Improved Use of Workplace Exposure Data in the Regulatory Risk Assessment of Chemicals within Europe
Author(s) -
Chris Money,
S A Margary
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
the annals of occupational hygiene
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1475-3162
pISSN - 0003-4878
DOI - 10.1093/annhyg/mef044
Subject(s) - risk assessment , european union , context (archaeology) , process (computing) , scope (computer science) , risk analysis (engineering) , exposure assessment , occupational hygiene , business , human health , occupational medicine , environmental health , occupational safety and health , occupational exposure , computer science , medicine , geography , computer security , pathology , economic policy , programming language , operating system , archaeology
The process of risk assessment for human health demands the availability of soundly based effects and exposure information. However, many of the available data, particularly those which seek to describe human exposures to chemicals, are of varying quality and scope. Changing public and regulatory expectations increasingly demand that the outcomes of risk assessments are seen to have duly accounted for these data, in order that their conclusions can be viewed as valid. The challenge for risk assessors, therefore, is how the different grades of data should be integrated within the overall process. A series of core values are identified that govern the relationships and the influence that different types of exposure data have within European Union (EU) regulatory risk assessment for chemicals. Building on these values, an approach is presented for evaluating workplace exposure information in the context of how such data might be used within the EU process for assessing the risks to human health of new and existing substances. The implications of adopting the approach for regulatory risk assessment within the EU and its consequent impact on current occupational hygiene practice are discussed.
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