Environmental Health

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Session 4

Chapters 5

Producing Manufactured Goods

 

Chapter Five Flashcards

Chapter Five Slides:

 
Key Concepts:
  1. Most synthetic organic chemicals are made from oil.

  2. Organic solvents, as the name suggests, are used to dissolve other substances.

  3. Phthalates and bisphenol A are used in the production of a range of consumer products.

  4. One large group of synthetic organic chemicals is of particular concern in public health because the chemicals are both persistent in the environment and toxic to humans.

  5. Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), in which chlorine atoms are substituted for hydrogen atoms, were manufactured mainly as insulating material for electrical equipment. U.S. production stopped in 1977. Dioxins were created as byproducts of the manufacture of PCBs.

  6. Polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs), in which bromine atoms are substituted for hydrogen atoms, are manufactured and used as flame-retardant chemicals.

  7. Perfluorochemicals (PFCs), in which fluorine atoms are substituted for hydrogen atoms, have been used in the production of stain- or water-resistant coatings.

  8. Another group of chlorine-containing synthetic organic compounds affects human health indirectly by upsetting the natural dynamic equilibrium among oxygen atoms(O), molecular oxygen (O2), and ozone (O3) in the stratosphere—specifically, by tipping the balance toward the destruction of ozone.

  9. Toxics use reduction is a preventive approach to chemical hazards.

  10. The six metals described in the text—inorganic lead, mercury (elemental and inorganic), arsenic, cadmium, chromium, and beryllium—have substantial public health impacts, especially in the workplace.

  11. This new technology takes advantage of the fact that the physical and chemical properties of a given material are sometimes different when the material is formed into extremely fine particles.

  12. Workers generally have much higher exposures to particles and fibers than the general public does.

  13. There are parallels between the stories of asbestos and cotton as respiratory hazards in the workplace.

  14. Mechanical hazards in the workplace are usually more visible than harmful substances. They are also more fatal.

  15. Exposure to noise in the workplace can cause temporary or permanent hearing loss and has been linked to coronary heart disease and heart attack.

  16. Shift work that increases workers’ exposure to light during the biological night is now deemed likely to increase the risk of cancer.

  17. Certain organic chemicals, metals, and physical agents in the workplace are known to cause asthma in workers; that is, occupational asthma.

  18. At both the national and international scales, socially disadvantaged populations bear a heavier burden of exposure to industrial wastes; in the more developed countries, social differences in exposure to newer industrial chemicals in household or consumer products (e.g., BPA, PFCs, and PBDEs) are more complex.

  19. A framework exists for managing the international trade in hazardous wastes.

  20. Examining the U.S. regulatory framework in stepwise fashion, moving generally upstream in a conceptual sense, highlights missed opportunities for preventing public health impacts of industry.

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Supplemental Links

 

 

Homework: Read this session's assignment. Answer all of the discussion questions found at the end of each chapter for the assigned chapters and email the attached questions and answers in Word or pdf format to Canvas email by 5 pm on Sunday the last day of Session 4. In the title box on the email be sure to label your homework Enviro Health Session 4.