Chapter 11 Risk, Toxicology, and Human Health

Similar documents
Chapter 17 Human Health and Environmental Risks. Monday, March 26, 18

Name: Class: Date: ID: A

Risk, Toxicology, & Human Health

Risk, Toxicology & Human Health. Chapter 11

Chapter 17 Human Health and Environmental Risks

Chapter 17 Human Health and Environmental Risks

Biological- those risks associated with diseases. Disease- any impaired function of the body w/ a characteristic set of symptoms.

Infection, Detection, Prevention...

Critical Thinking. Answer Key. Skills Worksheet. ANALOGIES 1. a 6. a 2. c 7. d 3. b 8. d 4. d 9. c 5. b 10. d

Biology. Slide 1 of 30. End Show. Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall

CE Unit. Viruses and Vaccines

Communicable and Noncommunicable. Diseases

AOHS Global Health. Unit 1, Lesson 3. Communicable Disease

Communicable Diseases

Chapter 7 Human Health and Environmental Toxicology

Immune System. Before You Read. Read to Learn

The prokaryotic domains

Human Health and Environmental Toxicology

Human Health and Environmental Toxicology

CE Unit 7. Viruses and Vaccines

Environmental Science (SCBI 360) Environmental health and toxicology. Dr. Patompong Saengwilai SC2-306;

Chapter 8 Review. 4. Scientists do not consider viruses as true living organisms because they

Microbiology. Bacteria Viruses Fungi Parasites

NYS Right-to-Know Law. Protects your rights to information about hazardous materials that are used or stored at your place of work.

Unit 5: The Kingdoms of Life Module 12: Simple Organisms

Infectious Diseases through Viruses. Obj. 3.c. & 3.g.

8.L.1 Practice Questions

CHILD HEALTH. There is a list of references at the end where you can find more information. FACT SHEETS

Chapter 08 Lecture Outline

Overview Existing, Emerging, and Re-Emerging Communicable Diseases

Warm Up. What do you think the difference is between infectious and noninfectious disease?

Disease: any change, other than an injury, that disrupts homeostasis. Pathogen: disease-causing agent such as bacteria, virus, etc.

Understanding and Confronting Emerging Disease

Infection Control in the School Setting. It s In Your Hands

Understanding and Confronting Emerging Disease

WILDLIFE DISEASE - PRESENT YET EMERGING THREAT

Chapter 10. Objectives. Describe the difference between infectious and noninfectious diseases. Describe how the human body fights diseases.

Communicable Diseases

Class 9 th Why do we fall ill?

MICROORGANISM NORMAL FLORA AND PATHOGENS

Disease Transmission Methods

Downloaded from

Pathogens and Disease

5/28/2015. Pregnancy, Birth and Postnatal for mother and baby. and Flu, oh my! An Update on Public Health Issues for Massage Therapists

The Immune System: Your Defense Against Disease

Community mobilization in major emergencies

A BSL-1 lab houses activities that require only standard microbial practices. These include:

Chapter 6: Fighting Disease

1/29/2013. Viruses and Bacteria. Infectious Disease. Pathogens cause disease by: Chapters 16 and 17

Multiple Choice Questions

Bacteria to Plants: Chapter 2: Viruses and Bacteria Study Guide

Burton's Microbiology for the Health Sciences

CHAPTER AT A GLANCE. Science Class (SA-II)- IX

Epidemiology: Prevention and Control of Diseases and Health Conditions. Chapter 4

Warts are a skin virus!

Suggested Exercises and Projects 395

The Immune System and Disease

Study Guide 23, 24 & 47

Biosafety Basics. Patrick Stockton, Director, Office of Biosafety Biosafety Community Liaison Committee June 26, 2017

Unit 5: The Kingdoms of Life Module 12: Simple Organisms

Breaking the Chain of Infection Designated Officer Education Day September 3, 2014 Jodi-Marie Black RN BScN PHN

Pathogens. How Do They Cause Disease?

