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Exposure assessment


Exposure assessment is a branch of environmental science and occupational hygiene that focuses on the processes that take place at the interface between the environment containing the contaminant of interest and the organism being considered. These are the final steps in the path to release an environmental contaminant, through transport to its effect in a biological system. It tries to measure how much of a contaminant can be absorbed by an exposed target organism, in what form, at what rate and how much of the absorbed amount is actually available to produce a biological effect. Although the same general concepts apply to other organisms, the overwhelming majority of applications of exposure assessment are concerned with human health, making it an important tool in public health.[1]

Definition

Exposure assessment is the process of estimating or measuring the magnitude, frequency and duration of exposure to an agent, along with the number and characteristics of the population exposed. Ideally, it describes the sources, pathways, routes, and the uncertainties in the assessment.

Exposure analysis is the science that describes how an individual or population comes in contact with a contaminant, including quantification of the amount of contact across space and time. 'Exposure assessment' and 'exposure analysis' are often used as synonyms in many practical contexts. Risk is a function of exposure and hazard. For example, even for an extremely toxic (high hazard) substance, the risk of an adverse outcome is unlikely if exposures are near zero. Conversely, a moderately toxic substance may present substantial risk if an individual or a population is highly exposed.[2][3]

Applications

Quantitative measures of exposure are used: in risk assessment, together with inputs from toxicology, to determine risk from substances released to the environment, to establish protective standards, in epidemiology, to distinguish between exposed and control groups, and to protect workers from occupational hazards.

Receptor-based approach

The receptor-based approach is used in exposure science. It starts by looking at different contaminants and concentrations that reach people. An exposure analyst can use direct or indirect measurements to determine if a person has been in contact with a specific contaminant or has been exposed to a specific risk (e.g. accident). Once a contaminant has been proved to reach people, exposure analysts work backwards to determine its source. After the identification of the source, it is important to find out the most efficient way to reduce adverse health effects.[1] If the contaminant reaches a person, it is very hard to reduce the associated adverse effects.[4] Therefore, it is very important to reduce exposure in order to diminish the risk of adverse health effects. It is highly important to use both regulatory and non-regulatory approaches in order to decrease people's exposure to contaminants.[4] In many cases, it is better to change people's activities in order to reduce their exposures rather than regulating a source of contaminants.[4] The receptor-based approach can be opposed to the source-based approach. This approach begins by looking at different sources of contaminants such as industries and power plants. Then, it is important to find out if the contaminant of interest has reached a receptor (usually humans). With this approach, it is very hard to prove that a pollutant from a source has reached a target.

Exposure

In this context exposure is defined as the contact between an agent and a target. Contact takes place at an exposure surface over an exposure period. Mathematically, exposure is defined as

 

where E is exposure, C(t) is a concentration that varies with time between the beginning and end of exposure. It has dimensions of mass times time divided by volume. This quantity is related to the potential dose of contaminant by multiplying it by the relevant contact rate, such as breathing rate, food intake rate etc. The contact rate itself may be a function of time.[4]

Routes of exposure

Contact between a contaminant and an organism can occur through any route. The possible routes of exposure are: inhalation, if the contaminant is present in the air; ingestion, through food, drinking or hand-to-mouth behavior; and dermal absorption, if the contaminant can be absorbed through the skin.

Exposure to a contaminant can and does occur through multiple routes, simultaneously or at different times. In many cases the main route of exposure is not obvious and needs to be investigated carefully. For example, exposure to byproducts of water chlorination can obviously occur by drinking, but also through the skin, while swimming or washing, and even through inhalation from droplets aerosolized during a shower. The relative proportion of exposure from these different routes cannot be determined a priori. Therefore, the equation in the previous section is correct in a strict mathematical sense, but it is a gross oversimplification of actual exposures, which are the sum of the integrals of all activities in all microenvironments. For example, the equation would have to be calculated with the specific concentration of a compound in the air in the room during the time interval. Similarly, the concentration in the ambient air would apply to the time that the person spends outdoors, whereas the concentration in the food that the person ingests would be added. The concentration integrals via all routes would be added for the exposure duration, e.g. hourly, daily or annually as

 

where y is the initial time and z the ending time of last in the series of time periods spent in each microenvironment over the exposure duration.[5]

