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Disinfection by-products in drinking water and genotoxic changes in urinary bladder epithelial cellsRanmuthugala, Geethanjali Piyawadani. January 2001 (has links)
Bibliography: leaves 263-270.
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The relationship between fluoride concentration in drinking water with dental caries and fluorosis in Vietnamese childrenNguy~e̊n Thuy Thánh. January 2001 (has links) (PDF)
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 232-247). Obtained information on dental caries and fluorosis among a representative sample of Vietnamese children. Also collected information on factors likely to influence caries experience and dental fluorosis and undertook statistical analyses to examine the relationship between fluoride in drinking water, dental caries and dental fluorosis
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Groundwater contamination by arsenic in Bangladesh : causes, consequences and solutionsUddin, G.M. Saleh. January 2001 (has links) (PDF)
Bibliography: leaves 106-114.
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Public health approaches to measurement, surveillance and the promotion of walking among Australian adultsMerom, Dafna, Public Health & Community Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, UNSW January 2007 (has links)
The aim of this thesis is to demonstrate the importance of walking to public health. The first part is characterized by epidemiological research. First, a typology for the measurement of walking is developed. A systematic review is conducted of observational studies to determine the health benefits of walking in its own right. Studies consistently confirm that 30 minutes walking on most days of the week is sufficient to reduce the risk of cardiovascular diseases and non-communicable disease risk. Then, a series of epidemiological analyses describes the prevalence and correlates of walking, using multiple health and non-health surveillance data sets. Surveillance data indicate that the prevalence of walking at the above recommended levels is low across all domains. Between 1991 and 2001 an increase in walking occurred, and was the main contributor to reductions in leisure time physical inactivity; however, the proportion of the population who achieved the recommended amount of physical activity by walking did not change in leisure and transport domains. The next part of the thesis is characterized by health promotion research examining the impact of three population-based approaches to increasing walking among Australian adults. The first was an evaluation of a conversion of rail to trail, as an environmental change intervention; the second was a mass media campaign promoting walking to work, and the third was a targeted print media walking program. Providing environmental supports with minimal promotion had no effect on walking. A nation-wide mass media campaign promoting walking to work increased walking and other moderate intensity physical activity, but process evaluation indicated other promotional efforts contributed as well. The targeted print media randomised trial had the greatest effect on walking, but the increases were not greater than spontaneous change in the control. Increases in total physical activity were achieved only when the intervention was supplemented by the use of a pedometer. The expectation that broader approaches to the promotion of walking will bring about changes at the population level, were not corroborated by these case studies. There is a need for enhancement of walking-specific interventions to influence total PA at the population levels.
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Exposure estimation, uncertainty and variability in occupational hygiene retrospective assessment.Glass, Deborah Catherine, mikewood@deakin.edu.au January 1999 (has links)
This thesis reports on a quantitative exposure assessment and on an analysis of the attributes of the data used in the estimations, in particular distinguishing between its uncertainty and variability.
A retrospective assessment of exposure to benzene was carried out for a case control study of leukaemia in the Australian petroleum industry. The study used the mean of personal task-based measurements (Base Estimates) in a deterministic algorithm and applied factors to model back to places, times etc for which no exposure measurements were available. Mean daily exposures were estimated, on an individual subject basis, by summing the task-based exposures. These mean exposures were multiplied by the years spent on each job to provide exposure estimates in ppm-years. These were summed to provide a Cumulative Estimate for each subject.
Validation was completed for the model and key inputs.
Exposures were low, most jobs were below TWA of 5 ppm benzene. Exposures in terminals were generally higher than at refineries. Cumulative Estimates ranged from 0.005 to 50.9 ppm-years, with 84 percent less than 10 ppm-years.
Exposure probability distributions were developed for tanker drivers using Monte Carlo simulation of the exposure estimation algorithm. The outcome was a lognormal distribution of exposure for each driver. These provide the basis for alternative risk assessment metrics e.g. the frequency of short but intense exposures which provided only a minimal contribution to the long-term average exposure but may increase risk of leukaemia.
The effect of different inputs to the model were examined and their significance assessed using Monte Carlo simulation. The Base Estimates were the most important determinant of exposure in the model. The sources of variability in the measured data were examined, including the effect of having censored data and the between and within-worker variability. The sources of uncertainty in the exposure estimates were analysed and consequential improvements in exposure assessment identified.
Monte Carlo sampling was also used to examine the uncertainties and variability associated with the tanker drivers' exposure assessment, to derive an estimate of the range and to put confidence intervals on the daily mean exposures. The identified uncertainty was less than the variability associated with the estimates.
The traditional approach to exposure estimation typically derives only point estimates of mean exposure. The approach developed here allows a range of exposure estimates to be made and provides a more flexible and improved basis for risk assessment.
