| Literature DB >> 29769039 |
Nicole Bijlsma1, Marc Maurice Cohen2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Most clinicians feel ill-equipped to assess or educate patients about toxicant exposures, and it is unclear how expert environmental medicine clinicians assess these exposures or treat exposure-related conditions. We aimed to explore expert clinicians' perspectives on their practice of environmental medicine to determine the populations and toxicants that receive the most attention, identify how they deal with toxicant exposures and identify the challenges they face and where they obtain their knowledge.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical practice; Environmental health; Environmental medicine; Environmental sensitivities; Exposure assessment; Exposure history; Multiple chemical sensitivity; Occupational and environmental medicine; Toxicant assessment; Toxicant biomarkers
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29769039 PMCID: PMC5956903 DOI: 10.1186/s12199-018-0709-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Prev Med ISSN: 1342-078X Impact factor: 3.674
Environmental medicine is a divided profession
| Area of difference | Clinician | Quotes |
|---|---|---|
| Nature of employment | OEPs | I’ve never worked in the private clinical area as a fee-charging professional. |
| IPs | The patients that I see have seen seven or eight different doctors and have been examined to death and nothing has come out of that. | |
| Type of diseases seen | OEPs | Mainly chronic neck pains and chronic back pains from a work injury. So it’s much more musculoskeletal than environmental unfortunately. |
| IPs | The basis of my practice is chronically ill people, who do not fit into a clear medical diagnostic category… [they] suffer [from] persistent inflammation, immunological dysregulation and neurological responses which are hyper-responses. | |
| Toxicants of concern | OEPs | The environment means different things to different people. What we’re talking about is a workplace environment. |
| IPs | It’s the very ubiquitous ones that people are routinely eating and drinking, without thinking much about it, just because of it being in the water supply and food. | |
| Role of nutrition in toxicant exposures | OEPs | There’s a fringe thing called nutritional medicine... it’s not really recognised. |
| IPs | Nutrition is your backbone in biochemistry; if you’ve got good nutrition, you’ve got a level of resilience against environmental insults, if you’ve got poor nutrition, you have less resilience. | |
| Attitude towards genetic testing | OEPs | There’s a huge reluctance in occupational and EM to do genetic testing because of the implications, discriminating against people on the basis of genetic predisposition to problems. |
| IPs | People with the HLA DRB-1 and the HLA-DQ test do put them into a category that makes perfect sense about why the person reacted (to biotoxins in a water-damaged building). |
Clinical assessment of toxicant exposures is challenging
| Key challenges | Clinician | Quotes |
|---|---|---|
| Lack of clinical guidelines | IP | It would be great to have a standardized data-collection tool for environmental exposure history. It would make an enormous difference to outcomes. |
| Limitations of laboratory testing | OEP | The frustrating thing with EM is actually trying to find the tests which can actually show that what they (the patient) have got is real. |
| IP | There’s a lot of rubbish pathology that goes on, where we don’t have good standards, where we accept almost any kind of result as proof of poison and abnormalities and we don’t have good, validated ways of understanding how to measure the toxins. So we don’t have good surrogate markers, because no one can agree on what a marker of a toxic exposure does. | |
| Difficulty in establishing cause and effect | OEP | In case of punitive or suspected cause, until there’s sufficient scientific evidence supporting, relating the possible cause and the effect... that’s where dose-response relationships are important, whether there’s a plausible biological mechanism that can explain the mechanism from the exposure. It’s important not to create alarm. |
The environmental exposure history is the most important clinical tool
| Features | Clinician | Quotes |
|---|---|---|
| Importance of an environmental history | OEP | It’s quite a long, drawn out question and answer process that follows no specific format, because then I go along and choose the questions I want to ask, to determine what is their alleged level of exposure and what has been the responses by their body to that exposure, and what measurements they’ve had. |
| IP | History, history, history is the most important tool to use. | |
| Challenges of long consultations | OEP | In 90 minutes you can actually really get to understand a person and their risk of exposures and whether in fact this might be something that is related to occupational or environmental exposures. |
| IP | 90 minutes allows me to give an hour to the history taking portion and half an hour for examination. That’s really what’s needed to conduct a proper environmental history. | |
| Occupational history | OEP | You need to go through what is this person exposed to through the whole course of their working life. |
| IP | If they have listed a job involving the use of chemicals, farming, soldering, or various things like that, I’ll specifically ask what personal protection they use. | |
| Place history | OEP | Mount Isa mines in Queensland and Port Pirie in South Australia they’ve shown quite significant spread (of lead dust), many kilometers from the stacks and waste dumps. |
| IP | Where they’ve lived as children, renovations of houses, all those kind of things don’t actually come out unless you ask that. | |
| Dietary history | IPs | So tell me a bit about the chemical reaction you are concerned about. When was it, how long was it, how long after the exposure, the duration of the effects. What did those effects, i.e. was it gas, or the neurological. you know, childhood, behavioral. And then I just try and map it out. Then you go on to the next one. What was the next environmental reaction which your child had. And then you just slowly build up a picture of the person, and then I go through the artificial chemicals and colors, additives and preservatives as well as the natural colors, flavors, preservatives, like salicylates. And then, I go through the family history as well, that’s very important. I look for genetic predisposition and for chemical sensitivity. |
