PU530 Environmental Health Unit 2 Environmental Hazards - Sources and Routes of Exposure Flashcards
What do we call the agents that pollute the environment?
Pollutants
Carbon dioxide is not normally considered a pollutant, but in its increased concentration has been responsible for global warming.
What are the two types of pollutants?
Non-degradable and biodegradable pollutants
Examples of non-degradable pollutants include pesticides, heavy metals, rubber, plastic, nuclear waste.
Biodegradable pollutants such as paper, domestic sewage, garden waste, and fertilizers are broken down into simple components by bacterial composition.
What are the natural and man-made sources of air pollution?
Natural sources - include volcanic eruptions [releasing
poisonous gases such as sulphur dioxide (SO2), hydrogen sulphide
(H2S), and carbon monoxide (CO)], forest fires, decay of organic
matter, marsh gases, pollen grains, fine sand particles, and fungal
spores.
Man-made sources - include increase in population,
deforestation, burning of fossil fuels, vehicular emissions, rapid
industrialization, and agricultural activities (use of agrochemicals
such as fertilizers, pesticides, insecticides, and herbicides). Some
other sources include wastes from nuclear reactors.
What are the 8 significant sources of water pollution?
Sewage and domestic wastes - 75% of water pollution
Industrial effluents - toxic materials discharged from industries which contain chemicals and harmful compounds.
Agricultural discharges - mostly agrochemicals such as fertilizers, pesticides, insecticides, etc. discharged into water bodies as agricultural run-offs.
Detergents - Household detergents contain a number of pollutants that severely affect water bodies such as sodium and sodium silicate.
Toxic metals - industrial processes responsible for releasing toxic materials like mercury, cadmium, lead, etc.
Siltation - silt entering bodies of water brought down by rains and flash floods. The soil particles in the silt make the water turbid, thus hindering the free movement of aquatic organisms.
Thermal pollutants - unutilized heat from thermal power plants is released into water bodies, which adversely affect the aquatic environment.
Radioactive materials - Radioactive wastes enter water bodies
from sources such as nuclear power plants, nuclear tests, and
fission reactions. Extremely toxic radioactive elements such as
plutonium, uranium, thorium, and radium are produced from
neutron bombardment of atomic fuel. Once they enter the water
bodies, they disrupt the ecosystem and find way into the food
chain.
What are the 5 significant sources of soil pollution?
What are the six types of pollution?
Three main categories of pollution?
Air, water, soil/land, noise, pollution by radioactive substances, and thermal pollution.
These all fall under three main categories of biological, chemical, and physical.
Where did the modern chemical manufacturing industry originate?
In Europe during the Industrial Revolution in the late 1700s and early 1800s (Sulfuric acid was the first)
What is currently the most important chemical feedstock?
Petroleum
Why are chemical workers at high risk of disease?
What are the three chemicals that pioneered the thought that chemicals cause cancer?
Chemically induced disease because they are often exposed to new chemicals, and their exposures are often quite high.
Aniline-based dyes, benzene, and asbestos.
Where has chemical produced increasingly moved to?
LMICs
See attached for examples.
What is a key risk factor when it comes to vulnerability to toxic chemical exposures?
Age
What are the four differences between children and adults that contribute to children’s heightened susceptibility to toxic chemicals reported by the National Academy of Sciences?
- Children have proportionately greater exposures to toxic chemicals than adults.
- Children’s metabolic pathways are immature, and a child’s ability to metabolize toxic
chemicals is different from an adult’s. - Children’s exquisitely delicate early developmental processes are easily disrupted.
Windows of vulnerability occur during critical periods in early development when
exposures to even minute doses of toxic chemicals—levels that would have no adverse
effect on an adult—can disrupt organ formation, increase lifelong risk of noncommunicable disease, and cause lifelong functional impairments. - Children have more future years than adults to develop diseases of long latency that
may be triggered by harmful exposures in early life.
What is a critically important mechanism of chemical toxicity that has been extensively studied in recent years?
What does it disrupt?
What are the key principles of this mechanism?
Endocrine (hormonal) disruption.
Hormonal signaling which alters development, reduces cognitive function and intelligence, and impair reproductive capacity.
Large biological effects can occur at very low doses.
Toxic effects occur across multiple species, ranging from minnows to humans—illustrating that common biological pathways are shared with species across the biological
world.
The timing of exposures is important. Windows of unique vulnerability in early life,
determined by developmental pathways and stages, are associated with the most severe
and lasting effects. Effects sustained during those periods are not limited to childhood.
Effects can occur across the lifespan. One worrisome trend, for example, is that human
sperm counts in Western countries have declined significantly since the 1970s,44 falling by 50%–60% with no indication that the decline is slowing. Studies in China
show similar results, with declines in sperm counts of as much as 40% over recent
decades.45,46 Such trends are manifesting as reduced fertility sufficient to affect population growth rates. In a recent Danish study approximately 25% had sperm count
sufficiently reduced to increase time to pregnancy and 15% were so severely impaired
that it is unlikely they would be able to reproduce without fertility treatment.
Endocrine disruption is emblematic of the far-reaching human impacts of chemical
pollutants.
What are the two sequences of events that have marked many historical missteps with chemicals?
- the enthusiastic introduction and wide dissemination of many thousands of chemicals
and new products - followed by the belated discovery that some of these
apparently beneficial chemicals pose unanticipated threats to human health and the
environment
Examples of this include addition of lead to paint and gasoline, use of asbestos for insulation and fireproofing products, the use of DDT as a pesticide, introduction of thalidomide to control nausea in pregnancy, widespread use of PCBs in electrical transformers, use of the synthetic hormone diethylstilbestrol (DES) to prevent miscarriage in pregnancy, the use of ozone-destroying chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) in refrigeration units.
What are the two core themes of the field of planetary health in respect to the corporate model?
- Those who benefit from environmental degradation and those who pay the costs are
often very different populations, and - Quantifying the human health costs of environmental degradation is an important
step in moving these costs out of the realm of vague externalities and into the realm
of cost–benefit analysis and policymaking.
What % of chemicals used today have been screened for their potential to disrupt early human development or to cause disease in infants and children?
20%
An egregious policy gap is that fewer than half of the high-production volume chemicals currently on world markets have undergone any testing for safety or toxicity.
What is at the root cause of the global problem of chemical pollution and toxicity?
The absence in most countries of a coherent chemical protection policy.
The results of this poor stewardship and lack of due diligence are as follows:
- Chemicals and pesticides whose potential to harm human health and the environment were never examined have repeatedly been responsible for the episodes of disease, death, and environmental degradation described in the preceding section of this
chapter; and - Little is known about the possible dangers to human health and the environment
of most of the synthetic chemicals in the world today. Even less is known about the
potential health effects of simultaneous exposure to multiple chemicals or about how
chemicals may interact with one another in the human body, possibly causing synergistic adverse effects on health.
Food for Thought
The extent of knowledge of neurotoxic chemicals.
What term relates to poisonous or deadly effects on the body by inhalation (breathing), ingestion (eating), or absorption, or by direct contact with a chemical?
Toxic
What is a chemical that can injure or kill humans, animals, or plants; a poison?
Toxicant
The term “toxicant” is used when talking
about toxic substances that are produced by or are a by-product of human activities.
Toxins are typically used to describe natural toxicants.