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Contact Mary Bryant, RiskWorld
staff, e-mail bryant@tec-com.com.
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Assessing
Cumulative Risk
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The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Office of
Pesticide Programs has posted a web site that provides
information about its new framework for conducting cumulative risk
assessments for the organophosphates (OPs) and other pesticides that have a
common mechanism of toxicity (i.e., that act in the same way in the body)
and about the various meetings and comment opportunities available to the
public during this process. (Posted August 2001.)
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http://www.epa.gov/pesticides/cumulative/
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Canadian Network of
Toxicology Centres
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The Canadian Network of Toxicology Centres is recognized and respected internationally for excellence
in
research, training, and analysis and communication of information on critical toxicology issues for ecosystem and human health.
This expertise is achieved through innovative, multi-disciplinary research, teamwork and partnerships between many
Canadia public and private industry sectors. CNTC is a network of collaborating institutions which includes
participants from academia, government and industry. The Network conducts environmental and human health related
research along with well articulated and planned themes of interdisciplinary research. Implicit in the CNTC approach is a
commitment to joint, interactive efforts, centralized planning, project accountability for both intellectual and financial objectives and
regular reporting of progress beyond the usual publication in scientific journals. (Posted January
19, 2000.)
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http://www.uoguelph.ca/cntc/
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Center for
Environmental & Human Toxicology
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The Center for Environmental and Human Toxicology serves as the focal point
at the University of Florida for activities concerning the effects of
chemicals on human and animal health.
The Center serves as an interface between basic research and its application
for evaluation of human health and environmental risks. This interface
includes an educational component to transfer this knowledge to producers,
consumers, and regulators. The research and teaching activities of the
Center provide a resource for the State of Florida to identify and reduce
risks associated with environmental pollution, food contamination, and
workplace hazards. Development and improvement of risk assessment methods as
well as toxicity testing and elucidation of mechanisms of action of
chemical-induced adverse health effects are all activities of the Center
that serve as resources for the State of Florida and the nation. The Center
provides a forum for the discussion of specific and general problems
concerning the potential adverse human health effects associated with
chemical exposure. Using the interpretive skills of scientists and
clinicians from various health disciplines, better decisions can be made for
the protection of public health. (Posted February 11,
2000.)
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http://www.floridatox.org
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Chemical Register -
Yellow Pages for Chemical Industry
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This on-line searchable directory of chemical suppliers enables buyers to
easily source manufacturers for capacity and price of commodity and
specialty chemicals by name or CAS registry number. Site includes free
magazine offers, jobs, news, and events. (Posted
February 2005.) |
| http://www.chemicalregister.com/ |
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ChemIndustry.com
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A leading comprehensive category-based search engine for the chemical and
allied industry, ChemIndustry.com provides chemical and allied industry
professionals an efficient tool for locating information, products,
and services that are available via the World Wide Web. A team of industry
experts serve as editors to categorize and classify Web sites submitted
for registration, to edit registration descriptions so they will yield
appropriate results to search queries, and to provide advanced advice and
guidance for difficult searches. (Posted April 2000.)
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http://www.chemindustry.com/
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Computational
Toxicology
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
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Recent advances in the young field of computational biology are helping
scientists develop a more detailed understanding of the risks posed by a
large number of chemicals. The application of computational biology tools
to assess human health environmental risks posed by chemicals is called computational
toxicology. The research program at the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency currently uses many computational and biological approaches that
fall under the general area of computational toxicology to improve its
prioritization of data requirements and risk assessments for toxic
chemicals. Examples of such work are described in this website. The goal
of EPA's research program on computational toxicology is to better
understand the relationships between sources of environmental pollutant
exposure and adverse outcomes. (Posted August 2004.)
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http://www.epa.gov/comptox/
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Exposure Assessment
Tools and Models
of the U.S. EPA's Office of
Pollution Prevention and Toxics
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The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Office of
Pollution Prevention and Toxics (OPPT) has developed
several exposure
assessment methods, databases, and predictive models to help
scientists and engineers familiar with exposure assessment principles in
evaluating what happens to chemicals when they are used
and released to the environment and how workers, the general
public, consumers and the aquatic ecosystems may be exposed to
chemicals. These models and tools include Chemical
Screening Tool for Exposures & Environmental Releases (ChemSTEER);
Exposure,
Fate Assessment Screening Tool (E-FAST); Graphical
Exposure Modeling Systems (GEMS); Multi-Chamber
Concentration and Exposure Model (MCCEM); ReachScan;
Source
Ranking Database; Use
Clusters Scoring System (UCSS); and Wall
Paint Exposure Assessment Model (WPEM). While all will eventually be
available from the OPPT web site, only E-FAST and MCCEM are available to
download at this time (June 2000). (Posted June 2000.)
