| Literature DB >> 29165148 |
Kazue Ishitsuka1, Shoji F Nakayama2, Reiko Kishi3, Chisato Mori4, Zentaro Yamagata5, Yukihiro Ohya1, Toshihiro Kawamoto6, Michihiro Kamijima7.
Abstract
There is worldwide concern about the effects of environmental factors on children's health and development. The Miami Declaration was signed at the G8 Environment Ministers Meeting in 1997 to promote children's environmental health research. The following ministerial meetings continued to emphasize the need to foster children's research. In response to such a worldwide movement, the Ministry of the Environment, Japan (MOE), launched a nationwide birth cohort study with 100,000 pairs of mothers and children, namely, the Japan Environment and Children's Study (JECS), in 2010. Other countries have also started or planned large-scale studies focusing on children's environmental health issues. The MOE initiated dialogue among those countries and groups to discuss and share the various processes, protocols, knowledge, and techniques for future harmonization and data pooling among such studies. The MOE formed the JECS International Liaison Committee in 2011, which plays a primary role in promoting the international collaboration between JECS and the other children's environmental health research projects and partnership with other countries. This review article aims to present activities that JECS has developed. As one of the committee's activities, a workshop and four international symposia were held between 2011 and 2015 in Japan. In these conferences, international researchers and government officials, including those from the World Health Organization, have made presentations on their own birth cohort studies and health policies. In 2015, the MOE hosted the International Advisory Board meeting and received constructive comments and recommendations from the board. JECS is a founding member of the Environment and Child Health International Birth Cohort Group, and has discussed harmonization of exposure and outcome measurements with member parties, which will make it possible to compare and further combine data from different studies, considering the diversity in the measurements of variables between the studies. JECS is expected to contribute to the international environmental health research community and policy-making. More international collaboration would enhance our understanding of the possible environmental causes of diseases and disabilities.Entities:
Keywords: Birth cohort study; Chemical exposure; Children’s environmental health; Environmental policy; International collaboration; Japan Environment and Children’s study (JECS)
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29165148 PMCID: PMC5664803 DOI: 10.1186/s12199-017-0667-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Prev Med ISSN: 1342-078X Impact factor: 3.674
JECS international symposia
| Conference title (date) | Venue | Co-sponsor | Country or organization of speakers/panelists | Titles of sessions/presentations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Japan Environment and Children’s Study (JECS) Workshop on International Linkage | Tokyo | Japan | Session 1: planning large-scale birth cohort studies (five speakers) | |
| Japan | Session 2: environmental exposure assessment in cohort studies (two speakers) | |||
| Japan | Session 3: for what unexpected events must one prepare in site operations? (four speakers) | |||
| Japan | Session 4: follow-up activities in birth cohort studies (one speaker) | |||
| Japan | Session 5: outcome and measurements (one speaker) | |||
| Japan | Session 6: expectation for birth cohort studies (one speaker) | |||
| Australia | Session 7: international liaison of national cohort studies (three speakers) | |||
| JECS International Symposium | Tokyo | Japan | Outline of Japan Environment and Children’s Study focusing on the effects of environmental chemicals | |
| Denmark | The Danish National Birth Cohort | |||
| Korea | Mothers and Children’s Environmental Health Study | |||
| United States of America | The National Children’s Study | |||
| WHO | Coordinating and harmonizing long-term cohort studies of children’s environmental health | |||
| UNEP | An evaluation of environmental health risks and risk management strategies among children in developing countries | |||
| International Childhood Cancer Cohort Consortium (I4C), Australia | International Childhood Cancer Cohort Consortium initiative | |||
| Japan | International linkage in JECS | |||
| JECS International Symposium in Kitakyushu, Japan | Kitakyushu | University of Occupational and Environmental Health | Japan | Japan Environment and Children’s Study |
| United States of America | National Children’s Study USA | |||
| Germany | Concept of a birth cohort study as contribution to health-related environmental monitoring in Germany | |||
| WHO | Coordination and harmonization of the next generation of large-scale birth cohorts | |||
| Japan | Report from WHO Working Group for Coordination of the Next Generation of Large-scale Birth Cohorts | |||
| Japan | Progress in Japan Environment and Children’s Study | |||
| Japan | Current progress of the “Hokkaido Cohort Studies on Environment and Children: congenital abnormality, development, and allergy” | |||
| Japan | A study of child development in northeast Japan | |||
| Japan | Pilot studies for JECS | |||
| Japan | Expectations for JECS | |||
| JECS International Symposium, Nagoya, Japan | Nagoya | Nagoya City University | Japan | Background to international linkage |
