Literature DB >> 15060212

Environmental pediatrics and its impact on government health policy.

Lynn Goldman1, Henry Falk, Philip J Landrigan, Sophie J Balk, J Routt Reigart, Ruth A Etzel.   

Abstract

Recent public recognition that children are different from adults in their exposures and susceptibilities to environmental contaminants has its roots in work that began >46 years ago, when the American Academy of Pediatrics (APA) established a standing committee to focus on children's radiation exposures. We summarize the history of that important committee, now the AAP Committee on Environmental Health, including its statements and the 1999 publication of the AAP Handbook of Pediatric Environmental Health, and describe the recent emergence of federal and state legislative and executive actions to evaluate explicitly environmental health risks to children. As a result in large part of these efforts, numerous knowledge gaps about children's health and the environment are currently being addressed. Government efforts began in the 1970s to reduce childhood lead poisoning and to monitor birth defects and cancer. In the 1990s, federal efforts accelerated with the Food Quality Protection Act, an executive order on children's environmental health, the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry/Environmental Protection Agency Pediatric Environmental Health Specialty Units, and National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences/Environmental Protection Agency Centers of Excellence in Research in Children's Environmental Health. In this decade, the Children's Environmental Health Act authorized the National Children's Study, which has the potential to address a number of critical questions about children's exposure and health. The federal government has expanded efforts in control and prevention of childhood asthma and in tracking of asthma, birth defects, and other diseases that are linked to the environment. Efforts continue on familiar problems such as the eradication of lead poisoning, but new issues, such as prevention of childhood exposure to carcinogens and neurotoxins other than lead, and emerging issues, such as endocrine disruptors and pediatric drug evaluations, are in the forefront. More recently, these issues have been taken up by states and in the international arena.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2004        PMID: 15060212

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pediatrics        ISSN: 0031-4005            Impact factor:   7.124


  11 in total

Review 1.  The estrogenic endocrine disrupting chemical bisphenol A (BPA) and obesity.

Authors:  Frederick S Vom Saal; Susan C Nagel; Benjamin L Coe; Brittany M Angle; Julia A Taylor
Journal:  Mol Cell Endocrinol       Date:  2012-01-10       Impact factor: 4.102

Review 2.  Measuring infant memory: Utility of the visual paired-comparison test paradigm for studies in developmental neurotoxicology.

Authors:  Thomas M Burbacher; Kimberly S Grant
Journal:  Neurotoxicol Teratol       Date:  2012-06-30       Impact factor: 3.763

Review 3.  A qualitative analysis of environmental policy and children's health in Mexico.

Authors:  Enrique Cifuentes; Leonardo Trasande; Martha Ramirez; Philip J Landrigan
Journal:  Environ Health       Date:  2010-03-23       Impact factor: 5.984

4.  Environmental Politics of Reproduction.

Authors:  Martine Lappé; Robbin Jeffries Hein; Hannah Landecker
Journal:  Annu Rev Anthropol       Date:  2019-07-12

5.  Environmental Exposures and Child Health: What we Might Learn in the 21st Century from the National Children's Study?

Authors:  Jane A McElroy
Journal:  Environ Health Insights       Date:  2008-11-06

Review 6.  Effect of endocrine disruptor pesticides: a review.

Authors:  Wissem Mnif; Aziza Ibn Hadj Hassine; Aicha Bouaziz; Aghleb Bartegi; Olivier Thomas; Benoit Roig
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2011-06-17       Impact factor: 3.390

7.  Prenatal exposure to organochlorine pesticides and early childhood communication development in British girls.

Authors:  Zuha Jeddy; Katarzyna Kordas; Kristen Allen; Ethel V Taylor; Kate Northstone; W Dana Flanders; Gonza Namulanda; Andreas Sjodin; Terryl J Hartman
Journal:  Neurotoxicology       Date:  2018-10-05       Impact factor: 4.294

8.  Effect of an environmental health educational programme for paediatricians in an Egyptian University Hospital: before and after study.

Authors:  Reem A Abbas; Ashgan A Alghobashy
Journal:  JRSM Short Rep       Date:  2012-12-31

Review 9.  A systematic review of US state environmental legislation and regulation with regards to the prevention of neurodevelopmental disabilities and asthma.

Authors:  Lauren Zajac; Eli Sprecher; Philip J Landrigan; Leonardo Trasande
Journal:  Environ Health       Date:  2009-03-26       Impact factor: 5.984

10.  Impact of air pollution on respiratory diseases in children with recurrent wheezing or asthma.

Authors:  Susanna Esposito; Carlotta Galeone; Mara Lelii; Benedetta Longhi; Beatrice Ascolese; Laura Senatore; Elisabetta Prada; Valentina Montinaro; Stefano Malerba; Maria Francesca Patria; Nicola Principi
Journal:  BMC Pulm Med       Date:  2014-08-07       Impact factor: 3.317

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