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http://www.epa.gov/opptintr/exposure/
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International Center for Toxicology and
Medicine
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ICTM delivers an unparalleled combination of expertise in medicine,
toxicology and environmental and occupational health and sciences. The ICTM team is lead by professors and other practicing scientists -- all contributors to leading
scientific publications. ICTM principals have been in the forefront of developing causal inference
methodology to assess relationships between health disturbances and exposure to drugs and
chemicals. Their clinical researchers helped define modern clinical evaluation methods for injuries
claimed from toxic exposure. They combine scientific experience with proven case development
methodologies to provide unbiased cost-efficient analysis. (Posted January
14, 2000.)
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http://www.ictm.com/
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Isocyanates
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The National Institute of Occupational Health and Safety
has published an on-line safety and health topic page on isocyanates, a
family of highly reactive, low molecular weight chemicals that are widely
used in the manufacture of flexible and rigid foams, fibers, coatings such
as paints and varnishes, and elastomers and are increasingly used in the
automobile industry, auto-body repair, and building insulation materials.
Isocyanates are powerful irritants to the mucous membranes of the eyes and
gastrointestinal and respiratory tracts. (Posted January
22, 2004.)
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http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/topics/isocyanates/
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National Pesticide
Telecommunications Network
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This
cooperative service of Oregon State University and the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency provides objective, science-based information about
pesticide-related subjects, including pesticide products, recognition and
management of pesticide poisoning, toxicology, and environmental chemistry.
The network is a source of factual chemical, health, and environmental
information about more than 600 pesticide active ingredients incorporated
into over 50,000 different products registered for use in the United
States since 1947. NPTN operates 6:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Pacific time, 7
days a week, excluding holidays; accepts calls toll free from the United
States, Puerto Rico, or the Virgin Islands; and responds to written
requests (see contact
information).
NPTN also hosts the National
Antimicrobial Information Network, a toll-free telephone service
that responds by telephone or mail to information requests about
antimicrobial products--sanitizers, disinfectants, and sterilants. (Posted October 2000.)
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http://ace.orst.edu/info/nptn/
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The New Zealand (NZ) Pump Company |
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The New Zealand (NZ) Pump Company manufactures and
distributes from facilities in UK/Europe, USA, and New Zealand the EZI-action
product range, which includes the Drumpump, Safety Measure Kit
(equipment for the safe dispensing and transfer of chemical fluids),
Powder Measure, Shallow Well Hand Pump, and Marine/Kayak Water Pumps.
These plastic drum pumps are resistant to a wide range of chemicals,
oils, diesel, and liquid fertilizers. (Posted October 2009.)
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http://www.nzpump.com/ |
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The
Prop 65 Page
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| California's voters passed Proposition 65, the Safe Drinking Water and
Toxic Enforcement Act of 1986, which addressed citizens' concerns about
exposure to substances "known to the state to cause cancer and reproductive
toxicity." The law prohibits businesses from discharging such
chemicals into sources of drinking water and requires that warnings be
given to individuals exposed to them. This web, developed and maintained
by Jeffrey B. Margulies of the Haight, Brown & Bonesteel law firm, provides a general overview of the
act, links to other Prop 65 sites and documents, and current developments in the legislative, regulatory, and litigation fields.
(Posted February 2000.) |
| http://www.calprop65.com/ |
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Reporting
on Risk
A Journalist's Handbook on Environmental Risk Assessment
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| The purpose of this primer is to
give the reporter an understanding of how risk assessment is currently
practiced and publicized. It is intended to enable the journalist to sort
through the numbers and scientific terminology to detect whether they are
getting the whole story and to identify the strengths and weaknesses of a
study. The ultimate goal is to improve public understanding and
decision-making regarding environmental risks. In this handbook, risk
assessment refers to the process of estimating the type and magnitude of
risk to human health posed by exposure to chemical substances; however,
many of the principles of risk assessment described also apply to
measuring other forms of risk. The handbook also includes chapters on
exposure assessment, toxicity assessment, epidemiology, and risk
communication.