AP Biology. Viral diseases Polio. Chapter 18. Smallpox. Influenza: 1918 epidemic. Emerging viruses. A sense of size

NOTES OF CH 13 WHY DO WE FALL ILL CLASS 9TH SCIENCE

Chapter 11 Future of Human Evolution

MATERIAL SAFETY DATA SHEET RILEXINE (cephalexin monohydrate) Chewable Tablets

Boston MRC Introduction to Biological Hazards Response

Preventing Disease Transmission

OPERATION ENDURING FREEDOM

Chapter 4 Infection Control, Safety, Health, and Hygiene. Introduction

OPERATION IRAQI FREEDOM

Knowledge is power: 815 Second Avenue New York, NY Toll Free HEAL

Dengue Virus-Danger from Deadly Little Dragon

Part 3- Biology Paper 1 Infection and Response Application Questions Triple Science

Bacteriology Virology Mycology Parasitology Immunology Pathology Epidemiology. Microbe alternate terms Germs, microorganisms, pathogens, agents, bugs

GOYAL BROTHERS PRAKASHAN

PH 150 MIDTERM KEY VERSION A October 29, 2003

GraspIT AQA GCSE Infection and Response

Risk, Toxicology and Human Health

Viruses. Objectives At the end of this sub section students should be able to:

Pathogens: Microorganisms that are capable of causing disease Infection: Results when a pathogen invades and begins growing within the host Disease:

Starting with MICROBIOLOGY

32 Disease - transmission and control - answers

Spread of an Infectious Disease

UNDERSTANDING ZIKA AND MOSQUITO BORNE ILLNESSES

16 HIV/AIDS Infection and Cell Organelles ALTHOUGH MANY OF their characteristics are similar to those of cells, viruses

Permethrin cancer permethrin cancer cancer permethrin cancer cancer cancer permethrin cancer permethrin cancer Permethrin cancer permethrin

answer Marks Guidance 1 (a) 2 max Mark the first answer on each prompt line. ACCEPT ora throughout nucleus / nuclei ; 1 ACCEPT DNA not free

SGCEP SCIE 1121 Environmental Science Spring 2012 Section Steve Thompson:

CS/PoliSci/Statistics C79 Societal Risks & The Law

Annual Epidemiological Report

Part 3- Biology Paper 1 Infection and Response Knowledge Questions

The Menace of Waves of Infectious Diseases

to change size? Abstract Introduction

Immune System and Disease. Chapter 31

EBOLA. Harford County Health Department October 22, 2014

ALAT - Chapter 4. Occupational Health and Safety. Dr. Carrie Freed, DACLAM, DVM, MLAS

Lecture 2 Evolution in action: the HIV virus

LEC 2, Medical biology, Theory, prepared by Dr. AYAT ALI

Repellent Soap. The Jojoo Mosquito. Africa s innovative solution to Malaria prevention. Sapphire Trading Company Ltd

Transcription:

Chapter 11 Risk, Toxicology, and Human Health

Risk Expressed in terms of probability: how likely it is that some event will occur. Risk = (Exposure)(harm) Risk assessment (identifying, occurrence, assessing) and risk management (make decisions)

Hazards 4 main types: Biological: from pathogens that can infect humans Chemical: in air, water, soil, and food Physical: fire, earthquake, volcanic eruption, flood, etc. Cultural: smoking, unsafe work conditions, diet, etc.

Toxicology Toxicity: measures how harmful a substance is Depends on: Size of dose (amount ingested) How often exposure occurred Who is exposed (adult or child) How well the body s detox system works Genetic makeup/sensitivity to a toxin

Trace amounts Basic concept: any synthetic or natural chemical can be harmful if ingested in a large enough quantity. Most chemicals have a safe, threshold level of exposure in which their harmful effects are insignificant.

Poisons Poison: classified by LD 50 LD 50 (median lethal dose):: the amount of a chemical received in one dose that kills exactly 50% or the animals within a 14 day period.