Measurement of exposure

To quantify the exposure of particular individuals or populations two approaches are used, primarily based on practical considerations:

Direct approach

A video about measuring contaminants in the air at a workplace as part of a NIOSH Health Hazard Evaluation Program exposure assessment
A video about measuring contaminants on workers' skin and workplace surfaces as part of a NIOSH Health Hazard Evaluation Program exposure assessment

The direct approach measures the exposures to pollutants by monitoring the pollutant concentrations reaching the respondents. The pollutant concentrations are directly monitored on or within the person through point of contact, biological monitoring, or biomarkers.[6] In a workplace setting, methods of workplace exposure monitoring are used.

The point of contact approach indicates the total concentration reaching the host, while biological monitoring and the use of biomarkers infer the dosage of the pollutant through the determination of the body burden. The respondents often record their daily activities and locations during the measurement of the pollutants to identify the potential sources, microenvironments, or human activities contributing the pollutant exposure.[6] An advantage of the direct approach is that the exposures through multiple media (air, soil, water, food, etc.) are accounted for through one study technique. The disadvantages include the invasive nature of the data collection and associated costs. Point of contact is continuous measure of the contaminant reaching the target through all routes.

Biological monitoring is another approach to measuring exposure[7] measures the amount of a pollutant within body tissues or fluids (such as blood or urine). Biological monitoring measures the body burden of a pollutant but not the source from whence it came. The substance measured may be either the contaminant itself or a biomarker which is specific to and indicative of an exposure to the contaminant. Biomarkers of exposure assessment is a measure of the contaminant or other proportionally related variable in the body.

Air sampling measures the contaminant in the air as concentration units of ppmv (parts per million by volume), mg/m3 (milligrams per cubic meter) or other mass per unit volume of air. Samplers can be worn by workers or researchers to estimate concentrations found in the breathing zone (personal) or samples collected in general areas can be used to estimate human exposure by integrating time and activity patterns. Validated and semi-validated air sampling methods are published by NIOSH, OSHA, ISO and other bodies.

Surface or dermal sampling measures of the contaminant on touchable surfaces or on skin. Concentrations are typically reported in mass per unit surface area such as mg/100 cm2.

Indirect approach

The indirect approach measures the pollutant concentrations in various locations or during specific human activities to predict the exposure distributions within a population. The indirect approach focuses on the pollutant concentrations within microenvironments or activities rather than the concentrations directly reaching the respondents. The measured concentrations are correlated to large-scale activity pattern data, such as the National Human Activity Pattern Survey (NHAPS), to determine the predicted exposure by multiplying the pollutant concentrations by the time spent in each microenvironment or activity for by multiplying the pollutant concentrations b the contact rate with each media.[6] The indirect approach or exposure modeling determines the estimated exposure distributions within a population rather than the direct exposure an individual has experienced. The advantage is that process is minimally invasive to the population and is associated with lower costs than the direct approach. A disadvantage of the indirect approach is that the results were determined independently of any actual exposures, so the exposure distribution is open to errors from any inaccuracies in the assumptions made during the study, the time-activity data, or the measured pollutant concentrations.

In general, direct methods tend to be more accurate but more costly in terms of resources and demands placed on the subject being measured and may not always be feasible, especially for a population exposure study.

Examples of direct methods include air sampling though a personal portable pump, split food samples, hand rinses, breath samples or blood samples. Examples of indirect methods include environmental water, air, dust, soil or consumer product sampling coupled with information such as activity/location diaries. Mathematical exposure models may also be used to explore hypothetical situations of exposure.[8]

Exposure factors

Especially when determining the exposure of a population rather than individuals, indirect methods can often make use of relevant statistics about the activities that can lead to an exposure. These statistics are called exposure factors. They are generally drawn from the scientific literature or governmental statistics. For example, they may report informations such as amount of different food eaten by specific populations, divided by location[9] or age, breathing rates, time spent for different modes of commuting,[10] showering or vacuuming, as well as information on types of residences. Such information can be combined with contaminant concentrations from ad-hoc studies or monitoring network to produce estimates of the exposure in the population of interest. These are especially useful in establishing protective standards.