The independent, nonprofit institution Foundation
for American Communications, which provides the knowledge and
resources journalists and their sources need to effectively communicate
information to the public through the news, and National
Sea Grant College Program, which encourages the wise stewardship of
marine resources, produced this handbook. (Posted
February 2000.) |
| http://www.facsnet.org/report_tools/guides_primers/risk/ |
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Society of Toxicology
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Founded in 1961, this professional and
scholarly organization of scientists who practice toxicology promotes
the acquisition and utilization of knowledge in toxicology, aids in the
protection of public health, facilitates disciplines, and has a strong
commitment to education in toxicology and to the recruitment of students
and new members into the profession. The society deals with risk
assessment issues through several of its specialty
sections and through an appointed committee named Task
Force to Improve the Scientific Basis of Risk Assessment. (Posted
March 2000.)
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http://www.toxicology.org/
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Toxicological Sciences
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One of the Society of Toxicology's official journals and fully owned and
financed by the society, Toxicological Sciences publishes research
articles 12 times a year that are broadly relevant to assessing the
potential adverse health effects resulting from exposure of human or
animals to chemicals, drugs, natural products, or synthetic materials.
Manuscripts are published in all areas of toxicology, both descriptive and
mechanistic, as well as interpretive or theoretical investigations that
elucidate the risk assessment implications of exposure to toxic agents
alone or in combination. Beginning January 1, 1999, Toxicological
Sciences became available on line free to the public and is published
by Oxford University Press. (Posted March 2000.)
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http://toxsci.oupjournals.org/
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| Toxics
Release Inventory |
| The TRI, a publicly
accessible toxic chemical database containing information concerning waste
management activities and the release of toxic chemicals by facilities
that manufacture, process, or use them, was developed and is maintained by
the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency under mandate of the Emergency
Planning and Community Right-To-Know Act (section 313) and the Pollution
Prevention Act (section 6607). Using this information, citizens,
businesses, and governments can work together to protect the quality of
their land, air, and water. The TRI web site includes the 1998
Toxics Release Inventory Public Data Release Report, published in
September 2000, which provides an overview of the 1998 TRI reporting year
data, and TRI Explorer,
which provides access to the TRI data that is easy to understand and
flexible to use. Combined with hazard and exposure information, the TRI
Explorer can be a valuable tool for risk identification. (Posted
September 2000.)
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| http://www.epa.gov/tri/ |
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Oak Ridge National Laboratory's
Toxicology and
Risk Analysis Section
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ORNL's Toxicology and Risk Analysis Section promotes
the protection of human health and the environment by developing and
applying improved methodologies and communications for risk,
toxicological, and environmental regulatory analyses. (Posted
January 2000.)
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http://www.hsrd.ornl.gov/taraweb/index.htm
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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's
Office of Pollution Prevention
and Toxics (OPPT)
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EPA's Office of Pollution Prevention and Toxics
promotes pollution prevention as the guiding principle for
controlling industrial pollution; safer chemicals through a combination of
regulatory and voluntary efforts; risk reduction so as to minimize
exposure to existing substances such as lead, asbestos, dioxin, and
polychlorinated biphenyls; and public understanding of risks by providing
understandable, accessible and complete information on chemical risks to
the broadest audience possible. OPPT's web site offers databases
and software (of
which some are available to download) for obtaining chemical and
regulatory information; concerned
citizen information; descriptions of projects
and programs specific to communities and industry, such as Chemical
Right-to-Know; information resources,
such as clearinghouses, dockets, and hotlines; publications,
such as fact sheets, Federal Register notices, and newsletters; and
information for students
and teachers. (Posted June 2000.)
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http://www.epa.gov/opptintr/
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Voluntary Children's
Chemical Evaluation Program
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In December 2000, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
announced the Voluntary Children's Chemical Evaluation Program (VCCEP), one
of three components of the Chemical
Right-to-Know Initiative. The program intends to provide data to
enable the public to understand the potential health risks to children
associated with certain chemical exposures. In Tier 1 of the program's
pilot, EPA has asked companies that manufacture and/or import 23 chemicals
that have been found in human tissues and the environment through various
monitoring programs to volunteer to sponsor an evaluation of those
chemicals.
(Posted July 2001.)
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http://www.epa.gov/chemrtk/childhlt.htm
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