An examination of EPA risk assessment principles and practices

HERO ID

192199

Reference Type

Technical Report

Subtype

EPA Report

Year

2004

Language

English

HERO ID 192199
Material Type EPA Report
Year 2004
Title An examination of EPA risk assessment principles and practices
Authoring Organization U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Publisher Text U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Science Advisor
City Washington, DC
Abstract The most common basic definition of risk assessment used within the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is paraphrased from the 1983 report Risk Assessment in the Federal Government: Managing the Process (NRC, 1983), by the National Academy of Sciences’ (NAS’s) National Research Council (NRC): Risk assessment is a process in which information is analyzed to determine if an environmental hazard might cause harm to exposed persons and ecosystems. This process is highly interdisciplinary in that it draws from such diverse fields as biology, toxicology, ecology, engineering, geology, statistics, and the social sciences to create a rational framework for evaluating environmental hazards. While this definition has been somewhat enhanced and elaborated upon through subsequent NAS writings, it still basically describes risk assessment as it is performed within EPA. EPA uses risk assessment as a tool to integrate exposure and health effects or ecological effects information into a characterization of the potential for health hazards in humans or other hazards to our environment.
Report Number EPA/100/B-04/001
Url https://semspub.epa.gov/work/10/500006305.pdf
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Number Of Pages 193
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
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