Landrigan P J, Suk W A, Amler R W
Department of Community and Preventive Medicine, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, New York 10029-6574, USA.
Environ Health Perspect. 1999 Jun;107(6):423-7. doi: 10.1289/ehp.99107423.
Three to 4 million children and adolescents in the United States live within 1 mile of a federally designated Superfund hazardous waste disposal site and are at risk of exposure to chemical toxicants released from these sites into air, groundwater, surface water, and surrounding communities. Because of their patterns of exposure and their biological vulnerability, children are uniquely susceptible to health injury resulting from exposures to chemical toxicants in the environment. The Superfund Basic Research Program, funded by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and directed by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, is extremely well positioned to organize multidisciplinary research that will assess patterns of children's exposures to hazardous chemicals from hazardous waste disposal sites; quantify children's vulnerability to environmental toxicants; assess causal associations between environmental exposures and pediatric disease; and elucidate the mechanisms of environmental disease in children at the cellular and molecular level.
在美国,有300万至400万儿童和青少年居住在距离联邦指定的超级基金危险废物处置场1英里范围内,他们面临着接触这些场所释放到空气、地下水、地表水及周边社区的化学毒物的风险。由于他们的接触模式以及生理脆弱性,儿童特别容易受到环境中化学毒物暴露导致的健康伤害。由美国环境保护局资助、美国国立环境卫生科学研究所指导的超级基金基础研究项目,在组织多学科研究方面极具优势,这些研究将评估儿童接触危险废物处置场危险化学品的模式;量化儿童对环境毒物的脆弱性;评估环境暴露与儿科疾病之间的因果关系;并在细胞和分子水平阐明儿童环境疾病的发病机制。