Title: Environmental Hazards and Human Health
1Chapter 18
- Environmental Hazards and Human Health
2Core Case Study The Global HIV/AIDS Epidemic
- AIDS has reduced the life expectancy of
sub-Saharan Africa from 62 to 47 years 40 years
in the seven countries most severely affected by
AIDS.
Projected age structure of Botswana's population
in 2020.
Figure 18-2
3Core Case Study The Global HIV/AIDS Epidemic
- The virus itself is not deadly, but it cripples
the immune system, leaving the body susceptible
to infections such as Kaposis sarcoma (above).
Figure 18-1
4What is a(n)
- Epidemic disease in a small area, i.e. Georgia,
Midwest, United States - Pandemic disease that is spreading through many
continents around the world
5RISKS AND HAZARDS
- RISKS POSSIBILITY OF SUFFERING HARM FROM A
HAZARD THAT CAN CAUSE ILLNESS, INJURY, DISEASE
DEATH, ECONOMIC LOSS OR ENVIRONMENTAL DAMAGE. - RISK ASSESSMENT SCIENTIFIC PROCESS OF
ESTIMATING HOW MUCH HARM A PARTICULAR HAZARD CAN
CAUSE TO HUMAN HEALTH OR THE ENVIRONMENT.
6RISKS AND HAZARDS
- Biological hazards from more than 1,400
pathogens. - Chemical hazards in air, water, soil, and food.
- Physical hazards such as fire, earthquake,
volcanic eruption. - Cultural hazards such as smoking, poor diet,
unsafe sex, drugs, unsafe working conditions, and
poverty.
7BIOLOGICAL HAZARDS DISEASE IN DEVELOPED AND
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
- Diseases not caused by living organisms cannot
spread from one person to another
(nontransmissible disease), while those caused by
living organisms such as bacteria and viruses can
spread from person to person (transmissible or
infectious)
8Transmissible Disease
- Pathway for infectious disease in humans.
Figure 18-4
9Transmissible Disease
- WHO estimates that each year the worlds seven
deadliest infections kill 13.6 million people
most of them the poor in developing countries.
Figure 18-5
10Case Study Growing Germ Resistance to Antibiotics
- Infectious bacteria are becoming genetically
resistant to widely used antibiotics due to - Genetic resistance Spread of bacteria around the
globe by humans, overuse of pesticides which
produce pesticide resistant insects that carry
bacteria. - Overuse of antibiotics A 2000 study found that
half of the antibiotics used to treat humans were
prescribed unnecessarily.
11Case Study The Growing Global Threat from
Tuberculosis
- The highly infectious tuberculosis (TB) kills 1.7
million people per year and could kill 25 million
people 2020. - Recent increases in TB are due to
- Lack of TB screening and control programs
especially in developing countries due to
expenses. - Genetic resistance to the most effective
antibiotics.
12Solutions to Tuberculosis
- Early identification treatment with active TB
- Treatment with 4 inexpensive drugs cure up to 90
of individuals with active TB - Must be taken everyday for 6-8 months
- Symptoms disappear after a few weeks, people stop
taking the drugs allowing the - Disease to recur in drug-resistant forms and
- Spread
13Viral Diseases
- Flu, HIV, and hepatitis B viruses infect and kill
many more people each year than highly publicized
West Nile and SARS viruses. - The influenza virus is the biggest killer virus
worldwide. - Pigs, chickens, ducks, and geese are the major
reservoirs of flu. As they move from one species
to another, they can mutate and exchange genetic
material with other viruses.
14Viral Diseases
- HIV is the second biggest killer virus worldwide.
Five major priorities to slow the spread of the
disease are - Quickly reduce the number of new infections to
prevent further spread. - Concentrate on groups in a society that are
likely to spread the disease. - Provide free HIV testing and pressure people to
get tested. - Implement educational programs.
- Provide free or low-cost drugs to slow disease
progress.
15Case Study Malaria Death by Mosquito
- Malaria kills about 2 million people per year and
has probably killed more than all of the wars
ever fought.
Figure 18-7
16Case Study Malaria Death by Mosquito
- Economists estimate that spending 2-3 billion on
malaria treatment may save more than 1 million
lives per year.
Figure 18-6
17Case Study Malaria Death by Mosquito
- Spraying insides of homes with low concentrations
of the pesticide DDT greatly reduces the number
of malaria cases. - Under international treaty enacted in 2002, DDT
is being phased out in developing countries.