Exposure factor values can be used to obtain a range of exposure estimates such as average, high-end and bounding estimates. For example, to calculate the lifetime average daily dose one would use the equation below:

 

All of the variables in the above equation, with the exception of contaminant concentration, are considered exposure factors. Each of the exposure factors involves humans, either in terms of their characteristics (e.g., body weight) or behaviors (e.g., amount of time spent in a specific location, which affects exposure duration). These characteristics and behaviors can carry a great deal of variability and uncertainty. In the case of lifetime average daily dose, variability pertains to the distribution and range of LADDs amongst individuals in the population. The uncertainty, on the other hand, refers to exposure analyst's lack of knowledge of the standard deviation, mean, and general shape when dealing with calculating LADD.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Exposure Factors Handbook[4] provides solutions when confronting variability and reducing uncertainty. The general points are summarized below:

Four Strategies for Confronting Variability[4] Examples
Disaggregate the variability Develop distribution of body weight for subgroup
Ignore the variability Assume all adults weigh 65 kg
Use a maximum or minimum value Choose a high-end value for weight distribution
Use the average value Use the mean body weight for all adults
Analyzing Uncertainty[4] Description
Classical statistical methods (descriptive statistics and inferential statistics) Estimating the population exposure distribution directly, based on measured values from a representative sample
Sensitivity analysis Changing one input variable at a time while leaving others constant, to examine effect on output
Propagation of uncertainty Examining how uncertainty in individual parameters affects the overall uncertainty of the exposure assessment
Probabilistic analysis Varying each of the input variables over various values of their respective probability distributions(i.e. Monte Carlo integration)

Defining acceptable exposure for occupational environments

 
Simple representation of exposure risk assessment and management hierarchy based on available information

Occupational exposure limits are based on available toxicology and epidemiology data to protect nearly all workers over a working lifetime. Exposure assessments in occupational settings are most often performed by occupational/industrial hygiene (OH/IH) professionals who gather "basic characterization" consisting of all relevant information and data related to workers, agents of concern, materials, equipment and available exposure controls. The exposure assessment is initiated by selecting the appropriate exposure limit averaging time and "decision statistic" for the agent. Typically the statistic for deciding acceptable exposure is chosen to be the majority (90%, 95% or 99%) of all exposures to be below the selected occupational exposure limit. For retrospective exposure assessments performed in occupational environments, the "decision statistic" is typically a central tendency such as the arithmetic mean or geometric mean or median for each worker or group of workers. Methods for performing occupational exposure assessments can be found in "A Strategy for Assessing and Managing Occupational Exposures".[11]

Exposure assessment is a continuous process that is updated as new information and data becomes available.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Nieuwenhuijsen, Mark; Paustenbach, Dennis; Duarte-Davidson, Raquel (2006). "New developments in exposure assessment: The impact on the practice of health risk assessment and epidemiological studies". Environment International. 32 (8): 996–1009. doi:10.1016/j.envint.2006.06.015. PMID 16875734.
  2. ^ US EPA, "Expocast" http://www.epa.gov/ncct/expocast/
  3. ^ Vallero, D.A. (2004). Environmental Contaminants: Assessment and Control. Academic Press. ISBN 0127100571.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g "U.S. EPA. Exposure Factors Handbook". U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. 1997. EPA/600/P-95/002F a-c.
  5. ^ Vallero, D.A. "Fundamentals of Air Pollution". Elsevier Academic Press.
  6. ^ a b c Ott, Wayne R.; Steinemann, Anne C.; Wallace, Lance A. (2006). "1.4 Total Human Exposure Concept. 1.5 Receptor-Oriented Approach". Exposure Analysis. CRC Press. pp. 6–13. ISBN 978-1-4200-1263-7.
  7. ^ Lioy, Paul (1990). "Assessing total human exposure to contaminants". Environmental Science & Technology. 24 (7): 938–945. Bibcode:1990EnST...24..938L. doi:10.1021/es00077a001.
  8. ^ Vallero, D.; Isukapalli, S.; Zartarian, V.; McCurdy, T.; McKone, T.; Georgopoulos, P.G.; Dary, C. (2010). "Ch. 44: Modeling and predicting pesticide exposures". In Krieger, Robert (ed.). Hayes' Handbook of Pesticide Toxicology. Vol. 1 (3rd ed.). Academic Press. pp. 995–1020. ISBN 978-0-08-092201-0.
  9. ^ Dons, E; Int Panis, L; Van Poppel, M; Theunis, J; Willems, H; Torfs, R; Wets, G (2011). "Impact of time-activity patterns on personal exposure to black carbon". Atmospheric Environment. 45 (21): 3594–3602. Bibcode:2011AtmEn..45.3594D. doi:10.1016/j.atmosenv.2011.03.064.
  10. ^ Dons, E; Int Panis, L; Van Poppel, M; Theunis, J; Wets, G (2012). "Personal exposure to Black Carbon in transport microenvironments". Atmospheric Environment. 55: 392–398. Bibcode:2012AtmEn..55..392D. doi:10.1016/j.atmosenv.2012.03.020.
  11. ^ Bullock, William H.; Ignacio, Joselito S., eds. (2006). A Strategy for Assessing and Managing Occupational Exposures. AIHA. ISBN 978-1-931504-69-0.

