National Environmental Health Association (NEHA) articles
The Lead Renovation, Repair, and Painting Rule and the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act, both enacted in 2008, were intended to protect children from exposure to lead by setting federal limits on lead content. Neither of these federal actions, however, addresses a newly recognized pathway of exposure to lead from the use of used consumer products in the home. In the study described in this article, the authors purchased 28 used consumer items in the United States in 2004 and a
Laurel Sharmer, MPH, PhD, CHES, M. Steven Shackley, PhD, Anna K. Harding, PhD
A quasi-experimental pretest-posttest design was used to examine increases in food handling knowledge among eastern European refugee restaurant candidates as a result of educational material taught either by the employee’s child or the Salt Lake Valley Health Department. Participants were nonrandomly assigned to a study (n = 15) or control group (n = 17). The study group was taught by their children in their native language. The control group was taught by an SLVHD ins
Dhitinut Ratnapradipa, PhD, CHES, Daniela Quilliam, MPH, REHS. Lauren Wier, MPH, PhD (c), Darson L. Rhodes, PhD, CHES
This article reviews significant environmental health projects conducted by the Pennsylvania Department of Health, particularly the Division of Environmental Health, during the 1980s. The authors describe lessons learned from dealing with health concerns related to the Vietnam War, Three Mile Island, hazardous waste sites, and radon, as well as emerging issues during that decade.
James N. Logue, DrPH and Kandiah Sivarajah, PhD, DABFM
Nonhygienic behavior likely contributed to three recreational waterborne illness (RWI) outbreaks at Idaho splash parks. The study described in this article examined the influence of signage and hygiene attendant presence on rates of nonhygienic behavior among children at splash parks and knowledge and attitudes of their adult supervisors. Investigators observed children for nonhygienic behaviors at four Idaho splash parks, two with signage and attendants. Supervisors were surveyed (N
Randall J. Nett, MD, MPH, Robin Toblin, PhD, MPH, Annora Sheehan, DVM, Wan-Ting Huang, MD, Andrew Baughman, PhD, MPH, Kris Carter, DVM, MPVM
Children are vulnerable to viral infections. The study discussed in this article investigates the possibility of aerosol transmission of viruses in children under age 18 in the pediatrics department of a medical center in Taipei, Taiwan. After first using the filtration method to collect viral aerosols, the authors combined it with real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) to detect influenza A virus (INFAV), human adenovirus (HAdV), and enterovirus. Of 33 aerosol samples collec
Chun-Chieh Tseng, PhD, Luan-Yin Chang, MD, PhD, Chih-Shan Li, PhD
While ambient air pollution levels in excess of prescribed health standards are generally unacceptable, the exceedance is even more serious in areas where people reside. Vulnerability caused by poverty, disease, lack of education, and poor living conditions exacerbates the problem. Air quality management plans identify prioritized strategies for improved air quality independent of consideration of vulnerability. A population exposure and vulnerability risk prioritization framework comprising
Caradee Y. Wright, PhD, Roseanne Diab, PhD
Epidemiological studies have linked particulate matter (PM) exposure to morbidity and mortality from cardiovascular and respiratory disease. In order to monitor and assess the potential PM health risk to deployed military personnel, the U.S. Army must field a portable sampler that can accurately sample particles with an aerodynamic diameter less than or equal to a nominal 2.5 mm (PM2.5). In the study described in this article, the SKC® Deployable Particulate Sampler (DPS) was compared to
Steven L. Patterson, MSPH, RS/REHS, Jennifer A. Rusiecki, PhD, Steven L. Barnes, MD, MPH, Jack M. Heller, PhD, Joseph B. Sutphin, Timothy A. Kluchinsky, Jr., DrPH, MSPH, MBS, RS/REHS-E
The phrase “a willing suspension of disbelief,” coined by Samuel Taylor Coleridge in his Biographia Literaria published in 1817, refers to the willingness of a person to accept as true the premises of a work of fiction, even if those premises are fantastic or impossible. Prescriptive codes regulating onsite wastewater often carry forward the relics of previous generations even as new research, new ideas, and new technology provide infinite possibilities to better protect health, e
Anthony Smithson, MS, RS
Researchers have long debated the adverse effects of exposure to polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) on children versus the benefits of breastfeeding. In this article, the authors provide an overview of the known health effects of PCBs in children and examine the level of evidence regarding the risk of postnatal exposure via breastfeeding. The major source of PCBs is environmental, with over 90% of human exposure through the food chain. PCB exposure in infants is predominantly via breast milk, b
Muktar H. Aliyu, MD, DrPH, Amina P. Alio, PhD, Hamisu M. Salihu, MD, PhD
Challenges exist in comparing foodborne disease outbreaks (FBDOs) across states due to important differences in reporting practices and investigations. Variables such as FBDO size, population size, number of tourists, and suspected etiology are important to consider when interpreting FBDO data. Analysis of eFORS data can be valuable in improving state FBDO investigations. From 2000 to 2005, Florida reported a greater proportion of FBDOs, with two cases per outbreak, than the U.S. as a whole (
John P. Middaugh, MD, Roberta M. Hammond, PhD, RS, Leah Eisenstein, MPH, Rebecca Lazensky, MPH
