Main Title |
Residential indoor exposures of children to pesticides following lawn applications / by R.G. Lewis and M.G. Nishhioka. |
Author |
Lewis, R.G. ;
Nishhioka, M. G. ;
Lewis, Robert G.
|
Other Authors |
|
CORP Author |
Environmental Protection Agency, Research Triangle Park, NC. National Exposure Research Lab. ;Battelle Memorial Inst., Columbus, OH. |
Publisher |
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, National Exposure Research Laboratory, |
Year Published |
1999 |
Report Number |
PB99-175432 ; EPA 600/A-99/069 |
Stock Number |
PB99-175432 |
OCLC Number |
44782806 |
Subjects |
Pediatric toxicology ;
Pesticides--Toxicology ;
Children--Health and hygiene ;
Health risk assessment ;
Pesticides--Health aspects ;
Pesticides--Environmental aspects
|
Additional Subjects |
Pesticides ;
Children ;
Lawns ;
Exposures ;
Residential buildings ;
Indoor air pollution ;
Sampling ;
Residues ;
Floor dust
|
Internet Access |
|
Holdings |
Library |
Call Number |
Additional Info |
Location |
Last Modified |
Checkout Status |
ESAD |
EPA 600-A-99-069 |
|
Region 10 Library/Seattle,WA |
08/25/2000 |
NTIS |
PB99-175432 |
Some EPA libraries have a fiche copy filed under the call number shown. |
|
07/26/2022 |
|
Collation |
1 v. : 28 cm. |
Abstract |
Methods have been developed to estimate children's residential exposures to pesticide residues and applied in a small field study of indoor exposures resulting from the intrusion from the intrusion of lawn-applied herbicide into the home. Sampling methods included size-selective indoor air sampling; wipe sampling of floors, sills, tables; the polyurethane foam (PUF) roller for dislodgeable carpet surface residues; and the HVS3 vacuum sampler for floor dust. Personal exposure samples included hand wipes and morning void urine samples. Pesticide spray drift was found to result in only a relatively minor increase in indoor pesticide levels. post-application air intrusion from closed house ventilation and the opening and closing of doors and windows increased indoor background levels 6-fold, while track-in by high activity children and pets, and wearing shoes indoors, increased indoor levels by 37-fold. Indoor 2,4-D levels were found to increase continually over a one-week period, with the increase in indoor air levels corresponding to the increased floor dust levels, suggesting resuspension of house dust by human activity. Similar estimates of non-dietary exposure are obtained from models based on 100 mg ingestion and surface contact simulated by the PUF roller. |
Notes |
600/A-99/069. Cover title. |
Place Published |
Washington, DC : |
Supplementary Notes |
See also PB93-119899. Prepared in cooperation with Battelle Memorial Inst., Columbus, OH. |
Availability Notes |
Product reproduced from digital image. Order this product from NTIS by: phone at 1-800-553-NTIS (U.S. customers); (703)605-6000 (other countries); fax at (703)605-6900; and email at orders@ntis.fedworld.gov. NTIS is located at 5285 Port Royal Road, Springfield, VA, 22161, USA. |
Corporate Au Added Ent |
United States. Environmental Protection Agency. National Exposure Research Laboratory. ; Battelle Memorial Institute. |
PUB Date Free Form |
c{1999?} |
NTIS Prices |
PC A03/MF A01 |
BIB Level |
m |
Cataloging Source |
OCLC/T |
OCLC Time Stamp |
20000814154907 |
Language |
eng |
Origin |
OCLC |
Type |
MERGE |
OCLC Rec Leader |
01129nam 2200325Ka 45010 |