TY - JOUR
T1 - A science-based agenda for health-protective chemical assessments and decisions
T2 - overview and consensus statement
AU - Woodruff, Tracey J.
AU - Rayasam, Swati D.G.
AU - Axelrad, Daniel A.
AU - Koman, Patricia D.
AU - Chartres, Nicholas
AU - Bennett, Deborah H.
AU - Birnbaum, Linda S.
AU - Brown, Phil
AU - Carignan, Courtney C.
AU - Cooper, Courtney
AU - Cranor, Carl F.
AU - Diamond, Miriam L.
AU - Franjevic, Shari
AU - Gartner, Eve C.
AU - Hattis, Dale
AU - Hauser, Russ
AU - Heiger-Bernays, Wendy
AU - Joglekar, Rashmi
AU - Lam, Juleen
AU - Levy, Jonathan I.
AU - MacRoy, Patrick M.
AU - Maffini, Maricel V.
AU - Marquez, Emily C.
AU - Morello-Frosch, Rachel
AU - Nachman, Keeve E.
AU - Nielsen, Greylin H.
AU - Oksas, Catherine
AU - Abrahamsson, Dimitri Panagopoulos
AU - Patisaul, Heather B.
AU - Patton, Sharyle
AU - Robinson, Joshua F.
AU - Rodgers, Kathryn M.
AU - Rossi, Mark S.
AU - Rudel, Ruthann A.
AU - Sass, Jennifer B.
AU - Sathyanarayana, Sheela
AU - Schettler, Ted
AU - Shaffer, Rachel M.
AU - Shamasunder, Bhavna
AU - Shepard, Peggy M.
AU - Shrader-Frechette, Kristin
AU - Solomon, Gina M.
AU - Subra, Wilma A.
AU - Vandenberg, Laura N.
AU - Varshavsky, Julia R.
AU - White, Roberta F.
AU - Zarker, Ken
AU - Zeise, Lauren
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022, The Author(s).
PY - 2023/1
Y1 - 2023/1
N2 - The manufacture and production of industrial chemicals continues to increase, with hundreds of thousands of chemicals and chemical mixtures used worldwide, leading to widespread population exposures and resultant health impacts. Low-wealth communities and communities of color often bear disproportionate burdens of exposure and impact; all compounded by regulatory delays to the detriment of public health. Multiple authoritative bodies and scientific consensus groups have called for actions to prevent harmful exposures via improved policy approaches. We worked across multiple disciplines to develop consensus recommendations for health-protective, scientific approaches to reduce harmful chemical exposures, which can be applied to current US policies governing industrial chemicals and environmental pollutants. This consensus identifies five principles and scientific recommendations for improving how agencies like the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) approach and conduct hazard and risk assessment and risk management analyses: (1) the financial burden of data generation for any given chemical on (or to be introduced to) the market should be on the chemical producers that benefit from their production and use; (2) lack of data does not equate to lack of hazard, exposure, or risk; (3) populations at greater risk, including those that are more susceptible or more highly exposed, must be better identified and protected to account for their real-world risks; (4) hazard and risk assessments should not assume existence of a “safe” or “no-risk” level of chemical exposure in the diverse general population; and (5) hazard and risk assessments must evaluate and account for financial conflicts of interest in the body of evidence. While many of these recommendations focus specifically on the EPA, they are general principles for environmental health that could be adopted by any agency or entity engaged in exposure, hazard, and risk assessment. We also detail recommendations for four priority areas in companion papers (exposure assessment methods, human variability assessment, methods for quantifying non-cancer health outcomes, and a framework for defining chemical classes). These recommendations constitute key steps for improved evidence-based environmental health decision-making and public health protection.
AB - The manufacture and production of industrial chemicals continues to increase, with hundreds of thousands of chemicals and chemical mixtures used worldwide, leading to widespread population exposures and resultant health impacts. Low-wealth communities and communities of color often bear disproportionate burdens of exposure and impact; all compounded by regulatory delays to the detriment of public health. Multiple authoritative bodies and scientific consensus groups have called for actions to prevent harmful exposures via improved policy approaches. We worked across multiple disciplines to develop consensus recommendations for health-protective, scientific approaches to reduce harmful chemical exposures, which can be applied to current US policies governing industrial chemicals and environmental pollutants. This consensus identifies five principles and scientific recommendations for improving how agencies like the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) approach and conduct hazard and risk assessment and risk management analyses: (1) the financial burden of data generation for any given chemical on (or to be introduced to) the market should be on the chemical producers that benefit from their production and use; (2) lack of data does not equate to lack of hazard, exposure, or risk; (3) populations at greater risk, including those that are more susceptible or more highly exposed, must be better identified and protected to account for their real-world risks; (4) hazard and risk assessments should not assume existence of a “safe” or “no-risk” level of chemical exposure in the diverse general population; and (5) hazard and risk assessments must evaluate and account for financial conflicts of interest in the body of evidence. While many of these recommendations focus specifically on the EPA, they are general principles for environmental health that could be adopted by any agency or entity engaged in exposure, hazard, and risk assessment. We also detail recommendations for four priority areas in companion papers (exposure assessment methods, human variability assessment, methods for quantifying non-cancer health outcomes, and a framework for defining chemical classes). These recommendations constitute key steps for improved evidence-based environmental health decision-making and public health protection.
KW - Chemicals
KW - Conflicts of Interest
KW - EPA
KW - Environmental Health
KW - Environmental Justice
KW - Hazard Identification
KW - Health Equity
KW - Risk Assessment
KW - TSCA
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85146194840&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85146194840&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1186/s12940-022-00930-3
DO - 10.1186/s12940-022-00930-3
M3 - Article
C2 - 36635734
AN - SCOPUS:85146194840
SN - 1476-069X
VL - 21
JO - Environmental Health: A Global Access Science Source
JF - Environmental Health: A Global Access Science Source
M1 - 132
ER -