Record Display for the EPA National Library Catalog

RECORD NUMBER: 199 OF 251

Main Title Risk Assessment for the Waste Technologies Industries (WTI) Hazardous Waste Incinerator Facility (East Liverpool, Ohio), Volume V: Human Health Risk Assessment (HHRA): Evaluation of Potential Risks from Multipathway Exposure to Emissions (Draft)
CORP Author A. T. Kearney, Inc., Chicago, IL.; U. S. Environmental Protection Agency, Waste, Pesticides and Toxics Division, Region V, Chicago, IL.
Publisher Nov 95
Year Published 1995
Report Number EPA/905/D-95/002E; EPA-68-W4-0006
Stock Number PB96-121587
Subjects Hazardous wastes--Incineration--Ohio--East Liverpool
Additional Subjects Hazardous materials ; Incinerators ; Air pollution effects(Humans) ; Risk assessment ; Public health ; Combustion products ; Stack gases ; Exhaust emissions ; Ecological concentration ; Population ; Toxicity ; Environmental exposure ; Dose-response relationships ; Health hazards ; East Liverpool(Ohio) ; Fugitive emissions ; Demographic characteristics
Internet Access
Description Access URL
https://nepis.epa.gov/Exe/ZyPDF.cgi?Dockey=2000CJ49.PDF
Holdings
Library Call Number Additional Info Location Last
Modified
Checkout
Status
EJBM  PB96-121587 Most EPA libraries have a fiche copy filed under the call number shown. Check with individual libraries about paper copy. Headquarters Library/Washington,DC 02/29/1996
NTIS  PB96-121587 Some EPA libraries have a fiche copy filed under the call number shown. 07/26/2022
Collation 847 p.
Abstract
The Human Health Risk Assessment (HHRA) portion of the WTI Risk Assessment involves the integration of information about the facility with site-specific data for the surrounding region and population to characterize the potential human health risks due to emissions from the facility. The estimation of human health risks is comprised of the following general steps: (1) identification of substances of potential concern; (2) estimation of the nature and magnitude of chemical releases from the WTI facility; (3) prediction of the atmospheric transport of the emitted contaminants; (4) determination of the types of adverse effects associated with exposure to the substances of potential concern (referred to as hazard identification), and the relationship between the level of exposure and the severity of any health effect (referred to as dose-response assessment); (5) estimation of the magnitude of exposure (referred to as exposure assessment); and (6) characterization of the health risks associated with exposure (referred to as risk characterization).