ERPG Levels
AEGL Tiers
TEEL Guidelines
IDLH Values
Compare and contrast
100

What is ERPG-1?

A level below which nearly all individuals can be exposed for 1 hour without more than mild, transient effects or strong odors.

100

What does AEGL stand for?

Acute Exposure Guideline Levels.

100

What does TEEL estimate?

The airborne concentration likely to produce health effects in the general public during emergencies.

100

What does IDLH mean?

Immediately Dangerous to Life or Health – concentrations that can cause death, permanent harm, or prevent escape.

100

ERPG vs AEGL

Both offer tiered exposure limits, but ERPGs are for 1-hour only and AEGLs have multiple timeframes.

200

What does ERPG-2 indicate?

The concentration below which exposure won't cause irreversible or serious health effects or impair the ability to escape.

200

Describe AEGL-1 effects.

Notable discomfort or irritation; reversible effects, no long-term health risk.

200

Define TEEL-2

A concentration above which irreversible or serious long-term effects, or impaired escape, may occur.

200

How is IDLH used?

To determine required protective equipment and safe entry procedures for workers.

200

AEGL vs TEEL

AEGLs are peer-reviewed and scientifically rigorous; TEELs are interim values used when AEGLs aren’t available.

300

What makes ERPG-3 critical?

It is the level above which life-threatening health effects may occur; it's used for worst-case emergency planning.

300

What exposure durations are used?

10 minutes, 30 minutes, 60 minutes, 4 hours, and 8 hours.

300

How are TEELs like AEGLs?

Both define three severity tiers and are used to guide emergency response for chemical exposure.

300

What does “immediate” mean in IDLH?

Effects may occur instantly or soon after exposure, requiring instant action or escape.

300

TEEL vs IDLH

TEELs apply to public exposure; IDLH is for workplace safety and equipment requirements.

400

Define nuisance level.

A level that may cause discomfort or irritation but does not result in health risks or impair escape.

400

What makes AEGL-3 severe?

AEGL-3 represents life-threatening effects or death in susceptible individuals.

400

What’s different about TEEL durations?

TEELs do not differentiate by time periods like AEGLs; they are primarily used for 1-hour estimates.

400

Give one example of IDLH use.

Multiple examples, one of which could be determining the need for SCBA gear when entering a potentially hazardous environment.

400

IDLH vs ERPG

IDLH is occupational; ERPG is public-focused with three defined tiers.

500

What’s the difference in effect between ERPG-1, 2, and 3?

ERPG-1: mild discomfort/odor;
ERPG-2: serious but non-lethal effects or impaired escape;
ERPG-3: potentially life-threatening.

500

Why include sensitive groups?

To ensure public protection, including children, elderly, and the ill.

500

Why are TEEL-3 and IDLH not equal?

TEEL-3 is a predictive public exposure guideline, while IDLH is an occupational exposure limit requiring immediate protective action.

500

Compare IDLH with AEGL-3.

IDLH applies to workers and equipment decisions; AEGL-3 includes the general population and is based on public exposure modeling.

500

AEGL-2 vs TEEL-2

Both define thresholds for serious health effects, but AEGLs use time durations while TEELs are for a general 1-hour exposure.

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