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Your search keyword '"Brody JG"' showing total 90 results

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1. Institutional review board challenges related to community-based participatory research on human exposure to environmental toxins: A case study

2. 'Is it safe?': New ethics for reporting personal exposures to environmental chemicals

4. Health policy and ethics. Improving disclosure and consent: 'is it safe?': new ethics for reporting personal exposures to environmental chemicals.

5. Association between residence on Cape Cod, Massachusetts, and breast cancer.

6. Environmental pollutants and breast cancer.

7. Mapping out a search for environmental causes of breast cancer.

9. PCB-containing wood floor finish is a likely source of elevated PCBs in residents' blood, household air and dust: a case study of exposure.

10. Participant perspectives related to individual chemical exposure report-back approaches in three environmental health studies.

11. Application of the Key Characteristics Framework to Identify Potential Breast Carcinogens Using Publicly Available in Vivo , in Vitro , and in Silico Data.

12. Moving Forward with Reporting Back Individual Environmental Health Research Results.

13. The Effect of Individual or Study-Wide Report-Back on Knowledge, Concern, and Exposure-Reducing Behaviors Related to Endocrine-Disrupting Chemicals.

14. Translating community-based participatory research into broadscale sociopolitical change: insights from a coalition of women firefighters, scientists, and environmental health advocates.

15. Mi PROTECT: A personalized smartphone platform to report back results to participants of a maternal-child and environmental health research cohort program in Puerto Rico.

16. Influence of living in the same home on biomonitored levels of consumer product chemicals.

17. Perspectives of peripartum people on opportunities for personal and collective action to reduce exposure to everyday chemicals: Focus groups to inform exposure report-back.

18. Outcomes from Returning Individual versus Only Study-Wide Biomonitoring Results in an Environmental Exposure Study Using the Digital Exposure Report-Back Interface (DERBI).

19. Data Clothing and BigBarChart: Designing Physical Data Reports on Indoor Pollutants for Individuals and Communities.

20. Perceived Risks, Benefits, and Interest in Participating in Environmental Health Studies That Share Personal Exposure Data: A U.S. Survey of Prospective Participants.

21. Rethinking Environmental Carcinogenesis.

22. Consumer behavior and exposure to parabens, bisphenols, triclosan, dichlorophenols, and benzophenone-3: Results from a crowdsourced biomonitoring study.

23. Barriers and opportunities for breast cancer organizations to focus on environmental health and disease prevention: a mixed-methods approach using website analyses, interviews, and focus groups.

24. Privacy Risks of Sharing Data from Environmental Health Studies.

25. Environmental exposures during windows of susceptibility for breast cancer: a framework for prevention research.

27. Serum concentrations of PFASs and exposure-related behaviors in African American and non-Hispanic white women.

28. Measurement of endocrine disrupting and asthma-associated chemicals in hair products used by Black women.

29. Reporting to parents on children's exposures to asthma triggers in low-income and public housing, an interview-based case study of ethics, environmental literacy, individual action, and public health benefits.

30. Environmental Determinants of Breast Cancer.

31. Environmental chemicals and breast cancer: An updated review of epidemiological literature informed by biological mechanisms.

32. Research altruism as motivation for participation in community-centered environmental health research.

33. Researcher and institutional review board perspectives on the benefits and challenges of reporting back biomonitoring and environmental exposure results.

35. Re-identification Risks in HIPAA Safe Harbor Data: A study of data from one environmental health study.

36. Social Science-Environmental Health Collaborations: An Exciting New Direction.

37. The Exposure Experience: Ohio River Valley Residents Respond to Local Perfluorooctanoic Acid (PFOA) Contamination.

38. Improving Environmental Health Literacy and Justice through Environmental Exposure Results Communication.

39. Reporting back environmental exposure data and free choice learning.

40. Balancing Benefits and Risks of Immortal Data: Participants' Views of Open Consent in the Personal Genome Project.

41. Semivolatile organic compounds in homes: strategies for efficient and systematic exposure measurement based on empirical and theoretical factors.

42. Communicating results in post-Belmont era biomonitoring studies: lessons from genetics and neuroimaging research.

43. Urinary biomonitoring of phosphate flame retardants: levels in California adults and recommendations for future studies.

44. New exposure biomarkers as tools for breast cancer epidemiology, biomonitoring, and prevention: a systematic approach based on animal evidence.

45. Reporting individual results for biomonitoring and environmental exposures: lessons learned from environmental communication case studies.

47. Pharmaceuticals, perfluorosurfactants, and other organic wastewater compounds in public drinking water wells in a shallow sand and gravel aquifer.

48. After the PBDE phase-out: a broad suite of flame retardants in repeat house dust samples from California.

49. Endocrine disruptors and asthma-associated chemicals in consumer products.

50. Measuring the success of community science: the northern California Household Exposure Study.

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