18CHEMICAL HAZARDS
- A toxic chemical can cause temporary or permanent
harm or death. - Mutagens are chemicals or forms of radiation that
cause or increase the frequency of mutations in
DNA. - Teratogens are chemicals that cause harm or birth
defects to a fetus or embryo. - Carcinogens are chemicals or types of radiation
that can cause or promote cancer.
19TOXICOLOGY
- Bioaccumulation molecules stored in the body
- Biomagnification moves up through food chains
increases concentration - Acute effects sudden
- Chronic effects long-term
- Synergism 1 1 3
20Effects of Chemicals on the Immune, Nervous, and
Endocrine Systems
- Molecules of certain synthetic chemicals have
shapes similar to those of natural hormones and
can adversely affect the endocrine system.
Figure 18-9
21TOXICOLOGY ASSESSING CHEMICAL HAZARDS
- Factors determining the harm caused by exposure
to a chemical include - The amount of exposure (dose).
- The frequency of exposure.
- The person who is exposed.
- The effectiveness of the bodys detoxification
systems. - Ones genetic makeup.
22TOXICOLOGY ASSESSING CHEMICAL HAZARDS
- Typical variations in sensitivity to a toxic
chemical within a population, mostly because of
genetic variation.
Figure 18-10
23TOXICOLOGY ASSESSING CHEMICAL HAZARDS
- Under existing laws, most chemicals are
considered innocent until proven guilty, and
estimating their toxicity is difficult,
uncertain, and expensive. - Federal and state governments do not regulate
about 99.5 of the commercially used chemicals in
the U.S.
24TOXICOLOGY ASSESSING CHEMICAL HAZARDS
- Precautionary principle 1st do no harm
- Poison any substance with an LD-50 of 50 mg or
less /kg of body weight - LD50 amount of a chemical received in 1 dose
that kills 50 of the animals in a test
population within 14-day period
25Toxicity Rating LD50 (mg per kg of body weight) Average Lethal Dose Examples
Supertoxic Less than 0.01 Less than 1 drop Nerve gases, botulism, mushroom toxins, dioxin
Extremely Toxic Less than 5 Less than 7 drops K cyanide, heroin, atropine, parathion, nicotine
Very Toxic 5 50 7 drops to 1 teaspoon Mercury salts, morphine, codeine
Toxic 50 500 1 teaspoon to 1 ounce Lead salts, DDT, NaOH, H2SO4, caffeine, CCl4
Moderately Toxic 500 5,000 1 ounce to 1 pint Methyl alcohol, ether, amphetamines
Slightly toxic 5000 15,000 1 pint to 1 quart Ethanol, lysol, soaps
26Dose-Response Curves
- Show effects of various dosages of a toxic agent
- Threshold dose takes minimum amount before
damage is seen - Non-threshold dose any dosage causes harm that
increases with dosage
27PCBs
- Most widespread toxin stable
- Used as cooling liquid in transformers,
capacitors, hydraulic fluids, adhesives, paints,
dirt road surfaces - Causes liver problems, miscarriages, low birth
weight, cancer, endocrine disruption - Often in fatty parts of fish (fat-soluble)
28Dioxins
- Formed as by-product of herbicides, germ-killer
(hexachlorophene), burning compounds with
chlorine, Agent Orange - Source for humans meat, eggs
- Interferes with immunity is a carcinogen causes
hormonal disruption (thyroid), nervous system, - Causes muscle aches and pains
29Asbestos
- From brake linings, fire-retardants, siding,
floors - Causes
- asbestosis,
- mesothelioma,
- GI cancer
30Lead
- From paints, metals, soldering
- Interferes with blood cell formation,
- Causes kidney damage, sterility, miscarriages,
birth defects, and CNS damage
31Mercury
- Sources
- Elemental (naturally occurring)
- Coal burning power plants
- Mercury using industries
- Problems with speech, swallowing, walking,
deafness, vision, destroys cells, convulsions
32RISK ANALYSIS
- Estimating risks from using many technologies is
difficult due to unpredictability of human
behavior, chance, and sabotage. - Reliability of a system is multiplicative
- If a nuclear power plant is 95 reliable and
human reliability is 75, then the overall
reliability is (0.95 X 0.75 0.71) 71.
33RISK ANALYSIS
- Annual deaths in the U.S. from tobacco use and
other causes in 2003.
Figure 18-A
34RISK ANALYSIS
- Number of deaths per year in the world from
various causes. Parentheses show deaths in terms
of the number of fully loaded 400-passenger jumbo
jets crashing every day of the year with no
survivors.
Figure 18-13
35RISK ANALYSIS
- Comparisons of risks people face expressed in
terms of shorter average life span.
Figure 18-14