What are the four types of environmental hazards?
What are physical, chemical, biological, and cultural hazards?
What type of disease kills most of us?
What are infectious diseases?
What is typically present in water in levels not high enough to affect human health, but high enough to affect aquatic life?
What are pesticides?
Analysis quantifies the toxicity of a substance by measuring its effects on animals at different doses
What is dose-response?
Process of toxicants building up in animal tissues to greater concentration than in the environment
What is bioaccumulation?
Synthetic or natural chemicals such as pharmaceuticals, disinfectants, or pesticides
What are chemical hazards?
What insect is the vector for Lyme disease?
What are ticks?
This type of toxic substance causes cancer: __________
This type of toxic substance causes DNA mutations: __________
What are carcinogens?
What are mutagens?
The amount of substance needed to kill half the population of study animals
What is LD50?
Process that occurs when concentration of toxicants becomes magnified in higher levels of the food chain
What is biomagnification?
Result from ecological interactions such as viruses, bacteria, and other pathogens
What are biological hazards?
What is the most dangerous animal or insect in the world, based on the number of deaths associated with it?
What are mosquitos?
This type of toxic substance causes birth defects in embryos: __________
This type of toxic substance assaults the nervous system: __________
What are teratogens?
What are neurotoxins?
For a nonlethal toxicant, what is measured?
What is an effective dose-50% (ED50)?
The probability that some harmful outcome will result from a given action, event, or substance?
What is risk?
Result from where we live, our socioeconomic status, our occupation, or our behavior
What are cultural hazards?
To reduce disease, we can improve the basic living conditions of poor, developing countries. What are some of the basic living conditions that could be improved?
What is food security, sanitation, and clean drinking water?
High exposure to a hazard for short periods of time
-easy to recognize
-stems from discrete events: ingestion, oil spills, nuclear accidents
What is acute exposure?
Responses to some toxicants occur only above a certain dose (when the body's organs can metabolize or excrete a toxicant at low doses but get overwhelmed at high doses)
What is a threshold/threshold dose?
Assumes that substances are harmless until shown to be harmful
What is the innocent-until-proven-guilty approach?
What are physical hazards?
A way to reduce disease in developing countries is to provide expanded access to healthcare. What type of places or access can be provided?
What are health clinics, immunizations, and pre- & postnatal care?
Low exposure for long periods of time
-common but harder to detect and diagnose
-cause and effect are not easily apparent due to time between onset of exposure and symptoms
What is chronic exposure?
What is the threshold dose for this toxicant? The LD50 occurs at what dose?
Threshold- What is 20%?
LD50- What is 70%
Assumes substances are harmful until proven harmless
What is the precautionary principle?