Literature DB >> 7860166

Stratospheric ozone and health.

B K Armstrong1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Stratospheric ozone is being depleted and ambient ultraviolet (UV) irradiance is probably increasing. While remedial steps have been taken through the Montreal protocols, at best it will take some 90 years for stratospheric ozone concentrations to return to the levels existing in the 1970s.
METHODS: The evidence that these changes may have harmful effects on health has been reviewed.
RESULTS: The direct harmful effects are skin cancer, ocular damage and, possibly, immune suppression with an increase in infectious disease. Indirect, harmful effects resulting from climate change, changes in atmospheric chemistry, and changes in food supply may also occur. Beneficial effects are also possible but have largely escaped attention. Quantification of these effects is either uncertain or impossible at present and the outcomes for health in 50 years time can only be guessed at.
CONCLUSIONS: To understand better the health consequence of stratospheric ozone depletion, we need to know the quantitative relationship between ambient UV radiation and skin cancer, whether or not UV radiation really causes cataract and other ocular effects and what the quantitative relationships are, whether effects of UV radiation on immune function produce detectable health consequences, whether there are important beneficial effects of increasing UV radiation and, ultimately, what the balance of all these effects might be on health on a global scale.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 7860166     DOI: 10.1093/ije/23.5.873

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Epidemiol        ISSN: 0300-5771            Impact factor:   7.196


  5 in total

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Journal:  Eur J Epidemiol       Date:  2000-04       Impact factor: 8.082

2.  Public health methods--attributable risk as a link between causality and public health action.

Authors:  M E Northridge
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  1995-09       Impact factor: 9.308

3.  A glossary for biometeorology.

Authors:  Simon N Gosling; Erin K Bryce; P Grady Dixon; Katharina M A Gabriel; Elaine Y Gosling; Jonathan M Hanes; David M Hondula; Liang Liang; Priscilla Ayleen Bustos Mac Lean; Stefan Muthers; Sheila Tavares Nascimento; Martina Petralli; Jennifer K Vanos; Eva R Wanka
Journal:  Int J Biometeorol       Date:  2014-02-19       Impact factor: 3.787

4.  Environmental health summit report: research blueprint for the 21st century.

Authors:  C M Baldwin
Journal:  Environ Health Perspect       Date:  1996-02       Impact factor: 9.031

5.  Non-melanoma skin cancer and solar keratoses. I. Methods and descriptive results of the South Wales Skin Cancer Study.

Authors:  I Harvey; S Frankel; R Marks; D Shalom; M Nolan-Farrell
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  1996-10       Impact factor: 7.640

  5 in total

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