Sentences with phrase «environmental health perspectives»

Environmental Health Perspectives, 109 (3), pp. 419 - 425.
The Climate Progress article refers to an article published in Environmental Health Perspectives: Associations of Cognitive Function Scores with Carbon Dioxide, Ventilation, and Volatile Organic Compound Exposures in Office Workers: A Controlled Exposure Study of Green and Conventional Office Environments; by Joseph G. Allen, Piers MacNaughton, Usha Satish, Suresh Santanam, Jose Vallarino1, and John D. Spengler.
A study, published in Environmental Health Perspectives, found concentrations of BPA were reduced by 66 percent and concentrations of phthalates were reduced by between 53 and 56 percent just by eating fresh foods.
Environmental Health Perspectives 113.5 (2005): 590 - 96.
Published in Environmental Health Perspectives, this groundbreaking alliance is called Project TENDR (Targeting Environmental Neuro - Developmental Risks) and includes 48 of the country's top scientists, health professionals and health advocates, across many disciplines and sectors, including epidemiology, toxicology, exposure science, pediatrics, obstetrics and gynecology, nursing, public health, and federal and state chemical policy.
Abstract and link to full peer reviewed publication are here, in Environmental Health Perspectives.
Example: as reported in Environmental Health News: «Those who consumed canned vegetables at least once a day had 44 percent more BPA in their urine than those who consumed no canned vegetables, according to the study, which was published in the scientific journal Environmental Health Perspectives
Environmental Health Perspectives, 119, 1681 - 1690, doi: 10.1289 / Ehp.1103456.
A report from the journal Environmental Health Perspectives on the connection between global environmental change, health, and medicine.
Environmental Health Perspectives 122:573 — 579.
The paper, Environmental Chemicals in Pregnant Women in the U.S., was just published in Environmental Health Perspectives and posted online.
New research, published this month in Environmental Health Perspectives, shows that persistent organic pollutants (POPs), including the insecticide DDT, travel in air and water currents around the world's -LSB-...]
A 2013 article in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives shows a strong (though not totally definitive) link between exposure to phthalates (chemicals that are found in air fresheners, candles and sometimes plastics) during pregnancy and the child's future risk of asthma.
Researchers behind the study, published in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives, found that preterm births associated with particulate matter — a type of pollutant — led to more than $ 4 billion in economic costs in 2010 due to medical care and lost productivity that results from disability.
Environmental health perspectives.
A study published in Environmental Health Perspectives has linked triflumizole to weight gain.
Interestingly, Dr. Stuart Yaniger, one of the authors of the Environmental Health Perspectives study, responded both to Chris Kresser's post and to a post at another website (which argued for the safety of polyethylene bags or silicone bags for sous vide).7 Dr. Yaniger's response (see comment in reference 7) was instructive:
Once a big proponent of sous vide cooking, Chris Kresser had this to say about the safety concerns raised in the Environmental Health Perspectives study:
Regarding Aspartame, a study published in «Environmental Health Perspectives» in 2007 found that long - term exposure to low doses of aspartame increased cancer in rats.
REFERENCES Environmental Health Perspectives — www.ephonline.org Dartmouth Toxic Metals Research Program — www.dartmouth.edu / ~ toxmetal / Agency for Toxic Substances & Disease Registry — www.astdr.cdc.gov/toxpro2.html Center for Air Toxic Metals — http://www.undeerc.org/catm/health.html American Board of Clinical Metal Toxicology — http://www.abcmt.org Toxicology of Metals, 1996, Louis W. Chang Comprehensive Coordination Chemistry II, Volume 8, pp 213 — 228
Environmental Health Perspectives 2005; 113 (8): 1039 - 1045.
Another powerful study published in 2003 Environmental Health Perspectives evaluated the levels of pesticide metabolites in the urine of two groups of children and found that children eating organic fruits and vegetables, consuming organic milk and drinking organic juices had levels of pesticide metabolites six to nine times lower than children eating conventionally grown food.17 Bear in mind, pesticides are up to ten times more toxic to children than adults, due to their smaller body size and developing organ systems, so it is especially important to minimize their exposure whenever possible during the growing years.18
(Environmental Health Perspectives 1997 Apr; 105 (Suppl 3): 633 - 636).
