Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Environmental
Health
- epidemiology and health surveillance
- epid: study factors
determining and
influencing the
frequency and
distribution of disease,
injury, and other
health-related events
and their causes
- Health surveillance: activity which
involves obtaining information about
EMPLOYEES health and which helps protect
employees from health risks
- • Protecting the health
of employees by early
detection of adverse
changes or disease;
- • Collecting
data for detecting
or evaluating
health hazards;
- • Evaluating
control
measures.
- • there is a disease
associated with the substance
in use (e.g. Asthma,
Dermatitis, Cancers);
- • it is
possible to
detect the
disease or
adverse change
and reduce the
risk of further
harm;
- • the
conditions in the
workplace make
it likely that the
disease will
appear.
- Definitions
- Cause; an event,
characteristic or condition
that precedes a disease
without which the disease
or condition would not have
occurred.
- Determinant; attribute or
circumstance that effects the
liability of an individual to be
exposed or when exposed to
develop the disease or
condition
- Confounding variable; factor
significantly associated both with the
cause and disease in the population,
but not the cause itself e.g. smoking/
Cancer
- Distinguishing cause from association
using evidence linked to;
- Strength of association, Time,
Distribution, Gradient,
Consistency, Specificity,
Biological Plausability, Models,
Trials
- Risk; Absolute; incidence of
disease within a defined
population. Relative; ratio of
incidence rate in an exposed
group. Attributable = difference
- Descriptive Studies; Demonstrate
patterns of disease within a
population that can track mortality or
morbidity over time and compae
inc/prev.
- Cohort Studies
and Case Control
Studie
areObservational
studies designed
to test specific
hypotheses, and
aim to define the
determinants of a
disease
- Cohort; Longitudinal study where a group/population is
identified as being possibly exposed to an agent under
investigation.
- Case-control; recruitment of individuals already having the disease, with their case histories
compared to a control group of subjects
- Intervention Experiments
designed to test efficacy of
health care interventions or
compare different methods.
These are effectively clinical
trials,
- environmental protection: water
- Water Treatment
- Extraction --> Storage --> Screening --> Coagulation --> Floculation --> Sedimentation --> Filtration --> Disinfection
- Wastewater Treatment
- Screening --> Grit removal --> sedimentation --> activated sludge --> bacteria beds --> tertiary filtration
- Urban Wastewater treatment directive, Urban waste water treatment, environment act (1995)
- Integrated Water Management involves the basic principle of managing the
hydrological cycle, through supply, distribution and waste control.
- Areas of control include catchment areas, rivers systems and estuarine environments.
- Related departments and bodies (UK)
- The National Rivers Authority + Her Majesty’s Inspectorate for pollution = Environment Agency
- OFWAT and DWI
- Monitoring involves
looking for nitrates,
pesticides and crypto
- for rivers it wlso considers suspended solids, BOD and chemical oxygen demand.
- EU directives
- regulation of quality of surface water for abstraction for drinking water, Drinking Water Directive, Exploitation & marketing of natural mineral water
- IOM's IRIS scheme
influenced by Water
Bathing Directive and
Blue Flag Scheme (in UK)
- food safety
- Environmental Health
Offices allied to public
health will also engage in
tracking of outbreaks and
education.
- Control of
Foodstuffs
Directive
(89/397/ECC) set
out standards of
hygiene and
control for all
member states
- Food Standards Authority (FSA) in 2000, as a result of
the Food Standards Act (1999) has strengthened
enforcement of legislation to protect the public
- FSA Responsibilities
- • Food Safety Policy Group.
• The Enforcement and Food Standards Group.
• The Corporate Resources and Strategy Group.
- Power of
inspection and
enforcement of
Food Safety Act
1990
- Food Safety Act 1990
- not to:- sell food not
complying w food safety
requirements - render food
injurious to health - sell food
which is not of the
nature/substance/quality
- Product Specific Management
- HACCP
- 1. Identify any hazards that must
be prevented eliminated or
reduced;
- 2. Identify the critical control points (CCPs)
- 3. Establish critical limits at CCPs;
- 4. Establish procedures to monitor the CCPs;
- 5. Establish corrective actions to be taken if a CCP is not under control;
- 6. Establish procedures to verify whether the above procedures are working
effectively; and
- 7. Establish documents and records to demonstrate the effective application of the
above measures.
- Case Study.
Implementation in Meat plants.
- In meat plants HACCP plans
will focus on control measures
that can reduce the likelihood of
contamination of meat during
production
- from microbiological
hazards, such as
Salmonella, E.coli
O157 and
Campylobacter,
- These meat-borne pathogens
can be carried by healthy animals
and cannot be detected by sight
or smell.
- Although thorough cooking kills most bacteria, meat
may be handled by lots of people before it is cooked and
the bacteria will spread to other foods
- Bacteria multiply very
quickly, especially in
warm conditions
- Retailers and consumers
need to take precautions,
including temperature
controls & keeping raw meat
& cooked meat & other
ready to eat foods separate
- Identification and
control of
microbiological,
chemical and
physical food safety
hazards during
product
development.
- Local
legislation
includes the
Food Act
1997 and the
Food Hygiene
Regulations
2007
- Risk Assessments and Health and Safety
Anlagen:
- Environmental health practitioners are
concerned by risk arising from environmental
stresses.
- Hazard is a
property or
situation that in
particular
circumstances
could lead to
harm.