| United States of America | U.S. National Children’s Study | |||
| Germany | German activities | |||
| China | Shanghai Birth Cohort | |||
| French | French National Birth Cohort | |||
| United States of America | Report from the working group related to the international collaboration in large-scale birth cohort studies | |||
| Japan | Roadmap of Japan Environment and Children’s Study (JECS) for the future | |||
| Japan | What has been proved and what will be proved in JECS | |||
| Japan | Expectations for JECS (four speakers) | |||
| Fourth JECS International Symposium | Tokyo | Chiba University | WHO | Recent global environmental change and children’s health |
| Japan | Preliminary results of the Japan Environment and Children’s Study (JECS) | |||
| Norway | The Norwegian Mother and Child Cohort Study | |||
| Denmark | An overview of the Danish National Birth Cohort | |||
| Japan | Current status of birth cohort studies in Asia | |||
| Norway | Panel discussion: Promoting birth cohort studies: from the perspective of information dissemination (four panelists) |
Examples of conference presentations relating to activities of JECS International Liaison Committee
| Year | Conferences | Type of presentation | Presenting authors | Titles of presentations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2011 | ISES/ISEEa | Poster | Mori K | Japan Environment and Children’s Study - Pilot Study and Research Launch |
| Poster | Toda E | International Coordination in Birth Cohorts | ||
| 2013 | ISES/ISEE/ISIAQb | Symposium | Nakayama SF | Japan Environment and Children’s Study |
| 2014 | ISES | Symposium | Nakayama SF | On-going harmonization of exposure questionnaires among large-scale birth cohort studies |
| Symposium | Nakayama SF | Background on the Environment and Child Health International Birth Cohort Group | ||
| Symposium | Nakayama SF | Harmonization of QA/QC measures among large-scale children’s environmental studies | ||
| 2015 | ISES | Symposium | Nakayama SF | Preliminary biomonitoring data from the Japan Environment and Children’s Study |
| 2016 | ISES | Symposium | Nakayama SF | Development of personal sampling devices and chemical screening methods for large-scale epidemiology and human biomonitoring studies |
| Symposium | Nakayama SF | Biomonitoring as part of exposome measurement in Japan Environment and Children’s Study | ||
| Symposium | Nakayama SF | We do exposome as much as we can: Japan Environment and Children’s Study | ||
| PPTOX V | Symposium | Kamijima M | Present status and preliminary results of the Japan Environment and Children’s Study (JECS) | |
| ISEE | Poster | Kanatani K | Effect modifiers of desert dust exposure to allergic symptoms–From an adjunct study of Japan Environment and Children Study (JECS)c |
Abbreviations: ISEE International Society for Environmental Epidemiology, ISES International Society of Exposure Science, ISIAQ International Society of Indoor Air Quality and Climate, PPTOX V Fifth Conference on Prenatal Programming and Toxicity, SOT Society of Toxicology
aJoint meeting of ISES and ISEE
bISES, ISEE and ISIAQ hosted the joint meeting
cThis presentation was supported by the Travel Grant for Young JECS Researchers
International Advisory Board members [20]
| Name | Affiliation |
|---|---|
| Marie-Aline Charles | Ined-Inserm Elfe, France |
| Andre Conrad | Toxicology, Health-related Environmental Monitoring, German Environment Agency, Germany |
| Ruth A Etzel | Office of Children’s Health Protection, Environmental Protection Agency, United States of America |
| Per Magnus | Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Norway |
| Mads Melbye | Management Board, Statens Serum Institut, Denmark |
| Maria P Neira | Department of Public Health, Environmental and Social Determinants of Health, World Health Organization |
| Ying Tian | Shanghai Key Laboratory of Children’s Environment Health, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, China |
| Christopher P Wild | International Agency for Research on Cancer |
| Birgit Wolz | Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation, Building and Nuclear Safety, Germany |
| Jun Jim Zhang | Xinhua Hospital, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, China |
Main recommendations of International Advisory Board [20]
| Key points | Details of actions | Recommendations |
|---|---|---|
| JECS study design | ||
| Strategy of questionnaires | Collecting information not only from mothers but from fathers, teachers, and children themselves; appropriate frequency and length of questionnaires; use of web-based questionnaire | |
| Outcome measurements | Including pediatric examination for collecting objective data | |
| Environmental measurements | Collection of biospecimens from children; data analysis from biospecimens and questionnaires together; set priority of chemical exposures paying close attention to other relevant research projects | |
| Seek assent from children | Conduct a pilot study | |
| JECS organizational structure | ||
| Collaboration among different disciplines | Health sector and schools | |
| Communication with public | ||
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| JECS international collaborations | ||
| Develop international collaboration | Sharing goals | |
| Share information among study teams | Study protocols, procedures, and harmonization of methodologies |
Abbreviations: JECS Japan Environment and Children’s study