Environmental surveys, specimen bank and health related environmental monitoring in Germany

Kolossa-Gehring, M; Becker, K; Conrad, A; Schröter-Kermani, C; Schulz, C; Seiwert, M

HERO ID

1056440

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2012

Language

English

PMID

22172995

HERO ID 1056440
In Press No
Year 2012
Title Environmental surveys, specimen bank and health related environmental monitoring in Germany
Authors Kolossa-Gehring, M; Becker, K; Conrad, A; Schröter-Kermani, C; Schulz, C; Seiwert, M
Journal International Journal of Hygiene and Environmental Health
Volume 215
Issue 2
Page Numbers 120-126
Abstract Production of chemicals, use of products and consumer goods, contamination of food as well as today's living conditions are related to a substantial exposure of humans to chemicals. Safety of human beings and the environment has to be safeguarded by producers and government. Human biomonitoring (HBM) has proven to be a useful and powerful tool to control human exposure and facilitate risk assessment. Therefore, the German Federal Environment Agency (Umweltbundesamt, UBA) employs two major HBM tools, the German Environmental Survey (GerES) and the German Environmental Specimen Bank (ESB). GerES is a nationwide population representative study on HBM and external human exposure, which has, inter alia, been used to identify lead in tap water, lead dustfall, time spent in traffic, and age of dwelling as exposure sources for lead and, thus, to derive risk reduction measures. The ESB is a permanent monitoring instrument and an archive for human specimens. Retrospective monitoring of phthalates and bisphenol A provides a continuous historical record of human exposure in Germany, over the last decades. Additionally it revealed that estimations of human exposure based on production and consumption data may supply misleading information on human exposure. HBM data demonstrated that (a) the use if the restricted isomer di-n-butylphthalat decreased while di-i-butylphthalate levels remained constant and (b) human bisphenol A exposure might be overestimated without monitoring data. The decrease of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon-exposure proves the success of German environmental policy after German re-unification. In addition to GerES and ESB UBA is involved in different co-operation networks, the two most prominent of which are (1) the harmonization of HBM in Europe (ESBIO; Expert Team to Support Biomonitoring in Europe, COPHES/DEMOCOPHES; Consortium to Perform Human Biomonitoring on a European Scale/Demonstration of a study to Coordinate and Perform Human Biomonitoring on a European Scale) and (2) the co-operation between BMU and the German Chemical Industry Association (VCI). In the latter project emphasis will be placed on substances with a potential relevance for health and on substances to which the general population might potentially be exposed to a considerable extent and for which HBM methods are not available up to now.
Doi 10.1016/j.ijheh.2011.10.013
Pmid 22172995
Wosid WOS:000303224500010
Url <Go to ISI>://WOS:000303224500010
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Comments Source: Web of Science WOS:000303224500010
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword German Environmental Survey (GerES); Environmental Specimen Bank (ESB); COPHES; DEMOCOPHES; Human biomonitoring; Time trends
Is Qa No