But it turns out the chemicals used to replace BPA may have nearly the exact impact on the human body — hormone disruption — as BPA, according to a new study in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives.
3 Ways to Cook Smarter Don't microwave in plastic (or put hot food or beverages in plastic containers): Scientists warn that estrogenlike chemicals could leach into your food by doing so — possibly even if you're using plastic that's free of a well - known culprit called bisphenol A (BPA), according to an article published in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives.
The findings were published online Dec. 2 in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives, just as world leaders gather in Paris for the United Nations Climate Change Conference.
Publishing in Environmental Health Perspectives, researchers looked at organophosphate flame retardants (PFRs), studying the urinary concentrations of their metabolites along with outcomes of IVF treatement.
The results are published in the February 2009 edition of the journal Environmental Health Perspectives.
A new review article appearing in Environmental Health Perspectives focuses on the use of nanomaterials for environmental cleanup.
The findings, which are presented in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives, particularly apply to women who are premenopausal and who are current or past smokers.
His team's findings are due to appear in an upcoming issue of the journal Environmental Health Perspectives.
The study, published in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives, showed that these drugs could affect the fertility of both unborn boys and girls.
R.A., Carter, W.H., DeVito, M.J. «Thyroid - Hormone - Disrupting Chemicals: Evidence for Dose - Dependent Additivity or Synergism» (2005) Environmental Health Perspectives 113 (11).
Published in Environmental Health Perspectives, this study surveyed 970 pregnant women.
A new report in Environmental Health Perspectives, the ever - reliable font of junk science, has outdone itself in straining to link exposures to environmental contaminants to diminished immune responses in infants.
Environmental Health Perspectives, 105 (Suppl 3), 679 — 683.
Carrie Arnold, Environmental Health Perspectives, Vol 122, No. 2, February 2014.
Biomarker Monitoring of a Population Residing Near Uranium Mining Activities, W. W. Au, R. G. Lane, M. S. Legator, E. B. Whorton, G. S. Wilkinson, and G. J. Gabehart; reprinted from Environmental Health Perspectives, Vol.
The scientists said the study, reported online in Environmental Health Perspectives, suggested that EPA air - pollution standards may not be stringent enough to protect developing fetuses.
Clapp was an associate editor of Environmental Health Perspectives from 2006 to 2010 and on the editorial board of New Solutions from 1994 to 2010.
A new review article appearing in Environmental Health Perspectives (EHP) co-authored by Dr. Todd Kuiken, a research associate for the Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies (PEN), focuses on the use of nanomaterials for environmental cleanup.
When women in the second trimester lived near fields treated with chlorpyrifos — the most commonly applied organophosphate pesticide — their children were 3.3 times more likely to have autism, according to the study, published in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives.
Environmental Health Perspectives, 118, 80, doi: 10.1289 / ehp.0900906.
He was one of the authors of the study, which was published online in the journal Environmental Health Perspectives last month.
Communities of color and those with low education and high poverty and unemployment face greater health risks even if their air quality meets federal health standards, according to the article published online in the scientific journal Environmental Health Perspectives.
A group of environmental health researchers, led by Trevor Penning, PhD, director of the Center of Excellence in Environmental Toxicology (CEET) at the Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, published their findings this month in Environmental Health Perspectives.
«Our findings suggest that DDT may be targeting the system in the body that keeps blood pressure under control,» said Michele La Merrill, a toxicologist at the University of California, Davis and lead author of the study published today in Environmental Health Perspectives.
A study published last year in Environmental Health Perspectives found that children in Guiyu had lead levels 50 percent higher than those in surrounding villages and 50 percent higher than safety limits set by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
An expanded set of experiments suggested that protein content in rice and wheat could sink by roughly 8 percent, Myers and colleagues wrote in the August Environmental Health Perspectives.
That work, published online in Environmental Health Perspectives on May 4, found that living near toxic sites leads to health impacts comparable to all the combined malaria issues in those three countries, or as much as the total negative impacts of air pollution.
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