| Literature DB >> 17520073 |
Peter L DeFur1, Gary W Evans, Elaine A Cohen Hubal, Amy D Kyle, Rachel A Morello-Frosch, David R Williams.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The field of risk assessment has focused on protecting the health of individual people or populations of wildlife from single risks, mostly from chemical exposure. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency recently began to address multiple risks to communities in the "Framework for Cumulative Risk Assessment" [EPA/630/P02/001F. Washington DC:Risk Assessment Forum, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (2003)]. Simultaneously, several reports concluded that some individuals and groups are more vulnerable to environmental risks than the general population. However, vulnerability has received little specific attention in the risk assessment literature.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17520073 PMCID: PMC1867984 DOI: 10.1289/ehp.9332
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Perspect ISSN: 0091-6765 Impact factor: 9.031
Examples of specific vulnerability factors.
| Environmental conditions (habitat quality) | Receptor characteristics (individual or group quality) |
|---|---|
| Location | Biological factors |
| Geographic area | Genetics |
| Urban | Gender |
| Rural | Genetic diversity |
| Proximity to industrial sites | Genetic flux |
| Proximity to roads and traffic | Susceptibility |
| Time indoors, time outdoors | Developmental or life stage |
| Quality of setting | Age |
| Natural environment | Population structure |
| Air quality | Physical health status |
| Water quality | Low birth weight |
| Climate, habitat | Chronic disease-obesity |
| Built environment | Compromised immune function |
| Land use | Asthma |
| Housing quality | Acute disease-exposure |
| Housing density | Infection |
| Occupant density | Nutrition |
| Sanitation | Injury |
| Traffic density | Psychologic factors |
| Noise | Mental/emotional health |
| Social environment | Depression |
| Segregation | Hostility |
| Crime | Poor coping skills |
| Chaos | Temperament |
| Conflict | Adaptability |
| Social support | Intensity |
| Immigration/emigration | Mood |
| Family or group stability | Persistence/attention span |
| Violence | Distractibility |
| Racism | Sensitivity |
| Resources | Activities/behaviors |
| Social capital | Physical activity |
| Wealth | Hygiene |
| Employment opportunities | Diet |
| Schools | Product use |
| Medical care | Smoking |
| Food availability | Substance abuse |
| System complexity and redundancy | Religious practice |
| Social factors | |
| Race/ethnicity | |
| SES | |
| Population size | |
| Diversity | |
| Number of species | |
| Other | |
| Marital status | |
| Educational status |
Environmental vulnerability factors affecting individuals.
| Household | Community | Institutions |
|---|---|---|
| Low SES | Low neighborhood quality | Poor quality schools |
| Family turmoil | Crime and violence | Poor quality medical care |
| Marital instability | Low social capital | Job strains (high demands, low control, no security) |
| Cold, harsh parenting | Deviant peers | Access to economic opportunities |
| Separation from family | Poor social support | |
| Poor housing quality | Noise | |
| Crowding | Segregation | |
| Chronic stressor exposure | Poverty | |
| Residential instability | Income inequality | |
| Chaotic, lack of structure, routines, rituals |
Receptor vulnerability factors affecting individuals.
| Biological | Personality and intelligence | Interpersonal |
|---|---|---|
| Gender | Negative emotionality, pessimism, difficult temperament | Poor self-regulatory skills (impulsive, attention focusing difficulties) |
| Genetic predispositions | Hostility and aggressiveness | Poor coping skills |
| Compromised immune function | Low mastery beliefs, low self-efficacy | Shyness, extreme introversion |
| Allergies | Depression and anxiety | |
| Asthma | Low intelligence | |
| Nutrition | ||
| Smoking | ||
| Substance abuse | ||
| Low birth weight/prematurity | ||
| Obesity, physical activity, age |
Figure 1Conceptual model for considering vulnerability in cumulative risk assessment. The risk paradigm is depicted in a left-to-right flow with sources of stress on the left, exposure pathways to receptors in the center, and outcomes on the right. The receptors—individuals and groups—are shown as circles. Vulnerability factors can act at the level of how stressors interact with the receptor (left of receptors), or how receptors respond to the stress (right of receptors).
Factors contributing to vulnerability.
| Environment | Receptors |
|---|---|
| Household | Receptor factors |
| 1. Low SES | 1. Genetics |
| 2. Chronic stressor exposure | 2. Development of life stage |
| 3. Family turmoil | 3. Physical health status |
| 4. Chaos—lack of structure and rituals | 4. Mental/emotional health status |
| 5. Poor housing quality | 5. SES |
| 6. Cold, harsh parenting | 6. Race/ethnicity |
| 7. Marital instability | 7. Culture |
| 8. Residential instability | 8. Temperament |
| 9. Separation from family | Individual level |
| 10. Crowding | 1. Diet/nutritional status |
| Community factors | 2. Social support |
| 1. Low neighborhood/housing quality | 3. Psychosocial stress |
| 2. Crime and violence | 4. Low SES/poverty |
| 3. Crowding | 5. Health behaviors |
| 4. Food supply | Personality/intelligence |
| 5. Access to health care | 1. Negative emotionality—pessimism, difficult temperament |
| 6. Concentration of poverty | 2. Depression/anxiety |
| 7. Poor social support | 3. Poor coping skills |
| 8. Racial segregation | 4. Low mastery beliefs/low self-efficacy |
| 9. Noise | 5. Poor self-regulatory skills |
| Institutions | 6. Shyness/extreme introversion |
| 1. Poor-quality schools | 7. Hostility and aggressiveness |
| 2. Job strain | 8. Low intelligence |
| 3. Poor-quality medical care | Biological |
| Physical conditions | 1. Racial minority |
| 1. Location | 2. Allergies and asthma |
| 2. Quality of setting | 3. Smoking |
| 3. Activities | 4. Gender |
| Social conditions | 5. Compromised immune function |
| 1. Social capital | 6. Low birth weight/prematurity |
| 2. Resources | 7. Obesity/low physical activity |
| 3. Behavior | 8. Substance abuse |
| Other factors | |
| 1. Habitat quality | |
| 2. Age | |
| 3. Population quality | |
| 4. Health status | |
| 5. Multiple stressors |