Chemical Hazards Toxic chemicals: substances that are fatal to more than 50% of test animals Hazardous chemicals: cause harm by being flammable, explosive, irritating, asphyxiants, or inducing allergic reactions

3 major type of toxic agents 1) Mutagens: Chemicals or ionizing radiation that cause or increase the frequency of random mutations in DNA molecules. Ex: UV light, Nitrous acid, Bromine, Benzene 2) Teratogens: chemicals, viruses or radiation that cause harm or birth defects to a fetus or embryo Ex: Alcohol and thalidomide 3) Carcinogens: chemicals or ionizing radiation that cause or promote cancer. Ex: tobacco

But the FDA said it was safe.. Under existing laws most chemicals are considered innocent until proven guilty Estimating toxicity is difficult, uncertain, and expensive Only 10% of the 75,000 chemical in commercial use have been screened for toxicity Most have never been checked to determine what type of toxic agent Federal and state governments DO NOT regulate 99.5% of the commercially used chemicals

What to do??? Use precautionary principle: when we are uncertain about potentially serious harm from chemicals, decision makers should act to prevent harm to humans and the environment. Better safe, than sorry

11.4 Biological Hazards Nontransmissible diseases: not caused by a living organism and does not spread from one person to another. Ex: cardiovascular disorders, cancers, diabetes Typically have multiple causes and develop slowly and progressively.

Transmissible disease: caused by living organism and can spread from person to person The infectious agent is called a pathogen and is spread by a vector (air, water, food, insects, etc) The types of diseases threatening developing countries are primarily infectious diseases in childhood, while in developed countries it is usually chronic diseases of adults.

Deadly diseases World health organization (WHO) estimates each year 13.6 million people (most in developing, poor countries) die from one of the 7 deadly infectious diseases. These diseases include 1) Acute respiratory infections 2) AIDS 5) Malaria 3) Diarrheal diseases 6) Hepatitis B 4) Tuberculosis 7) measles

Mostly because of human activities, infectious diseases are moving fast from one species to another and from one animal species to humans. Avian flu, West Nile, Lyme disease, and Hantavirus (pulmonary syndrome) are all transmitted to humans from wild or domesticated animals

Viral Disease Influenza Ebola West Nile Virus Rabies AIDS Viral diseases Transmitted Body fluids or airborne emissions Blood or other bodily fluids Bite of mosquito carrying virus Dogs, coyotes, raccoons, skunks, bats Unsafe sex, needles, blood Treatment of Viral Disease: Hard to fight because treatments harm the cells of the host Antibiotics useless leads to resistant bacteria Best treatment are vaccines stimulate immune system to create antibodies

Case Study: Malaria ~40% of the worlds people live in tropical and subtropical regions where malaria is present. Malaria is caused by four protozoa species of the genus Plasmodium. The parasite circulates from mosquito to human and back to mosquito. Malaria cycle repeats itself until immunity develops, treatment is given, or death occurs

Prevention of Malaria 1) increasing water flow irrigation systems 2) using mosquito nets dipped in insecticide for windows and doors 3) cultivating fish that feed on mosquito larvae 4) clearing vegetation around houses 5) planting trees to soak up water in marsh areas 6) using zinc and vitamin A to boost children s resistance 7) increased public education

11-5 Risk Analysis Involves (1) risk assessment (identifying hazards) (2) comparative risk analysis (ranking risks) (3) risk management (determining options) (4) risk communication (informing decision makers and public)

Risk Management Strategies Market-based method: relies on market forces to control response Hierarchical method: relies on response from lawmakers Sectarian method: relies on emotions (citizens) Rational method: relies on logic and facts

Greatest Risks In terms of number of premature deaths per year and reduced life span, the greatest risk by far is poverty. Followed by voluntary choices people make such as smoking, sun exposure, drinking, eating high fat meals, not exercising, and obesity. People are bad at estimating risks because of misleading media, denial and irrational fears.