1 / 12

Disaster Exposure: The Four R’s

Disaster Exposure: The Four R’s. Daniel A. Vallero, Ph.D. National Exposure Research Laboratory U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Risk Assessment:.

junior
Download Presentation

Disaster Exposure: The Four R’s

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Disaster Exposure: The Four R’s Daniel A. Vallero, Ph.D. National Exposure Research Laboratory U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

  2. Risk Assessment: Risk assessment* is a process where information is analyzed to determine if an environmental hazard might cause harm to exposed persons and ecosystems. Many decisions are made based on risk at various stages of a disaster: rescue, recovery, re-entry and re-habitation. * “Risk Assessment in the Federal Government”(National Research Council, 1983)

  3. In exposure, time is of the essence… Short-term exposures can be accompanied by chronic effects….

  4. Re-entry Rescue Time Time Exposure Time Time Recovery Re-habitation Time & Quality of Information to Protect Public and First Responders Vary by Stage:

  5. Rescue Lesson learned: ORD part of overall team to protect public health • Portable, state of the art equipment and expertise provided to first responders • “Research” focus needs immediacy…. • Same tools often applied, but at higher levels of detection and more immediate reporting • Crime scene, forensics and rescue efforts have primacy • Responder protection is also crucial • Proper respirators and personal protection • EPA takes respirator use very seriously…. • Protocols • Very different from “environmental exposures” • e.g. levels of dioxins and benzene to protect firefighters with PPE much higher than a person without protection exposed for 30 years

  6. Recovery • Somewhat more time to consider potential public exposures… • … but still working under first responder teams • Logging data and retrospectively conducting analyses • Different quality assurance needs, but still not the “typical” research design • Crime scene forensics still ongoing (defer to law enforcement), but more deliberate • In WTC, evidence moved to Staten Island • Adaptation to FEMA and other management actions • Coordination among EPA, Army Corps of Engineers, FEMA and response agencies. • Examples: • Water & wastewater treatment plant assessment • Separation of hazardous wastes

  7. Re-Entry • Even more time (longer exposures) • Closer to typical research protocol, but must support local/state agencies • Benchmarks are crucial • Understandable • Allows for risk comparisons • Helps distinguish reported concentrations from reasonable exposures • EPA has protocols, but need to be tailored to each emergency • Start with applicable and relevant standards • Go to risk-based approach • Last resort: Occupational scenarios (e.g. OSHA PAL) • Then adapt • Characterize background….

  8. Re-habitation • Longest potential exposures • Closest to typical metrics (e.g. lifetime average daily dose) • Conservative approaches are challenged • People and businesses want to get back to normal • Need solid reasons for denying this… • Benchmarks • Rely on State and Local to start the process • Technical approach • Background • Detection limits • Technical practicality, etc….. • Remediate to health standard or best estimate of what background was prior to accident, or….? • E.g. by proxy (may not know what it was, but use general urban background)

  9. Some Key Milestones EPA has learned numerous lessons and has been improving emergency response, by: • Assessing and remediating indoor contamination caused by building collapse or other environmental disaster. • National Homeland Security Research Center developing subchronic health-based exposure advisory levels for the general public called Provisional Advisory Levels (PALs). • PALs address exposure durations of one day, 30 days, and two years for chemical contaminants detected in air or drinking water. • EPA has developed PALs for over 20 chemicals • Equates to over 360 separate values : three exposure durations, for three levels of severity and for two environmental media . • Continuing effort with the National Research Council's Committee on Toxicology to develop Acute Exposure Guidance Levels (AEGLs). • Emergency response standards applicable to the general public. • 3 levels of severity and for the durations of 10 minute, 30 minute, one hour, 4 hour and 8 hour exposures. • PALs being developed for benchmarks to bridge the gap between acute exposure durations covered by the AEGLs & the chronic lifetime exposures covered by inhalation RfCs & oral RfDs.

  10. Some Key Milestones (Cont’d) • Developed a method to assess risk from exposures to contaminated building surfaces. • Will be incorporated into upcoming revision of the Risk Assessment Guidance for Superfund, Part E, Dermal Risk Assessment • Continually developing & refining scenario-driven disaster response plans on national & regional level. • Inter-agency working groups, sponsored by EPA and DHS, have developed restoration plans for large transportation infrastructures. • Produced universal templates to support generic disaster preparedness plans for various scenarios. • Supporting several inter-agency working groups developing uniform validated sampling plans, analytical methods and quality assurance protocols to support timely cleanup and restoration of infrastructures after disaster events.

  11. Re-entry Rescue Time Time Exposure Time Time Recovery Re-habitation Bottom Line Exposure is critical to each phase of emergency response….

  12. Contact me:vallero.daniel@epa.gov

More Related