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Effects of an industrial fire on a community of south Phoenix, ArizonaDegher, Alexandra B. 07 October 2003 (has links)
On August 31, 1992, Quality Printing Circuits, a circuit board manufacturing plant in
Phoenix, Arizona, burned to the ground. The fire lasted approximately eight hours, creating a thick,
black smoke that blew into the surrounding community. Emergency evacuation was erratic and
since no air samples were taken during the fire, community exposure levels were unknown.
Immediately afterwards, residents reported health problems but government studies on the
community were unable to link reported health problems and the fire.
Eight months after the fire, a local advocacy group performed a health study on the
community. The 690 people surveyed reported symptoms such as asthma, blurred vision, vomiting,
hair loss, rashes, and extremity numbness. The survey was never analyzed and the case was closed.
Community members continued to report health problems and five years after the fire, the US
Environmental Protection Agency reopened the case. They performed two sampling studies but
results found that chemical levels were below allowable exposure levels.
This thesis contains three chapters that investigate the political, health, and scientific issues
related to the QPC fire. The scientific chapter uses the EPA's ISCST3 dispersion model and a
mixed-box model, to approximate community exposure concentrations and compare them to
allowable human exposure levels. Results of the ISCST3 model show that four (hydrogen chloride,
polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, Acrolein, and naphthalene) of the twenty chemicals modeled
were above government allowable concentrations. Inhalation exposure to these chemicals causes
similar symptoms as those reported by residents.
The health-focused chapter characterized health symptoms reported in the 1993 health
survey. Results found that symptoms experienced by residents were similar to those documented in
other studies of exposure to chemical smoke. The study also found that residents living closest to
QPC reported a greater number of symptoms than residents living further away.
The political chapter analyzed the debate as to whether QPC officials and government
agencies took the steps needed to protect the exposed community during and after the QPC fire.
What became evident was that a significant conflict existed between the interests of residents
involved in the QPC fire and the government agencies responsible for protecting them. / Graduation date: 2004
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Thresholds of uncertainty : radiation and responsibility in the fallout controversyJolly, J. Christopher 30 May 2003 (has links)
The public controversy over possible health hazards from radioactive fallout from
atomic bomb testing began in 1954, shortly after a thermonuclear test by the United
States spread fallout world wide. In the dissertation, I address two of the fundamental
questions of the fallout controversy: Was there a threshold of radiation exposure below
which there would be no significant injury? What was the role of a responsible scientist
in a public scientific debate? Genetics and medicine were the scientific fields most
directly involved in the debate over the biological effects of radiation. Geneticists'
prewar experiences with radiation led them to believe that there was no safe level of
radiation exposure and that any amount of radiation would cause a proportional amount
of genetic injury. In contrast to geneticists, physicians and medical researchers generally
believed that there was a threshold for somatic injury from radiation. One theme of the
dissertation is an examination of how different scientific conceptual and methodological
approaches affected how geneticists and medical researchers evaluated the possible
health effects of fallout.
Geneticists and physicians differed not only in their evaluations of radiation
hazards, but also in their views of how the debate over fallout should be conducted. A
central question of the fallout debate was how a responsible scientist should act in a
public policy controversy involving scientific issues upon which the scientific community
had not yet reached a consensus. Based on their assumption that any increase in radiation
exposure was harmful, most geneticists believed that they had a responsibility to speak
out publicly about the deleterious effects of radiation. Physicians, who believed in the
likelihood of a threshold for significant radiation-induced injury, generally adopted the
opposite view. They believed that public discussion of possible, but improbable,
radiation hazards was irresponsible because it risked creating irrational public fear of
radiation exposure. In my dissertation, I examine how the different positions of
geneticists and physicians over what constituted responsible public scientific debate
affected the rhetoric of the controversy, as well as the implications of the debate in
matters of politics and policy. / Graduation date: 2004
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An analysis of shielding requirements in conjunction with current radiographic imaging practicesMallory, Stacy L. 11 December 2003 (has links)
The National Council of Radiation Protection and Measurements
Report No. 49, originally issued on September 15, 1976, has been the
primary design guide for diagnostic x-ray structural shielding in the
United States. To further protect the public from various areas of
medical radiation exposure, NCRP issued Report 116 in 1987 to
decrease the public exposure limits. These new limits used in
conjunction with NCRP 49 to determine shielding requirements for
diagnostic radiological rooms can be shown to over-shield based on
current technologies and protocols.
This paper explores the NCRP conservative assumptions that
physicists specifying barrier requirements for diagnostic x-ray facilities
normally utilize. These evaluated assumptions, which are incorporated
in the methodology and attenuation data presented in NCRP Report 49
formulas, include relatively high single kVp's, a "one size fits all"
workload default, and the lack of attenuation factors by the patient, the
wall, and the film. In essence, an analysis of the conservative nature of
NCRP 49 is demonstrated.
