Risk Assessment
Risk Assessment
Risk Assessment
Our industrial activities and consumer products have led to the creation of more than
70,000 chemicals. The rate at which new chemicals are formulated outpaces the
rate at which their safety can be evaluated. So, there is a hazard.
Furthermore, there is not always a threshold below which there is no adverse health
effect. For example, carcinogens always cause a risk no matter how low the dose is.
So, there is a matter of exposure level.
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The cost of avoidance or treatment goes up as the risk is being reduced.
There is a need to accept some level of risk.
- Corporations resist
spending money;
- Scientists object to
reduction of data;
- Residents complain about
remaining risks.
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What is the thinking here?
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Leading causes of death in the United States
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100
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EPA’s standard
Below are activities that all amount to the same level of risk, namely increasing the mortality
risk by one in a million in a lifetime (= one chance of dying in a million, = one death in a
population of 1,000,000 people engaging in the same activity)
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Quantitative Risk Analysis
(Nazaroff & Alvarez-Cohen, section 8.E.2)
Hazard
identification
Toxicity Exposure
assessment assessment
Action
You must follow this process if
you are doing this in a
“What do we decide to do?”
professional capacity. This is where it gets political…
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(Source: Nazaroff & Alvarez-Cohen, page 570)
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Dose – Intake Rate
(Nazaroff & Alvarez-Cohen, Page 570)
The Intake Rate (in mg of contaminant per kg of body weight and per day)
is calculated as follows:
CR EF ED
I C
BW AT
where
The intake rate I is sometimes denoted CDI, which stands for the Chronic Daily Intake.
100 mg/day soil and dust ingestion 50 mg/day soil and dust ingestion
AT Actual event duration if not carcinogenic Actual event duration if not carcinogenic
or 365 days/year x 70 years if carcinogenic or 365 days/year x 70 years if carcinogenic
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Noncarcinogenic substances are characterized by a threshold below which the body is
able to cope with or recover from the exposure.
A brief or low exposure leaves no consequence until the next exposure.
No Observable
Adverse Effect
Level (NOAEL)
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Risk characterization
(Nazaroff & Alvarez-Cohen, page 572)
I noncarcinogenic
HQ
RfD
where RfD is the Reference Dose Factor. The RfD is the ratio of the
No-Observable Averse Effect Level (NOAEL) over the Uncertainty Factor (UF):
RfD = NOAEL / UF. RfD values are found in prepared tables.
HQ 1 safe
HQ 1 unsafe
When several substances are simultaneously present, simply add the HQ’s.
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Example of risk associated with a non-carcinogenic substance
(Nazaroff & Alvarez-Cohen, Example 8.E.2 on pages 573-574)
When chlorine is used for disinfection of drinking water, chloroform can be produced by the reaction
of chlorine with residual organics in the water.
Estimate the ingestion intake rate for non-carcinogenic effects on an adult resident in a home
receiving tap water with an average chloroform concentration of 65 g/L. What is the risk?
SOLUTION:
To calculate the ingestion intake for non-carcinogenic effects, we calculate the intake rate I:
I 1.8 10 3 mg/(kg d)
HQ
RfD 0.010 mg/(kg d)
0.18 1
This ratio is less than unity,
and we conclude that this level of chloroform constitutes an acceptable risk.
Carcinogenic substances
(Nazaroff & Alvarez-Cohen, page 573)
The key parameter here is the Slope Factor (SF) of the dose-response curve.
IELCR I carcinogenic SF
Acceptable threshold is
10-6 (= 1 in a million).
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Example of risk associated with a carcinogenic substance
(Mihelcic & Zimmerman, Example 6.7 on page 244)
Assume that the chemical benzene, a known carcinogen, is found in air at a constant
concentration of 1 g/m3.
Calculate the risk for exposure to this benzene for an average adult who inhales 20 m3/day
with 50% absorption for a lifetime.
Benzene’s slope factor is SF = 0.015 (mg/kg.day)-1 [Note: This is the inhalation value, not the
oral intake value].
SOLUTION:
(20 m 3 / day )(350 day / yr )(70 yrs )
I (0.50)(1 g / m 3 )(1 mg / 1000 g )
(70 kg )(365 day / yr )(70 yrs )
1.37 10 4 mg / kg day
The risk is
Risk = I x SF
= (1.37 x 10-4 mg/kg.day)(0.015 kg.day/mg)
= 2.05 x 10-6
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