APEs Chapter 16: Environmental Hazards and Human Health
Four greatest risks in terms of shortened life spans
-living in poverty -smoking -obesity -being born male
The effects of a chemical rely on
1. Dose 2. Age 3. Genetic makeup 4. Synergy 5. Solubility 6. Persistence
Five factors people see technology or a product as being more or less risky than experts judge it to be
1. Fear 2. Degree of control 3. Whether a risk is catastrophic or chronic 4. Optimism bias 5. Instant gratification
Why are children more susceptible to toxins than adults
1. They generally breathe, drink, and eat more per unit of body weight than do adults 2. They are exposed to toxins in dust and soil when they put their finger, toys, and other objects in their mouth 3. Children have a less developed immune systems and Boyd detoxification processes than adults
Threshold level model
A certain level exposure to the chemical must be reached before any detectable harmful effects occur, presumable because the body can repair the damage caused by low dosages of some substances
Infectious disease
A disease caused by a pathogen such as bacterium, virus, or parasite invading the body and multiplying in its cells and tissues
Why has the percentage of all deaths world-wide resulting from infectious disease dropped
A growing number of children have been immunized against the major infectious diseases
Toxicity
A measure of the ability of a substance to cause injury, illness, or death to a living organisms
Toxic chemical
An elements or compound that can cause temporary or permanent harm or death to humans
Acute effect
An immediate or rapid harmful reaction ranging from dizziness to death
Viruses are not affected by ________
Antibiotics
Three agents of infectious disease
Bacteria, virus, parasite
five major types of hazards that threaten human health
Biological, chemical, natural, cultural, lifestyle choices
Three major types of potentially toxic agents
Carcinogens, teratogens, mutagens
Nontransmittable disease
Caused by something other than a living organism and does not spread from one person to another ; they involve cancers, asthma, and diabetes
Teratogens
Chemicals that harm or cause birth defects in a fetus or embryo (drinking alcohol while pregnant)
Carcinogen
Chemicals, some types of radiation., and certain viruses that can cause or promote cancer
___________ is the world most preventable and largest cause of suffering and premature death among adults
Cigarette smoking
What is the most widely used method for determining toxicity
Exposing a population of live laboratory animals to measured doses of a specific substance under controlled conditions
How does the immune system protect against disease
Forming antibodies
Risk analysis
Identifying hazards and evaluation their associated risk , ranking risks, and informing decision makers and the public about risks
Mutagens
Includes chemicals or forms of radiation that cause or increase the frequency of mutations (changes in the DNA molecules found in cells). Most mutation cause no harm, however some can lead to cancers
Why has Malaria increased since 1970
Malaria carrying mosquitos grew immune to pesticides
Pathogens
Microorganisms that can cause disease in order organisms
__________ harm the human nervous system
Neurotoxins
synergistic interaction (synergy)
Occurs when two or more compounds interact magnifying the effect of both compounds
Parasites
Organism that live on or insides other organisms and feed on them b
Viruses
Pathogens that work by invading a cell and taking over its genetic machinery to copy themselves in order to spread throughout the body ; they can cause diseases such as flu and AIDS
How does the precautionary principle apply to manufacturing and business
People argue that a company proposing a new chemical should should bear the burden of establishing its safety; however, this is incredibly expensive, and sometimes even impossible without real world application
Why is TB hard to control
People don't know they have it so they spread it to others You have to take medication for 6-9 months and many people stop
Bacteria
Single-called organisms that are found everywhere and that can multiply rapidly o their own; they can be both harmful and beneficial
Formula for system reliability
System reliability = technology reliability x human reliability
Median lethal dose
The dose of medication that kills 50% of the drug-tested population
Unconventional model
The harmful effects increase with dosage to a certain point and then begin decreasing
Response
The health damage resulting from exposure to a chemical
Risk
The probability of suffering harm from a hazard that can cause injury, disease, death, economic loss, or damage
Toxicology
The study of the harmful effects of these and other chemicals on humans and other organisms
What allows synthetic chemicals to attach to hormones and disrupt the endocrine system
They have similar shapes/receptors
Why are neurotoxins like methylmercury, DDT, and PCBs extremely dangerous
They persist in the environment and can be biologically magnified in food chains and food webs
dose-response curve
When scientists estimate the toxicity of a chemical by determining the effects of various doses of the chemical on test organisms and plotting the results on this type of graph
The precautionary principle states that:
When there is substantial preliminary evidence that an activity, technology, or chemical substance can harm humans, other organism, or the environment, decision makers should should take measure to prevent or reduce such harm, rather than waiting for more conclusion evidence scientific evidence.
Chronic effect
a permanent or long-lasting consequence of exposure to a single dose or to repeated lower doses of a harmful substance
Transmittable disease
an infectious disease that can be transmitted from one person to another, they can be spread through air, water, and food
nonthreshold dose-response model
any dosage of a toxic chemical causes harm that increases with the dosage
Risk Management
deciding whether or how to reduce a particular risk to a certain level and at what cost.
Dose
the amount of a harmful chemical that a person has ingested, inhaled, or absorbed through the skin at any one time
Risk assessment
the process of using statistical methods to estimate how much harm a particular hazard can cause to human health or to the environment.