An example of Primary and Secondary Shielding Methodology
utilizing NCRP 49 and NCRP 116 dose limits is provided as well as the
cost factors associated with the results. These examples are further
evaluated using a Monte Carlo software program.
In addition, an analysis of actual current radiographic conditions
in an imaging room is performed. This is done to determine first, the
actual mA utilized for specific exams; secondly, the actual mA-min
weekly workload; and thirdly, the tangible exams performed per week
in small and large medical facilities.
Based on the information and analysis presented, this paper
concludes that the formulas for NCRP 49 and NCRP 116 need to be
reexamined. Furthermore, this paper also demonstrates once again
that NCRP 49, utilizing NCRP 116 dose limits is extremely
conservative. / Graduation date: 2004
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A human health risk assessment of hazardous air pollutants in Portland, OregonTam, Bonnie 03 February 2003 (has links)
In 1990, the Clean Air Act (CAA) Amendments authorized the regulation of 188
hazardous air pollutants (HAP). Exposure to HAPs at sufficient concentrations and
durations can increase both cancer and serious adverse non-carcinogenic effects. The
purpose of this study was to conduct a human health risk assessment using data of 43
HAPs from five monitor sites in Portland, Oregon during July 1999-August 2000.
HAP concentrations were compared to carcinogenic and non-carcinogenic
(health) benchmark concentrations; and emission sources were determined for HAPs that
exceeded health benchmark concentrations. Additionally, cancer risks were determined
for subpopulations and compared to cancer risks generated for the general population.
Results of this study indicate that 20 HAPs exceeded carcinogenic benchmark
concentrations (corresponding to a risk level of 1 x 10������) in at least one location.
Chromium compounds posed the highest cancer risk (3.5 x 10������). Seventeen HAPs
exceeded carcinogenic benchmark concentrations at all five sites. Seventy-five percent
(%) of the total cumulative cancer risk was contributed by chromium compounds, 1,3-butadiene, formaldehyde and 1,1,2,2-tetrachloroethane. Three HAPs, chromium compounds, acrolein, and formaldehyde, exceeded non-carcinogenic hazard ratios of 1.0.
Releases from area sources accounted for the largest percentage of HAPs that exceeded
health benchmark concentrations.
With respect to subpopulations, asthmatics teenagers (age 11-16) and asthmatic
adults (age 18-50), had slightly elevated cancer risks of 1.4 x 10������ and 1.2 x 10������.
respectively, compared to the general population risk level of 1 x 10������.
Results of this study indicate that several HAPs pose a potential human health
concern in Portland and that efforts should be made to reduce their emissions. Additional
studies are warranted to further assess potential human health risks and the extent of
HAPs in Portland, Oregon. / Graduation date: 2003
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A prospective study of functional performance balance self-efficacy, and bone mineral density in community-dwelling elderly womenGunter, Katherine B. 05 September 2002 (has links)
In the United States, falls are the leading cause of unintentional
death with one of every three people 65 years and older falling each year. Falls
account for approximately 95% of hip fractures among older adults and falls to the
side predominate hip fracture related falls in this population. However, risk factors
for side and frequent falls are poorly understood. Furthermore, few data exist to
explain differences in bone mineral density among older postmenopausal women.
In particular, data regarding the timing of hormone replacement therapy (HRT)
among older women is scarce. In the first aim of this dissertation, we examined
changes in mobility and balance-related risk factors for side falls as well as
differences in these risk factors according to fall status in a population of 107
independent, elderly women (>70 yrs), who were followed over 2 years. We found
hip abduction strength decreased (p<.001) in all subjects, with side-fallers
exhibiting weaker hip abduction strength (p=.008), greater sway velocity (p=.027),
and slower performances on the tandem walk (p=.039) and Get Up and Go
(p<.001) compared to non-fallers. For the second study, in the same population, we
examined 2-year changes in balance self-efficacy (BSE) and the relationship of
BSE to side fall risk factors and falls incidence. Results showed BSE at baseline
was predictive of Get Up and Go, hip abduction strength and tandem walk at
follow-up (p<.008), but that BSE decreased only among the non-fallers (p=.013).
In the third study, we examined 3-yr hip bone mineral density (BMD) changes in
women with distinct hormone replacement therapy (HRT) profiles: 1) no hormone
replacement therapy (N0HRT), 2) HRT continually since menopause (Continual),
3) HRT begun 10 years after menopause (Late), 4) HRT initiated within 5 years
(New), and compared the change in BMD of the hip across HRT groups. Only the
NoHRT group lost bone over the 3 years (p=.014). We also assessed BMD of the
lateral spine across levels of estrogen use in a sub-sample of participants and found
long-term HRT users had significantly higher lateral spine BMD (p=.041)
compared to women who had never been on HRT. / Graduation date: 2003
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