of Americans smoke
20, 42
smoking kills ________ americans each year
443,000
100,000 chemicals are on the market today
72,000 industrial 8,700 food additives 2,000 new chemicals introduced per year
Leading Causes of Death in U.S.A.
Cardiovascular disease (25.4%) Cancer (23%) Stroke (5.6%) / Chronic Lower Resp. Disease (5.3%)
Leading Causes of Death World-Wide
Cardiovascular disease (29%) Infectious disease (26%) Cancer (13%)
federal agencies that manage risk
Centers for Disease Control (CDC), the EPA, and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
DDT degrades into _____, which is also highly _______
DDE, persistent
Environmental Toxicology
Deals with toxic substances that come from or are discharged into the environment
Risk Management
Determine policy with input from citizens, industry, and interest groups.
________ is a major focus of environmental health
Disease
examples of physical hazards
Earthquakes, volcanoes, fires, floods, droughts, exposure to UV radiation
________ is shifting more towards the precautionary principle
Europe
Precautionary principle approach
General assumption that chemicals/products are inherently dangerous, must prove safe before released on the market
three terms used frequently in Environmental Risk Assessment
Hazard, Exposure, and Risk
_______ and ________ factors are both considered
Natural, human-caused
Federal Risk Management of OSHA
Occupational Safety and Health
Routes of chemical transport
Pesticide drift, Runoff, excreted or metabolized, exist naturally and in our food
Most difficult in the risk- analysis process
Risk Acceptance
examples of cultural environmental hazards
Smoking, drug use, diet and nutrition, crime, mode of transportation
Risk
The likelihood that the hazard will actually happen and cause harm. How probable is it that the hazard will actually happen?
example of biological hazards
Viruses, bacteria, and other pathogens
Risk Assessment
What are the hazards? What is the toxicity and extent of exposure? -seeks to identify a potential hazard and determine the magnitude of the potential harm.
Risk Acceptance
What is the acceptable level of risk (based on social/economic/political considerations)
Exposure
What is the probability of being exposed to the risk? Can be based on occurrence (I only fly twice a year vs. drive times a day) or number of individuals (only 100 people of a city of 1 million live within a mile of the chemical plant)
Pesticide drift
airborne transport of pesticides
Vector
an organism that transfers pathogens to a host
Diseases are evolving resistance to
antibiotics
Toxicant
any toxic agent
Environmental health
assesses environmental factors that influence human health and quality of life
We can reduce risk by
better environmental choices
We increase our vulnerability to physical hazards by
deforesting slopes (landslides), channelizing rivers (flooding), etc.
________ kills most of us
disease
Our mobility spreads
diseases
Chemicals enter organisms through
drinking or absorption
Federal Risk Management of FDA
food, food additives, cosmetics, drugs, and medical devices
Innocent until proven guilty approach
generally assumes products/chemicals are safe unless demonstrated negative event occurs
Disease has a _______ and __________ basis
genetic, environmental
Synthetic chemical contaminants are found
globally
Persistent chemicals have the greatest potential for
harm
Risk =
hazard x exposure
Developed countries have better
hygiene, access to medicine, and money
animals can serve as
indicators of health threats
Every human carries traces of ___________
industrial chemicals
Hazard
inherent potential for something to cause harm. Hazards range from minimal to deadly in terms of human injury, or from minimal to catastrophic damage to the environment, or a specific component of the environment (water, air, etc.)
Environmental Risk Assessment
involves understanding the potential for harm to people, organisms, and the greater environment posed by different hazards.
smoking is the
leading cause of preventable death in America
disadvantages of Precautionary principle approach
may impede the pace of technology and economic advance
benefits of Innocent until proven guilty approach
not slowing down technological innovation and economic advancement
Physical hazards
occur naturally in our environment
Infectious (communicable, or transmissible) disease
other species parasitize humans, fulfilling their ecological roles
Federal Risk Management of EPA
pesticides
4 types of environmental hazards
physical hazards, chemical hazards, cultural hazards, and biological hazards
Disadvantage of Innocent until proven guilty approach
putting into wide use some substances that may later on turn out to be dangerous, big recalls
Climate change will expand the ______ of diseases
range
Critics say natural toxins are more _______ _________ and _______, and synthetic chemicals _______ and _________
readily metabolized, excreted, persist, accumulate
Biological Hazards
result from ecological interactions
Cultural Environmental Hazards
result from the place we live, our socioeconomic status, our occupation, our behavioral choices
When thinking about overall risk, determining the ________ of the hazard is important.
severity
Chemical Hazards
synthetic chemicals such as pesticides, disinfectants, pharmaceuticals. Harmful natural chemicals also exist
Many synthetic chemicals are not actually
tested
Toxicity
the degree of harm a toxicant can cause
toxicity is analogous to pathogenicity or virulence
the degree of harm of biological hazards that spread disease
Toxicology
the study of the effects of poisonous substances on humans and other organisms
Bioaccumulation
toxicants build up in animal tissues
Biomagnification
toxicants concentrate in top predators
Breakdown products
toxicants degrade into simpler products
"The dose makes the poison"
toxicity depends on the combined effect of the chemical and its quantity
diseases that are increasing
tuberculosis, acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), and the West Nile virus