External links

  • US National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), Exposure Assessment Program.
  • US National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Current Intelligence Bulletin 69: NIOSH Practices in Occupational Risk Assessment.
  • National Research Council; Division on Earth and Life Studies; Board on Environmental Studies and Toxicology (2012). Exposure Science in the 21st Century: A Vision and a Strategy. National Academies Press. ISBN 978-0-309-26468-6.
  • AIHA Exposure Assessment Strategies Committee
  • AIHA – American Industrial Hygiene Association (AIHA)
  • – International Society of Exposure Science
  • Exposure Factors Handbook by the US EPA
  • Software to Estimate Human Exposure to Chemicals by Creme Software
  • Zartarian, Valerie; Bahadori Tina Mckone Tom (2005). "Adoption of an official ISEA glossary". Journal of Exposure Analysis and Environmental Epidemiology. 15 (1): 1–5. doi:10.1038/sj.jea.7500411. PMID 15562291.

exposure, assessment, this, article, lead, section, short, adequately, summarize, points, please, consider, expanding, lead, provide, accessible, overview, important, aspects, article, april, 2022, branch, environmental, science, occupational, hygiene, that, f. This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article April 2022 Exposure assessment is a branch of environmental science and occupational hygiene that focuses on the processes that take place at the interface between the environment containing the contaminant of interest and the organism being considered These are the final steps in the path to release an environmental contaminant through transport to its effect in a biological system It tries to measure how much of a contaminant can be absorbed by an exposed target organism in what form at what rate and how much of the absorbed amount is actually available to produce a biological effect Although the same general concepts apply to other organisms the overwhelming majority of applications of exposure assessment are concerned with human health making it an important tool in public health 1 Contents 1 Definition 2 Applications 3 Receptor based approach 4 Exposure 4 1 Routes of exposure 5 Measurement of exposure 5 1 Direct approach 5 2 Indirect approach 5 3 Exposure factors 6 Defining acceptable exposure for occupational environments 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksDefinition EditExposure assessment is the process of estimating or measuring the magnitude frequency and duration of exposure to an agent along with the number and characteristics of the population exposed Ideally it describes the sources pathways routes and the uncertainties in the assessment Exposure analysis is the science that describes how an individual or population comes in contact with a contaminant including quantification of the amount of contact across space and time Exposure assessment and exposure analysis are often used as synonyms in many practical contexts Risk is a function of exposure and hazard For example even for an extremely toxic high hazard substance the risk of an adverse outcome is unlikely if exposures are near zero Conversely a moderately toxic substance may present substantial risk if an individual or a population is highly exposed 2 3 Applications EditQuantitative measures of exposure are used in risk assessment together with inputs from toxicology to determine risk from substances released to the environment to establish protective standards in epidemiology to distinguish between exposed and control groups and to protect workers from occupational hazards Receptor based approach EditThe receptor based approach is used in exposure science It starts by looking at different contaminants and concentrations that reach people An exposure analyst can use direct or indirect measurements to determine if a person has been in contact with a specific contaminant or has been exposed to a specific risk e g accident Once a contaminant has been proved to reach people exposure analysts work backwards to determine its source After the identification of the source it is important to find out the most efficient way to reduce adverse health effects 1 If the contaminant reaches a person it is very hard to reduce the associated adverse effects 4 Therefore it is very important to reduce exposure in order to diminish the risk of adverse health effects It is highly important to use both regulatory and non regulatory approaches in order to decrease people s exposure to contaminants 4 In many cases it is better to change people s activities in order to reduce their exposures rather than regulating a source of contaminants 4 The receptor based approach can be opposed to the source based approach This approach begins by looking at different sources of contaminants such as industries and power plants Then it is important to find out if the contaminant of interest has reached a receptor usually humans With this approach it is very hard to prove that a pollutant from a source has reached a target Exposure EditIn this context