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THE enHEALTH RISK MANAGEMENT FRAMEWORK

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... page last modified Friday 2 August 2002. website: www. ... Drafted by Australia's leading experts on HRA. Australian Centre for Human Health Risk Assessment ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: THE enHEALTH RISK MANAGEMENT FRAMEWORK


1
THE enHEALTH RISK MANAGEMENT FRAMEWORK
  • Brian G. Priestly
  • Director ACHHRA

Department of Epidemiology Preventive Medicine
ACHHRA
Australian Centre for Human Health Risk Assessment
2
ACHHRA What is it?
  • Consortium of four Australian Universities
  • Monash DEPM Flinders Env.HlthUQ EnTox
    Griffith Env Hlth
  • Core funds PHERP Innovations program
  • Broad spectrum of expertise in public
    environmental health risk assessment
  • Key priorities workforce development
    innovative research

Department of Epidemiology Preventive Medicine
ACHHRA
Australian Centre for Human Health Risk Assessment
3
The concept of SAFETY
  • The absence of risk?or
  • A concept which relies on the efficacy and
    reliability of CONTROLS over risk?

Department of Epidemiology Preventive Medicine
ACHHRA
Australian Centre for Human Health Risk Assessment
4
enHEALTH Council what is it?
  • Subcommittee of the National Public Health
    Partnership
  • Comprised of Commonwealth/State/Territory senior
    officials representing environmental health
    programs
  • Key publications include National
    Environmental Health Strategy (1999 under
    review) National Environmental Health Strategy
    Implementation plan (2000) Environmental health
    risk perception in Australia (2001) Directories
    of environmental health data, standards
    guidelines Developing National Environmental
    Health Indicators (2002)

Department of Epidemiology Preventive Medicine
ACHHRA
Australian Centre for Human Health Risk Assessment
5
enHealth Council what is it?
Department of Epidemiology Preventive Medicine
ACHHRA
Australian Centre for Human Health Risk Assessment
 
6
enHEALTH RISK MANAGEMENT FRAMEWORK
Department of Epidemiology Preventive Medicine
ACHHRA
Australian Centre for Human Health Risk Assessment
7
enHEALTH RISK MANAGEMENT FRAMEWORK
  • OBJECTIVES
  • Establish a national framework for risk
    assessment
  • Encourage the use of consistent risk assessment
    methodology
  • Adopt risk assessment methodology consistent with
    international best practice
  • Deliver consistent and reproducible outcomes (?)
  • Provide a mechanism for the application of risk
    assessment outcomes to standard setting and other
    risk management strategies

Department of Epidemiology Preventive Medicine
ACHHRA
Australian Centre for Human Health Risk Assessment
8
CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK
  • Risk assessment should represent a vigorous
    adaptive and interactive process of evaluating
    the nature, and to maximum extent possible, the
    quantitative character of risks.
  • Risk management should represent an interactive
    design, planning, negotiation and/or regulation
    process aimed at reducing identified risks to
    levels which can be tolerated by potentially
    affected parties or by society overall Hrudey
    (1996)

Department of Epidemiology Preventive Medicine
ACHHRA
Australian Centre for Human Health Risk Assessment
9
KEY ELEMENTS OF THE DOCUMENT
  • Summary of risk assessment objectives
    significance
  • Concise statement of the key principles in
    environmental health risk assessment (HRA)
  • Glossary of HRA terminology
  • Guidance on community consultation and risk
    communication
  • Individual chapters outlining the components of
    HRA hazard, dose-response, exposure, risk
    characterisation, guidance and standards for
    different exposure media
  • Drafted by Australias leading experts on HRA

Department of Epidemiology Preventive Medicine
ACHHRA
Australian Centre for Human Health Risk Assessment
10
There is another enHEALTH risk assessment
document out for consultation
Department of Epidemiology Preventive Medicine
ACHHRA
Australian Centre for Human Health Risk Assessment
11
EnHEALTH has also published reviews of individual
air toxics
Department of Epidemiology Preventive Medicine
ACHHRA
Australian Centre for Human Health Risk Assessment
12
Department of Epidemiology Preventive Medicine
ACHHRA
Australian Centre for Human Health Risk Assessment
13
Department of Epidemiology Preventive Medicine
ACHHRA
Australian Centre for Human Health Risk Assessment
14
DESIRABLE RISK ASSESSMENT OUTCOMES
  • Estimates of baseline, existing, new or exotic
    risks, at a point of time and changes in risk
    over time
  • Evidence-based health guideline values to assist
    the risk manager and/or guide clean-up processes
  • Supporting risk management decisions on whether
    interventions are needed or risk policies
    reconsidered
  • Prioritisation of issues according to their
    levels of risk
  • Identification and comparative analysis of
    factors which may mitigate risk
  • Greater transparency in risk management and risk
    communication to the community

Department of Epidemiology Preventive Medicine
ACHHRA
Australian Centre for Human Health Risk Assessment
15
STEP 1 HAZARD IDENTIFICATION
  • Is the airborne toxic a gas, vapour or dust?
  • Will it produce mainly systemic or local toxic
    effects?
  • What is the nature of the toxicological
    database? - animal studies - epidemiological
    studies - occupational exposure studies
  • Are the dose-response relationships adequately
    defined
  • Have exposure standards been set (or can they be
    set)? - TLV, ADI, MPC
  • Are these standards relevant to airborne
    exposures?

