An overview of measurement method tools available to communities for conducting exposure and cumulative risk assessments.

J Expo Sci Environ Epidemiol

National Exposure Research Laboratory, US EPA, MD-D205-05, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 27711, USA.

Published: June 2010

AI Article Synopsis

  • Community-based programs for environmental risk assessment involve collaboration among community leaders, local governments, and researchers to tackle issues through collective understanding and action.
  • After identifying community vulnerabilities and assets, participants prioritize risks, gather information, and establish an evaluation process to track the effectiveness of their actions, which can range from visible improvements to complex data collection.
  • The paper outlines various measurement methods for assessing chemicals and biologicals, categorizing them by complexity and cost, and serves as a guide for communities to select appropriate methods based on their specific goals and data confidence requirements.

Article Abstract

Community-based programs for assessing and mitigating environmental risks represent a challenge to participants because each brings a different level of understanding of the issues affecting the community. These programs often require the collaboration of several community sectors, such as community leaders, local governments and researchers. Once the primary concerns, community vulnerabilities and assets are identified, participants plan on how to address immediate actions, rank known risks, collect information to support decision making, set priorities and determine an evaluation process to assess the success of the actions taken. The evaluation process allows the community to develop new action plans based on the results obtained from earlier actions. Tracking the success of the community actions may be as simple as a visual/tangible result (e.g., cleaning a park) or as complex as the collection of specific measurements to track the reduction of toxic pollutants or to determine the presence of a specific contaminant. Recognizing that communities may need to perform measurements to meet their goals, this paper provides an overview of the available measurement methods for several chemicals and biologicals in relevant environmental samples to a community setting. The measurement methods are organized into several categories according to their level of complexity, estimated cost and sources. Community project technical advisors are encouraged to examine the objective(s) of the community to be addressed by a measurement collection effort and the level of confidence that needed for the data to make appropriate decisions. The tables provide a starting point for determining which measurement method may be appropriate for specific community needs.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/jes.2009.23DOI Listing

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