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Integrated Risk Analysis: the INTARESE IP

Integrated Risk Analysis: the INTARESE IP. http://www.imperial-consultants.co.uk/intarese.org/home.htm. David Briggs Department of Epidemiology and Public Health Imperial College London. INTARESE. Integrated project (6 th FP) 5 year project Started 1 st November 2005

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Integrated Risk Analysis: the INTARESE IP

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  1. Integrated Risk Analysis: the INTARESE IP http://www.imperial-consultants.co.uk/intarese.org/home.htm David Briggs Department of Epidemiology and Public Health Imperial College London

  2. INTARESE • Integrated project (6th FP) • 5 year project • Started 1st November 2005 • Co-ordinator: Imperial College London • 32 partners from 25 countries • Disciplines represented: epidemiology, toxicology, environmental science, geography, systems analysis, IT • User groups involved: WHO, national environmental and health agencies (France, UK), industry (CEFIC)

  3. Rationale • Complex (multi-causal and multi-effect)environmental health problems • Need for preventative/precautionary approach – requires foresight and tracking • Need for integrated intervention (multiple benefits from single actions) • Need for comparative evaluation of risks • Need to target susceptible groups • Need to make best possible use of available data and knowledge

  4. INTARESE: Aims To develop integrated approach to assessment and communication of risks from environmental stressors • Develop coherent framework for integrated risk analysis • Assess and develop information sources and analysis tools (environmental monitoring, biomonitoring, health surveillance, exposure assessment, consequence assessment, risk assessment) • Test and apply methodology to analyse range of contrasting policy areas (transport, agriculture, chemicals, wastes, climate, water resources, housing) • Develop assessment system (toolbox) for policy support

  5. SP7. Co-ordination and management The structure of INTARESE SP 6 User consultation and dissemination 6.1 User concerns and information needs 6.2 Dissemination SP 3 Policy assessments SP1 Integrated assessment methods 3.1 Transport 3.2 Housing 3.3 Agricultural land use 3.4 Water 3.5 Chemicals in household products and articles 3.6 Waste 3.7 Climate 1.1 Assessment framework 1.2 Source-exposure 1.3 Exposure-effect 1.4 Risk characterisation 1.5 Cross-cutting issues SP 5. Integration and training 5.1 Integration 5.2 Training SP 2 Monitoring and surveillance SP 4 Integrated assessment system 2.1 Environmental monitoring 2.2 Biomonitoring 2.3 Health surveillance 2.4 Integrated monitoring 4.1 Toolbox design 4.2 Toolbox development 4.3 Application and testing

  6. Integrated assessment: the INTARESE approach User needs Value systems Knowledge constraints Analysis framework Intake fraction Pathways/ propagation Exposure assessment Source-exposure Dose-response relationships Toxicity Expert assessment Exposure-effect Impact assessment Cost-benefit Indicators Risk characterisation

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