Department of Epidemiology Preventive Medicine
ACHHRA
Australian Centre for Human Health Risk Assessment
16
AIRBORNE TOXICS PRODUCE BOTH SYSTEMIC AND LOCAL
TOXIC EFFECTS
Department of Epidemiology Preventive Medicine
ACHHRA
Australian Centre for Human Health Risk Assessment
17
TOXICITY TESTS BASIC ASSUMPTIONS
  • As dose increases, so does the severity of the
    toxic effect and the probability of observing it
  • Toxic mechanisms are common across tissues and
    species differences in response relate mainly
    to different target tissue concentrations
  • The toxic endpoint is recognisable as a distinct
    patho-physiological change
  • The use of safety factors overcomes the
    uncertainties inherent in trans-species
    extrapolation

Department of Epidemiology Preventive Medicine
ACHHRA
Australian Centre for Human Health Risk Assessment
18
TERMINOLOGY DEFINITIONS
  • Acceptable Daily Intake (ADI)the daily intake
    which can be ingested for an entire lifetime (70
    years) without appreciable health risk (on the
    basis of information available at the
    time)units mg/kg body wt/day

Department of Epidemiology Preventive Medicine
ACHHRA
Australian Centre for Human Health Risk Assessment
19
Department of Epidemiology Preventive Medicine
ACHHRA
Australian Centre for Human Health Risk Assessment
20
STEP 2 EXPOSURE ASSESSMENT
Department of Epidemiology Preventive Medicine
ACHHRA
Australian Centre for Human Health Risk Assessment
21
Department of Epidemiology Preventive Medicine
ACHHRA
Australian Centre for Human Health Risk Assessment
22
EXPOSURES MAY BE VARIABLE
Department of Epidemiology Preventive Medicine
ACHHRA
Australian Centre for Human Health Risk Assessment
23
Do the data allow for conversion between routes
of exposure?
Department of Epidemiology Preventive Medicine
ACHHRA
Australian Centre for Human Health Risk Assessment
24
POTENTIAL CONSEQUENCES ASSOCIATED WITH INADEQUATE
UNDERSTANDING OF EXPOSURE PARADIGMS
Department of Epidemiology Preventive Medicine
ACHHRA
Australian Centre for Human Health Risk Assessment
25
Is there a better way of integrating point
estimates of exposure?
Department of Epidemiology Preventive Medicine
ACHHRA
Australian Centre for Human Health Risk Assessment
26
MONTE CARLO TECHNIQUES
  • PROS- inherently more representative of variable
    exposures- avoids bias associated with outlier
    or extreme point estimates- enables exposure
    pathways to be appropriately ranked
  • CONS- complex, data-rich requirements to define
    probability distributions- difficult to
    distinguish between variability and
    uncertainty- need to define acceptable
    exposure in terms of a probability cut-off
    (e.g. 1 in 20 persons would exceed exposure
    level)- the models may portray a level of
    precision which is misleading- the distribution
    extremes (e.g 99th percentile) are still
    estimated with some uncertainty

Department of Epidemiology Preventive Medicine
ACHHRA
Australian Centre for Human Health Risk Assessment
27
EXPOSURE MODELLING
  • Some inputs required to achieve an estimate of
    concentrations at each receptor point (enHealth
    2002 table 2 A2)
  • release point locations stack height/diameter
  • mass emission rates for cmpds stack
    velocity/temperature
  • concs. Of individual substances geographic
    features
  • rural or urban site classification local
    meteorological data
  • receptor locations
  • frequency/duration of short-term releases

Department of Epidemiology Preventive Medicine
ACHHRA
Australian Centre for Human Health Risk Assessment
28
USE OF DEFAULT VALUES
  • Safety factors in extrapolating from animal to
    human
  • Benchmark dose approach to establishing a
    safe level of exposure to carcinogenic soil
    contaminants (NHMRC EH21 1999))
  • The use of tables of physiological
    parameterse.g. in December 2003 Exposure draft,
    see tables for - respiratory rates in infants,
    children adults standardised and
    activity-related - activity-related respiration
    volumes - air exchange ratios - particle
    deposition and filtration factors - examples of
    dust size-frequency distribution patterns -
    activity summaries time spent in different
    microenvironments

Department of Epidemiology Preventive Medicine
ACHHRA
Australian Centre for Human Health Risk Assessment
29
SOME CLOSING REMARKS
  • Whenever data gaps occur, assumptions must be
    made before the risk assessment process can be
    completed. When these assumptions are
    unrealistic, or eventually prove to be incorrect,
    the risk assessment supports an interpretation
    diametrically opposed to reality Gregory
    (1992) Cancer risk - does anyone really
    care? Reg. Toxicol. Pharmacol. 15, 271-277

Department of Epidemiology Preventive Medicine
ACHHRA
Australian Centre for Human Health Risk Assessment
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