Patients with environmental sensitivities have unique phenotypes, are complex to treat, rarely regain full health and are becoming more prevalent
| Key challenges | Clinician | Quotes |
|---|---|---|
| Attitude towards patients with environmental sensitivities | OEPs | We don’t deal with the long-term because this is what normal life is. None of these very, molecular or unseen chemical injuries are being monitored, because that’s still really research. |
| IPs | The canaries are the ones that are set up early on in life to have more difficulty dealing with the environment, because in terms of liver and cellular detox, they’re not that well-equipped for the environment. So in terms of the bell-shaped curve, they’re at one end. And then the rest of us are in the rest of the bell-shaped. And then there’s the bulldozer, these guys go through life and they smoke and drink and they spray everything and you have to run them over at ninety. | |
| Observations of patients with environmental sensitivities | IP | I didn’t think see those allergies ten years ago. |
| OEP | Greater awareness of the population generally...I think GPs are becoming more aware of things like MCS and fibromyalgia… and for which patients were often rubbished thirty years ago. | |
| Observations of phenotypes of patients with environmental sensitivities | OEP | The majority of people with Multiple Chemical Sensitivity have got some sort of an allergic, or highly reactive predisposition. |
| IP | These patients are extraordinarily sensory-sensitive in every way… they tend to be artistic, highly creative, able to read another person, very sensitive to another person’s emotions. When I go on their history, sometimes it’s he was a normal kid, but he was very, very sensitive to whatever things are around. | |
| Observations of genotypes of patients with environmental sensitivities | IP | Some people are just crappy at clearing drugs, pills, potions and pesticides out of their system. And those who have it remain for a long period of time, may have vulnerabilities. |
| Difficulties treating environmental sensitivities | IP | The more symptoms and systems involved and the more chronic the illness, the more challenging it is; especially people with multiple chemical sensitivity, because then they have difficulty tolerating the treatment as well. |
Educational and clinical resources in environmental medicine are lacking
| Resources | Clinician | Quotes |
|---|---|---|
| Education process | IPs | Difficult education process, everyone develops in their own way. |
| AFOEM training | OEPs | My college has been very slow at developing the EM side but they’re working on it, but we’re not getting there fast. |
| ACNEM training | IPs | Good introductory course. |
| Journals | OEP | Many of the things that come up (as an expert witness in court) require me to do quite a bit of research with Dr. Google and the online journals. |
| IP | I haven’t found any (journals) that are very useful. I usually do searches and just try and pick up general articles when I am researching a particular topic. | |
| Textbooks | IPs | I’m not aware of a really good environmental health textbook. Is there one? |
| Peers | IPs | 80% of what I learn, comes from a colleague emailing me, or passing on a paper from some source and then I go and read it and move on from the references there. |
| Patients | OEPs | Now I just learn from each case that I see. I still have a long way to go. There aren’t a lot of experts in this area. |
| IP | I have my little army of a few thousand chemically sensitive, chemically poisoned, affected people. And I’m forever getting notices and emails like: Did you see that? Here’s the biomarkers of chemical sensitivity, Here’s what organochlorines do, There’s the glyphosate paper... |
Websites used as a resource by clinicians on EM
| Organisation | Website URL | Number of mentions |
|---|---|---|
| Environmental Working Group (USA) and their database Skin Deep |
| × 3 (IP) |
| Surviving Mold (USA) |
| × 3 (IP) |
| Autism Research Institute (USA) |
| × 2 (IP) |
| Environmental Health News Above the Fold (daily news feeds) (USA) |
| × 1 (IP) |
| US Environmental Protection Agency |
| × 1 (OEP) |
| Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (USA) | × 1 (OEP) | |
| REACH (Registration, Evaluation, Authorisation and restriction of Chemicals) (Europe) |
| × 1 (OEP) |
| Harvard (T.H. Chan) School of Public Health |
| × 1 (Paed) |
| US National Library of Medicine |
| × 1 (OEP) |
| UK Health and Safety Executive |
| × 1 (OEP) |
| International Program on Chemical Safety. Environmental Health Criteria Monographs. |
| × 1 (OEP) |
| International Labor Organisation |
| × 1 (OEP) |
| Public Health England (UK) |
| × 1 (OEP |
| EnHealth (Australia) |
| × 1 (OEP) |
| Safe Work Australia |
| × 1 (OEP) |
| National Industrial Chemicals, Notification and Assessment Scheme (Australia) |
| × 1 (OEP) |
| US National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (USA) |
| × 1 (OEP) |
| Occupational Safety and Health Administration (USA) |
| × 1 (OEP) |
| Friends of the Earth |
| × 1 (IP) |
Books on EM
| Title | Author | Year | Number of mentions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Healthy Home Healthy Family | Nicole Bijlsma | 2018 | × 3 (IPs) |
| Chemical sensitivity. Volume 4. | William Rea | 1998 | × 2 (IPs) |
| Surviving mold | Ritchie Shoemaker | 2010 | × 2 (IPs) |
| Environmental disasters. A chronicle of individual, industrial and governmental carelessness. | Lee Davis | 1998 | × 1 (OEP) |
| Occupational medicine | Carl Zenz | 1994 | × 1 (OEP) |
| Four volume encyclopedia of occupational health and safety. | International Labor Organisation (ILO) | × 1 (OEP) | |
| Hunter’s diseases of occupations (10th ed) | Peter Baxter and Tar-Ching Aw | 2010 | × 1 (OEP |
| Toxic metals and antidotes. The chelation therapy handbook. (2nd ed) | E. Blaurock Busch. | 2012 | × 1 (IP) |
| Clinical metal toxicology (12th ed) | Prof Peter van der Schaar | 2015 | × 1 (IP) |
| Casarett and Doull’s Toxicology. The basic science of poisons. (8th ed). | Curtis Klaassen | × 1 (IP) | |
| Textbook of functional medicine | The Institute for Functional Medicine | 2010 | × 1 (IP) |
| Textbook of natural medicine (4th ed) | Joseph Pizzorno and Michael Murray | 2012 | × 1 (IP) |
| Detox or die | Sherry Roger | 2002 | × 1 (IP) |