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Human risk assessment of single exposure in chemical incidents : present situation and new and increasing chemical incident scenarios

Authors :
Bos, Peter MJ
Ruijten, M
Gundert-Remy, U
Bull, S
Nielsen, E
Tissot, S
Wood, M
Cassel, G
Russell, D
Mahieu, K
Leffler, Per
Persson, L
Zitting, A
Vincent, J-M
Bos, Peter MJ
Ruijten, M
Gundert-Remy, U
Bull, S
Nielsen, E
Tissot, S
Wood, M
Cassel, G
Russell, D
Mahieu, K
Leffler, Per
Persson, L
Zitting, A
Vincent, J-M
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

The release of chemicals from their containment, either accidentally or deliberately, is one of the most relevant risk scenarios in Europe. A human health risk assessment is a prerequisite for chemical incident prevention, preparedness and response. European guidance and harmonized Acute Exposure Reference Values (AERVs) are urgently needed for effective human health risk assessment in the context of chemical incidents.At present, no broad European consensus is available on guidance for risk assessment, risk management and risk communication purposes in case of chemical incidents. A review of legislation, existing or currently under revision, suggests that harmonized European guidance is not expected to be developed in the short term. An increasing number of European countries are developing their own procedures to assess the human health risk of chemical incident scenarios. The AERVs thus produced serve different purposes and are not interchangeable. Lack of international harmonization seriously obstructs a consistent response in chemical emergencies with transboundary effects within and beyond the EU, will hamper multinational companies attempting to make consistent risk assessments worldwide and will hinder consistent and transparent assessment, and management and communication of risks by different stakeholders.Emerging chemical incident risk scenarios and risk drivers have been identified. It is recommended to monitor more frequently at an early stage for new trends in chemicals, scenarios and risks from chemical incidents. A need for a specific approach to deal with single exposure to mixtures of chemicals is identified, as well as for specific guidance to adequately protect professional first responders.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1233926481
Document Type :
Electronic Resource