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Environmental Hazards and Human Health. Links between human health and the environmentPathways of riskRisk assessment. Some Definitions. Environment: combination of physical, chemical, and biological factorsHazard: anything that can cause injury, death, disease, damage to personal/public property
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1. Environmental Science: Toward a Sustainable Future Richard T. Wright Environmental Hazards and Human Health
PPT by Clark E. Adams
2. Environmental Hazards and Human Health Links between human health and the environment
Pathways of risk
Risk assessment
3. Some Definitions Environment: combination of physical, chemical, and biological factors
Hazard: anything that can cause injury, death, disease, damage to personal/public property, or deterioration or destruction of environmental components
Risk: probability of suffering a loss as a result of exposure to a hazard
4. Links between Human Health and the Environment The picture of health
Environmental hazards
5. The Picture of Health: Some Terms Morbidity: incidence of disease in a population
Mortality: incidence of death in a population
Epidemiology: study of presence, distribution, and control of disease in a population
6. Causes of Human Mortality
7. Environmental Hazards Cultural
Biological
Physical
Chemical
8. Cultural Hazards Consequence of choice
Risky behavior
To what cultural hazards do college students commonly subject themselves?
9. Deaths from Various Cultural Hazards
10. Biological Hazards Pathogenic bacteria
Fungi
Viruses
Protozoans
Worms
12. Global Map of Tuberculosis, 2001
13. Infectious Diseases More prevalent in, but not exclusive to, developing countries
Contamination of food and water
Lack of resources for sanitation
Lack of education
Ideal climates for transmission of vector-borne diseases like malaria
14. Malarial Parasite Life Cycle
15. Physical Hazards Natural disasters, e.g., tornadoes, floods, hurricanes, and wildfires
Avoidance of risk important in prevention, e.g., building homes in floodplains, and living on the coast
Climate change: consequences of elevated greenhouse gases
16. Chemical Hazards Result of industrialization
Exposure through ingestion, inhalation, absorption through skin
May be direct use or accidental
Many chemicals are toxic at low levels
17. Chemical Hazards 74 chemicals are known to be carcinogenic (Table 15-2)
Environmental carcinogens initiate mutations in DNA; several mutations lead to a malignancy
18. Pathways of Risk The risk of being poor
The cultural risk of tobacco use
Risk and infectious diseases
Toxic risk pathways
19. The Risk of Being Poor One major pathway for hazards is poverty
No money for health insurance
Higher probability of exposure to environmental hazards
20. The 10 Leading Global Risk Factors
21. Environmental Health Factors contributing to the environmental health of a nation include:
Education
Nutrition
Commitment from government
More equitable distribution of wealth
22. The Cultural Risk of Tobacco Use
23. Regulation of Smoking Warning labels
Smoke-free zones in public places
FDA regulations
Lawsuits against the tobacco industry
24. Risk and Infectious Diseases One major pathway of risk is contamination of food and water
Inadequate hygiene
Inferior sewage treatment
25. Control of Infectious Disease Genome sequencing of the Anopheles mosquito
Bed nets
Change in land use practices: wetland development
New effective antimalarial drugs
26. Worldwide Distribution of Malaria
27. Toxic Risk Pathways Categories of impact of airborne pollutants
Chronic: effect takes place over a period of years
Acute: life-threatening reaction within a period of hours or days
Carcinogenic: pollutants initiate cellular change leading to cancer
28. Indoor Air Pollution: Developed Countries Hazardous fumes from home products
Well-insulated buildings
Long exposure to indoor air
29. Indoor Air Pollution: Developing Countries Results from burning biofuels (wood, dung) inside homes
Acute respiratory infections in children
Chronic lung diseases
Lung cancer
Birth-related problems
30. Risk Assessment Environmental risk assessment by the EPA
Public-health risk assessment
Risk management
Risk perception
31. Definition of Risk Assessment The process of evaluating the risks associated with a particular hazard before taking some action in which the particular hazard is present
32. Loss of Life Expectancy from Various Risks: Top Five (see Fig. 15-16) Alcoholic
Poverty
Smoking – male
Poor social connections
Heart disease
33. Loss of Life Expectancy from Various Risks
35. Environmental Risk Assessment by the EPA Hazard assessment (What chemicals cause cancer?)
Dose-response assessment (How much?)
Exposure assessment (How long?)
Risk characterization (How many will die?)
36. Public-Health Risk Assessment Potential global impact
High likelihood of causality
Modifiability
Availability of data (see Table 15-4)
37. Risk Management Usually involves:
Cost–benefit analysis
Risk–benefit analysis
Public preferences
38. Risk Perception: Hazard vs. Outrage Hazard: expresses primarily a concern for fatalities only
39. Risk Perception: Hazard vs. Outrage Outrage includes:
Lack of familiarity with technology
Extent to which the risk is voluntary
Public impressions of hazards
Overselling safety
Morality
Control
Fairness
40. Risk Assessment/Management Some suggest we use distributive justice in making decisions about risk
Ethical process of making certain that everyone receives proper consideration
Should reduce environmental racism/injustice
41. Risk Assessment/Management Not a perfect system
Precautionary principle
Lack of certainty should not be used as a reason for preventing environmental degradation/hazards
42. End of Chapter 15