- Risk is the probability
that and adverse
situation could occur in
a give period of time
- Risk Assessment, term used to
describe a study of decisions to
uncertain consequences
- identification of risks, identification of
outcomes, estimation of magnitude of
consequences, estimation of probability
of outcomes, significance
- Risk Management, links risk
estimation and evaluation to
implementation of decisions to
minimise risk.
- Definition and Organisation
Anlagen:
- Principles of Environmental Health
- 1. The maintenance and
improvement of human condition is
at the centre of all environmental
action. A similar principle can
found in Agenda 21 address
- 2. Disadvantaged groups within
society are often live in the worst
housing, have the most
dangerous jobs and limited food.
- 3. Adoption of
democratic
principles of
government will
lead to effective
management of
environmental
health.
- 4. Co-operation
and partnership
- 5. Sustainable
development: policy
integration, partnership
and appropriate scale
- 6. Environmental health
issues are international
- Definition (WHO, 2013)
- Environmental
health addresses all the
physical, chemical, and
biological factors external to a
person, & all the related
factors impacting behaviours
- It encompasses the
assessment and control of those
environmental factors that can
potentially affect health.
- It is targeted towards
preventing disease and
creating health-supportive
environments.
- This definition excludes
behaviour not related to
environment, as well as
behaviour related to the
social and cultural
environment, and
genetics.
- Royal Commission for
Environmental Health are
targets and frameworks for
delivery by 2020:
- • holistic approach
• quality of life
• inequality
• lifestyle
• globalisation
• democracy
• information
• integration
• sustainable development
- Environmental Protection: Waste Management
- Definition
- b) and any substance or article which
requires to be disposed of as being broken,
worn out, contaminated or otherwise
spoiled
- a) Any substance that constitutes
scrap material or effluent or other
unwanted surplus substance arising
from the application of any process;
- It can be divided into sub-areas
household, controlled, industrial,
commercial municipal and hazardous.
- Waste Management Planning
- Following the Earth Summit in
Rio de Janeiro (1992) the UK
produced the document
Sustainable Development:
The UK Strategy (1994):
- 1. minimise the amount of waste produced,
2. make best use of remaining waste
3. and minimise pollution from waste.
- Waste Management Hierarchy
- Reduce --> Reuse --> Recycle --> Recover --> Dispose
- Relevant Documents etc:
- Making waste work: A strategy for sustainable waste management in
England and Wales (1995), and Waste Strategy 2000, reinforced by EPA
(SEPA) in 2000
- • reduce levels of industrial waste going to landfill by 85% of 1998 levels by 2005,
- • to recover 40% of municipal waste by 2005, 45% by 2010 and 67% by 2015
- • recycle or compost 17% household waste by 2004
- • reduction biodegradable municipal waste (BMW) 75% by 2010
- EU Landfill Directive2002
Landfill Regulations 2002
EU Waste Incineration
Directive 2000/76/EC
(WID)
- The Waste Incineration (England and Wales) Regulations 2002.
DETR Report of Composting Development Group (1999).
Hazardous Waste Directive 91/689/EEC
- Controlled Waste Regulations 1992
- Environmental health department with LAs
- • refuse collection,
• disposal sites, allocation planning & monitoring,
• hazardous & clinical waste
• monitoring of street cleaning & litter & ed
- Environmental Protection: Air Pollution
- Definition (WHO, 2013):
- Contamination of
indoor/outdoor
environment by any
chemical, physical
or biological agent
that modifies the
natural
characteristics of
the atmosphere
- Household combustion
devices, motor vehicles,
industrial facilities and
forest fires are common
sources of air pollution
- Pollutants of major public
health concern include
particulate matter, carbon
monoxide, ozone, nitrogen
dioxide and sulfur dioxide
- Outdoor and
indoor air pollution
cause respiratory
and other diseases,
which can be fatal
- Related Documents: Rio and Agenda 21
- Both documents
advocated the
“precautionary
principle” & “polluter
pays principle”, and
develop strategies
where the private
sector makes env
costs
- Conventions on
Carbon Dioxide
(Kyoto Protocol)
and CFC
emissions
(Montreal
Protocol), later
followed,
tackling specific
air pollution
issues as identi
- Air Quality Policy
- target local levels of
emissions with critical limits
set by discharge consents
(examine activity & risk to env
& human health) with risk
assessment
- Key to these assessments is the source of pollution. These include:
• road transport
• energy production
• industrial process
• and domestic sources
- UK
- London Smog episode of 1952 lead to 1956
Clean Air Act (1968+1993 too)
- Both central government
and local authorities use
model of Integrated
Pollution Control developed
by the Royal Commission
on Environmental Pollution
- Europe
- Directive 96/62/EC on
Ambient Air Quality
Assessment aka Air Quality
Framework Directive (lead,
NOXs, SOXs and
particulates)
- Europe meant UK
could develop
National Air Quality
Standards (NAQS).
Environment Act
1995, key
objectives were to
be met by 2005.
- Isle of Man
- The monitoring stations were
discontinued further to results
indicating continued good air
quality.
- The only occasional exception
is of intermittent concern in
respect of ozone whose souce is
most likely the UK
- 1997-2009 sttions
measured Nox, SO2, CO,
PM10 and PM2.5 and O3
- These are based on those
standards detailed within the
Air Quality Strategy for
England, Scotland, Wales and
Northern Ireland issued by
DEFRA, 2000
- It is transboundary and
linked to global issues of
climate change, acid rain
and ozone layer damage