exposure is defined as the contact between an agent and a target Contact takes place at an exposure surface over an exposure period Mathematically exposure is defined as E t 1 t 2 C t d t displaystyle E int t 1 t 2 C t dt where E is exposure C t is a concentration that varies with time between the beginning and end of exposure It has dimensions of mass times time divided by volume This quantity is related to the potential dose of contaminant by multiplying it by the relevant contact rate such as breathing rate food intake rate etc The contact rate itself may be a function of time 4 Routes of exposure Edit Contact between a contaminant and an organism can occur through any route The possible routes of exposure are inhalation if the contaminant is present in the air ingestion through food drinking or hand to mouth behavior and dermal absorption if the contaminant can be absorbed through the skin Exposure to a contaminant can and does occur through multiple routes simultaneously or at different times In many cases the main route of exposure is not obvious and needs to be investigated carefully For example exposure to byproducts of water chlorination can obviously occur by drinking but also through the skin while swimming or washing and even through inhalation from droplets aerosolized during a shower The relative proportion of exposure from these different routes cannot be determined a priori Therefore the equation in the previous section is correct in a strict mathematical sense but it is a gross oversimplification of actual exposures which are the sum of the integrals of all activities in all microenvironments For example the equation would have to be calculated with the specific concentration of a compound in the air in the room during the time interval Similarly the concentration in the ambient air would apply to the time that the person spends outdoors whereas the concentration in the food that the person ingests would be added The concentration integrals via all routes would be added for the exposure duration e g hourly daily or annually as E s u m t 1 t 2 C t d t t y t z C t d t displaystyle E sum int t 1 t 2 C t dt int t y t z C t dt where y is the initial time and z the ending time of last in the series of time periods spent in each microenvironment over the exposure duration 5 Measurement of exposure EditTo quantify the exposure of particular individuals or populations two approaches are used primarily based on practical considerations Direct approach Edit source source source source source source source source source source source source source source A video about measuring contaminants in the air at a workplace as part of a NIOSH Health Hazard Evaluation Program exposure assessment source source source source source source source source source source source source source source A video about measuring contaminants on workers skin and workplace surfaces as part of a NIOSH Health Hazard Evaluation Program exposure assessment The direct approach measures the exposures to pollutants by monitoring the pollutant concentrations reaching the respondents The pollutant concentrations are directly monitored on or within the person through point of contact biological monitoring or biomarkers 6 In a workplace setting methods of workplace exposure monitoring are used The point of contact approach indicates the total concentration reaching the host while biological monitoring and the use of biomarkers infer the dosage of the pollutant through the determination of the body burden The respondents often record their daily activities and locations during the measurement of the pollutants to identify the potential sources microenvironments or human activities contributing the pollutant exposure 6 An advantage of the direct approach is that the exposures through multiple media air soil water food etc are accounted for through one study technique The disadvantages include the invasive nature of the data collection and associated costs Point of contact is continuous measure of the contaminant reaching the target through all routes Biological monitoring is another approach to measuring exposure 7 measures the amount of a pollutant within body tissues or fluids such as blood or urine Biological monitoring measures the body burden of a pollutant but not the source from whence it came The substance measured may be either the contaminant itself or a biomarker which is specific to and indicative of an exposure to the contaminant Biomarkers of exposure assessment is a measure of the contaminant or other proportionally related variable in the body Air sampling measures the contaminant in the air as concentration units of ppmv parts per million by volume mg m3 milligrams per cubic meter or other mass per unit volume of air Samplers can be worn by workers or researchers to estimate concentrations found in the breathing zone personal or samples collected in general areas can be used to estimate human exposure by integrating time and activity patterns Validated and semi validated air sampling methods are