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RISK, TOXICOLOGY, and HUMAN HEALTH

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Scientific process of determining the probability something bad ... Cultural (diet, poverty,smoking) ... Voluntary vs. involuntary (driving vs. power plants) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: RISK, TOXICOLOGY, and HUMAN HEALTH


1
RISK, TOXICOLOGY, and HUMAN HEALTH
  • Risk A measure of the likelihood that you will
    suffer harm from a hazard

2
Risk Expressed as a probablility
  • Injury
  • Disease
  • Death
  • Economic loss
  • Environmental danger
  • Scientific process of determining the probability
    something bad will happen to you

3
Types of Hazards
  • Physical (fire, earthquake)
  • Chemical
  • Biological (pathogens, animals)
  • Cultural (diet, poverty,smoking)

4
Toxicology assessing chemical hazards the
measure of how harmful a substance is
  • Dose (amount ingested, inhaled, absorbed)
  • Frequency of exposure
  • Who is exposed (child vs adult)

5
5 factors that can affect the harm caused by a
substance
  • Solubility (water vs. lipid)
  • Persistence (how long it remains)
  • Bioaccumulation (stored in organs or tissues)
  • Biomagnification (toxicity increases up the
    trophic levels)
  • Chemical interactions
  • a. Antagonistic cancels out
  • b. Synergistic multiplies harmful effects

6
Basic Tenet of Toxicity
  • Any synthetic or natural chemical can be harmful
    if ingested in a large enough quantity
  • The Question Then
  • How much is too much?

7
Mechanisms for reducing harmful effects
  • Breakdown usually in the liver
  • DNA enzymes for repair
  • Certain cells can be replicated faster to replace
    damaged cells (skin, GI tract, blood vessels)

8
Estimating Toxicity (without testing humans!)
  • Median Lethal Dose (LD50) the amount received
    in 1 dose that kills 50 of animals tested
    usually mice or rats
  • The EPA most wanted list of toxic substances
  • Arsenic 4. Vinyl cloride
  • Lead 5. polychlorinate
  • Mercury biphenyls (PCBs)
  • These represent the top 5 of the 276 substances
    regulated by the Superfund Act (Love Canal)

9
Types of Chemical Hazards
  • Mutagens increase frequency of mutations
  • Teratogens harm developing fetus
  • Carcinogens cause/promote cancer
  • Long term chemical exposure affects
  • Nervous system
  • Immune system
  • Endocrine system

10
EPA is NOT the same as the FDA!
  • Current federal and state regulations only affect
    0.5 of commercially used chemicals in the U.S.
  • Why?
  • innocent until shown to be guilty
  • Not enough funds, people, facilities, or test
    animals
  • Difficult and expensive to analyze combined
    effects and interactions

11
BIOLOGICAL HAZARDS
  • Transmissible vs nontransmissible
  • Transmissible bacteria, virus, parasites ?
    pathogens ? 25 of deaths
  • Nontransmissible heart disease, diabetes,
    asthma ? 30 of deaths (data from WHO)
  • In industrialized countries infectious diseases
    decrease and chronic adult disease increases

12
WHO 7 Deadliest
  • Pneumonia/Flu 3.2 mil
  • HIV/AIDS 3.0 mil
  • Gastrointestinal 1.9 mil
  • TB 1.7 mil
  • Malaria 1 mil
  • Hep B 1 mil
  • Measles 800,000

13
Calculating Risk Risk Analysis
  • Ways to evaluate and compare risk
  • Determine how much is acceptable
  • A scientific process of analyzing PAST results
    (epidemiology)
  • High-risk Health Problems
  • Indoor/outdoor air pollution
  • Polluted water
  • Toxic chemicals in consumer products/food

14
  • High risk ecological problems
  • Global climate change
  • Ozone depletion
  • Habitat destruction
  • Loss of biodiversity
  • Medium-risk ecological problems
  • Acid deposition
  • Pesticides
  • Toxic material in surface water
  • Low risk ecological problems
  • Oil spills
  • Radioactive isotopes
  • Thermal pollution

15
Why is risk analysis so risky?
  • Use of old data
  • Who is doing the data analysis (do they benefit
    from the results?)
  • Short term vs long term risks
  • Are cummulative effects taken into consideration
    (synergistic effects)
  • How many people will be affected? How many is
    too many?
  • Risk analysis for different groups (i.e. workers
    vs. the general public consider nuclear power
    plants)
  • Who decides what is acceptable? WHO? EPA? FDA?
    Parents? Teachers?

16
Your Individual Perception of Risk
  • Misleading information
  • Misrepresented data
  • Level of participation
  • Cultural exposure
  • Distribution
  • In general, your sense of risk is defined by
  • Degree of control (wearing your seatbelt)
  • Fear of the unknown (gen. altered foods)
  • Voluntary vs. involuntary (driving vs. power
    plants)
  • Catastrophic vs. chronic (plane crash vs smoking)
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