1. Global strategies
  2. Preventing exposure to environmental hazards

Preventing exposure to environmental hazards

  • Protecting against environmental hazards

Context

Despite the successes of modern medical technologies, little is known about the basic chemistry or physiology behind human exposures to environmental health hazards. A new science is required based upon integrative environmental approaches with multidisciplinary perspectives to replace traditional science that looks at parts of the whole from a single discipline's perspective.

Implementation

In the last 10 years a number of issues of environmental health hazards have been addressed internationally, for example: the successful elimination of lead from gasoline and paint; the prohibition of the use of asbestos in construction; the elimination of DDT from use in the US; the banning of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) production in the US; and also in the USA, the passage of the 1996 Food Quality Protection Act to decrease pesticides in the diet of children. By reducing or eliminating these toxic exposures, substantial burdens of disease have been addressed in the human environment.

Broader

Preventing
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Narrower

Facilitated by

Problem

Value

Unexposed
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Underexposure
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Overexposure
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Hazard
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Exposure
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SDG

Sustainable Development Goal #3: Good Health and Well-beingSustainable Development Goal #15: Life on Land

Metadata

Database
Global strategies
Type
(D) Detailed strategies
Subject
  • Societal problems » Prevention
  • Societal problems » Hazards
  • Environment » Environment
  • Content quality
    Yet to rate
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    Language
    English
    Last update
    Dec 3, 2024