published by NIOSH OSHA ISO and other bodies Surface or dermal sampling measures of the contaminant on touchable surfaces or on skin Concentrations are typically reported in mass per unit surface area such as mg 100 cm2 Indirect approach Edit The indirect approach measures the pollutant concentrations in various locations or during specific human activities to predict the exposure distributions within a population The indirect approach focuses on the pollutant concentrations within microenvironments or activities rather than the concentrations directly reaching the respondents The measured concentrations are correlated to large scale activity pattern data such as the National Human Activity Pattern Survey NHAPS to determine the predicted exposure by multiplying the pollutant concentrations by the time spent in each microenvironment or activity for by multiplying the pollutant concentrations b the contact rate with each media 6 The indirect approach or exposure modeling determines the estimated exposure distributions within a population rather than the direct exposure an individual has experienced The advantage is that process is minimally invasive to the population and is associated with lower costs than the direct approach A disadvantage of the indirect approach is that the results were determined independently of any actual exposures so the exposure distribution is open to errors from any inaccuracies in the assumptions made during the study the time activity data or the measured pollutant concentrations In general direct methods tend to be more accurate but more costly in terms of resources and demands placed on the subject being measured and may not always be feasible especially for a population exposure study Examples of direct methods include air sampling though a personal portable pump split food samples hand rinses breath samples or blood samples Examples of indirect methods include environmental water air dust soil or consumer product sampling coupled with information such as activity location diaries Mathematical exposure models may also be used to explore hypothetical situations of exposure 8 Exposure factors Edit Especially when determining the exposure of a population rather than individuals indirect methods can often make use of relevant statistics about the activities that can lead to an exposure These statistics are called exposure factors They are generally drawn from the scientific literature or governmental statistics For example they may report informations such as amount of different food eaten by specific populations divided by location 9 or age breathing rates time spent for different modes of commuting 10 showering or vacuuming as well as information on types of residences Such information can be combined with contaminant concentrations from ad hoc studies or monitoring network to produce estimates of the exposure in the population of interest These are especially useful in establishing protective standards Exposure factor values can be used to obtain a range of exposure estimates such as average high end and bounding estimates For example to calculate the lifetime average daily dose one would use the equation below L A D D C o n t a m i n a n t C o n c e n t r a t i o n I n t a k e R a t e E x p o s u r e D u r a t i o n B o d y W e i g h t A v e r a g e L i f e t i m e displaystyle LADD ContaminantConcentration IntakeRate ExposureDuration BodyWeight AverageLifetime All of the variables in the above equation with the exception of contaminant concentration are considered exposure factors Each of the exposure factors involves humans either in terms of their characteristics e g body weight or behaviors e g amount of time spent in a specific location which affects exposure duration These characteristics and behaviors can carry a great deal of variability and uncertainty In the case of lifetime average daily dose variability pertains to the distribution and range of LADDs amongst individuals in the population The uncertainty on the other hand refers to exposure analyst s lack of knowledge of the standard deviation mean and general shape when dealing with calculating LADD The U S Environmental Protection Agency s Exposure Factors Handbook 4 provides solutions when confronting variability and reducing uncertainty The general points are summarized below Four Strategies for Confronting Variability 4 ExamplesDisaggregate the variability Develop distribution of body weight for subgroupIgnore the variability Assume all adults weigh 65 kgUse a maximum or minimum value Choose a high end value for weight distributionUse the average value Use the mean body weight for all adultsAnalyzing Uncertainty 4 DescriptionClassical statistical methods descriptive statistics and inferential statistics Estimating the population exposure distribution directly based on measured values from a representative sampleSensitivity analysis Changing one input variable at a time while leaving others constant to examine effect on outputPropagation of uncertainty Examining how uncertainty in individual