Science Inventory

EPIDEMIOLOGY IN RISK ASSESSMENT FOR REGULATORY POLICY

Citation:

Whittemore, A. EPIDEMIOLOGY IN RISK ASSESSMENT FOR REGULATORY POLICY. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, D.C., EPA/600/J-86/531.

Description:

Epidemiology and risk assessment have several of the features needed to make the difficult decisions required in setting standards for levels of toxic agents in the workplace and environment. hey differ in their aims, orientation, and time scale. While the distribution of disease provides the focus for epidemiologic research, concern for adverse effects of specific toxicants drives risk assessment. ost important, while epidemiology is a scientific field that draws upon medicine, demography, and statistics, risk assessment is a hybrid of science and policy that draws not only upon fields such as epidemiology, toxicology, chemistry and engineering, but also upon psychology, politics, economics, law and social justice. These inherent differences in emphasis, timing, and nature complicate the role played by epidemiology in risk assessment for regulatory policy. t will continue to play an essential part in regulatory decision-making. he role has placed epidemiologic findings and epidemiologists at the center of political controversies, with both positive and negative side effects of this new visibility. ays to prevent the negative side effects and ways to increase the utility of epidemiologic data for regulatory risk assessment are explored.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( REPORT )
Product Published Date:05/24/2002
Record Last Revised:04/16/2004
Record ID: 49582