Conducting evaluations of evidence that are transparent, timely and can lead to health-protective actions
Non-chemical stressors
Epidemiology
610
Review
Transparency
Toxicology
Precautionary principle
Education
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
systematic review
industry sponsorship
risk of bias
Health Sciences
Humans
Conflicts of interest
conflicts of interest
environmental justice
Environmental justice
Cumulative impacts
transparency
precautionary principle
Public health
Internet
Uncertainty
16. Peace & justice
Risk of bias
Industrial medicine. Industrial hygiene
3. Good health
RC963-969
Industry sponsorship
13. Climate action
Systematic review
Public Health and Health Services
non-chemical stressors
cumulative impacts
Public Health
Generic health relevance
Public aspects of medicine
RA1-1270
Medical Informatics
DOI:
10.1186/s12940-022-00926-z
Publication Date:
2022-12-05T09:03:47Z
AUTHORS (16)
ABSTRACT
Abstract
Background
In February 2021, over one hundred scientists and policy experts participated in a web-based Workshop to discuss the ways that divergent evaluations of evidence and scientific uncertainties are used to delay timely protection of human health and the environment from exposures to hazardous agents. The Workshop arose from a previous workshop organized by the European Environment Agency (EEA) in 2008 and which also drew on case studies from the EEA reports on ‘Late Lessons from Early Warnings’ (2001, 2013). These reports documented dozens of hazardous agents including many chemicals, for which risk reduction measures were delayed for decades after scientists and others had issued early and later warnings about the harm likely to be caused by those agents.
Results
Workshop participants used recent case studies including Perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA), Extremely Low Frequency – Electrical Magnetic Fields (ELF-EMF fields), glyphosate, and Bisphenol A (BPA) to explore myriad reasons for divergent outcomes of evaluations, which has led to delayed and inadequate protection of the public’s health. Strategies to overcome these barriers must, therefore, at a minimum include approaches that 1) Make better use of existing data and information, 2) Ensure timeliness, 3) Increase transparency, consistency and minimize bias in evidence evaluations, and 4) Minimize the influence of financial conflicts of interest.
Conclusion
The recommendations should enhance the production of “actionable evidence,” that is, reliable evaluations of the scientific evidence to support timely actions to protect health and environments from exposures to hazardous agents. The recommendations are applicable to policy and regulatory settings at the local, state, federal and international levels.
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