parameters affects the overall uncertainty of the exposure assessmentProbabilistic analysis Varying each of the input variables over various values of their respective probability distributions i e Monte Carlo integration Defining acceptable exposure for occupational environments Edit Simple representation of exposure risk assessment and management hierarchy based on available information Occupational exposure limits are based on available toxicology and epidemiology data to protect nearly all workers over a working lifetime Exposure assessments in occupational settings are most often performed by occupational industrial hygiene OH IH professionals who gather basic characterization consisting of all relevant information and data related to workers agents of concern materials equipment and available exposure controls The exposure assessment is initiated by selecting the appropriate exposure limit averaging time and decision statistic for the agent Typically the statistic for deciding acceptable exposure is chosen to be the majority 90 95 or 99 of all exposures to be below the selected occupational exposure limit For retrospective exposure assessments performed in occupational environments the decision statistic is typically a central tendency such as the arithmetic mean or geometric mean or median for each worker or group of workers Methods for performing occupational exposure assessments can be found in A Strategy for Assessing and Managing Occupational Exposures 11 Exposure assessment is a continuous process that is updated as new information and data becomes available See also EditWorkplace exposure monitoring Recommended Exposure Limit Limit for exposure to a chemical substance Exposure science Environmental health Public health branch focused on environmental impacts on human health Occupational exposure banding Permissible exposure limit Workplace environmental standard Predictive intake modelling Threshold limit value Upper limit on the acceptable exposure concentration of a hazardous substance in the workplace Radiation exposure Measure of ionization of air by ionizing radiationReferences Edit a b Nieuwenhuijsen Mark Paustenbach Dennis Duarte Davidson Raquel 2006 New developments in exposure assessment The impact on the practice of health risk assessment and epidemiological studies Environment International 32 8 996 1009 doi 10 1016 j envint 2006 06 015 PMID 16875734 US EPA Expocast http www epa gov ncct expocast Vallero D A 2004 Environmental Contaminants Assessment and Control Academic Press ISBN 0127100571 a b c d e f g U S EPA Exposure Factors Handbook U S Environmental Protection Agency 1997 EPA 600 P 95 002F a c Vallero D A Fundamentals of Air Pollution Elsevier Academic Press a b c Ott Wayne R Steinemann Anne C Wallace Lance A 2006 1 4 Total Human Exposure Concept 1 5 Receptor Oriented Approach Exposure Analysis CRC Press pp 6 13 ISBN 978 1 4200 1263 7 Lioy Paul 1990 Assessing total human exposure to contaminants Environmental Science amp Technology 24 7 938 945 Bibcode 1990EnST 24 938L doi 10 1021 es00077a001 Vallero D Isukapalli S Zartarian V McCurdy T McKone T Georgopoulos P G Dary C 2010 Ch 44 Modeling and predicting pesticide exposures In Krieger Robert ed Hayes Handbook of Pesticide Toxicology Vol 1 3rd ed Academic Press pp 995 1020 ISBN 978 0 08 092201 0 Dons E Int Panis L Van Poppel M Theunis J Willems H Torfs R Wets G 2011 Impact of time activity patterns on personal exposure to black carbon Atmospheric Environment 45 21 3594 3602 Bibcode 2011AtmEn 45 3594D doi 10 1016 j atmosenv 2011 03 064 Dons E Int Panis L Van Poppel M Theunis J Wets G 2012 Personal exposure to Black Carbon in transport microenvironments Atmospheric Environment 55 392 398 Bibcode 2012AtmEn 55 392D doi 10 1016 j atmosenv 2012 03 020 Bullock William H Ignacio Joselito S eds 2006 A Strategy for Assessing and Managing Occupational Exposures AIHA ISBN 978 1 931504 69 0 External links EditUS National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health NIOSH Exposure Assessment Program US National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health Current Intelligence Bulletin 69 NIOSH Practices in Occupational Risk Assessment National Research Council Division on Earth and Life Studies Board on Environmental Studies and Toxicology 2012 Exposure Science in the 21st Century A Vision and a Strategy National Academies Press ISBN 978 0 309 26468 6 AIHA EASC AIHA Exposure Assessment Strategies Committee AIHA American Industrial Hygiene Association AIHA ISES International Society of Exposure Science Exposure Factors Handbook by the US EPA Software to Estimate Human Exposure to Chemicals by Creme Software Zartarian Valerie Bahadori Tina Mckone Tom 2005 Adoption of an official ISEA glossary Journal of Exposure Analysis and Environmental Epidemiology 15 1 1 5 doi 10 1038 sj jea 7500411 PMID 15562291 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Exposure assessment amp oldid 1110202023, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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