Chapter 14: Physical Environment and Community Health Flashcards
What are the purposes of the Clean Water Act and the Safe Drinking Water Act?
- restore and maintain chemical, physical, and biological integrity of the waters in the US so they can support the protection and propagation of fish, shellfish, and wildlife and recreation in an on water
- return quality of surface waters to swimmable and fishable status
What is a foodborne disease outbreak? What factors contribute to foodborne disease outbreaks? Name some common foodborne disease causative agents.
- occurrence of two or more cases
of a similar illness resulting from the ingestion of a common food - inadequate cooking temperatures or
improper holding temperatures for foods (especially for bacterial outbreaks); unsanitary conditions or practices at the point of service, such as failure to wash hands (norovirus outbreaks); or drinking raw (nonpasteurized) milk (bacterial outbreaks) - salmonella, hepatitis A
environmental health
the study and mgmt of environmental conditions that affect the health and wellbeing of humans
environmental hazards
factors or conditions in the environment that increase the risk of human injury, disease or death
air pollution
contamination of air by substances in great enough amounts to harm living organisms
Major sources of air pollution in north america
transportation, electrical power plants fueled by oil and coal, industry
primary air pollutants
air pollutants that emanate directly from transportation, power and industrial plants, and refineries
secondary air pollutants
- formed when primary pollutants react with sunlight and other components in the atmosphere
- When primary pollutants react with other atmospheric components, they can form harmful new compounds
photochemical smog
haze or fog that’s formed when air pollutants interact with the sunlight
industrial smog
formed by sulfur dioxide given off from faculties from using coal as a fuel; aka grey smog
ozone
inorganic molecule considered to be a pollutant in the atmosphere bc it harms human tissue, in the stratosphere it’s considered beneficial
thermal inversion
- condition that occurs when warm air traps cooler air @ the surface of the earth
- Caused by excessive lvls of ground level ozone
sources of indoor air pollution
- asbestos (naturally occurring mineral fiber identified as a carcinogen)
- Old building have a lot of asbestos in it as fire retardants
- the asbestos fibres can get into air and people breathe them in - not good
- biogenic pollutants: airborne biological organisms that can produce illness
- combustion byproducts: generated by burning things
- Volatile organic compounds (VOC): compounds that exist as bakerse over the normal range of air pressures and temperatures
- Formaldehyde: found in aqueous solutions, found in many consumer products
- Radon: naturally occurring, tasteless, odorless and radioactive
- Environmental tobacco smoke: mainstream smoke, sidestream smoke, passive smoking
- Sidestream: smoke that comes off the end of smoking apparatus
- Passive smoking: involuntary inhalation of environmental tobacco smoke by nonsmokers
- mold : assoc w/ allergic reactions and respiratory difficulties
who regulates outdoor air quality
Environment canada
National air pollution surveillance program (NAPS)
Health canada
criteria pollutants
- Most pervasive air pollutants (they’re the worst)
- Greatest concern
- Ex. Carbon monoxide, lead, nitrogen dioxide, ground level ozone, particulate matter, sulfur dioxide