Suk William A
Rev Environ Health. 2016 Mar;31(1):3-9. doi: 10.1515/reveh-2015-0020.
The Pacific Basin Consortium (PBC) was formed 25 years ago to address significant public health challenges to vulnerable populations imposed by environmental threats in the region, including areas surrounding the rim of and in the Pacific Ocean. Originally focused on toxic waste pollution, the PBC has broadened its efforts over the years, embracing a health focus and more of a balance between engineering and public health. This move was informed by the PBC's close relationship with the National Institutes of Health (NIH) National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) Superfund Hazardous Substances Basic Research and Training Program (Superfund Research Program, or SRP), which played a dynamic role in the PBC from its early days. In addition, a sub-focus on children's environmental health emerged, which helped set the agenda for children's environmental health research in the region. Progress has also been made in reducing harm from some threats, particularly via extensive interventions to remediate arsenic in drinking water in Bangladesh, western Thailand, and Vietnam. However, many of the environmental health problems in the Pacific Basin region persist, including air pollution, inadequate safe drinking water, undernutrition, and a growing electronic waste problem. In the Pacific Basin and elsewhere, people with the lowest incomes often live in areas with the worst pollution. Although it is difficult to implement, dynamic strategic networking efforts are vital to understanding and correcting the inequities that persist in global environmental health. The PBC can help accomplish this by continuing and expanding its work to foster and enhance collaborations and communications between environmental health and engineering investigators and to integrate investigator-initiated research. As the PBC looks forward, there is also a need to exert increased effort to establish and maintain partnerships, to develop community-based primary-care and health services for vulnerable populations, as well as to connect with researchers in the eastern side of the Pacific basin and those in smaller island states.
太平洋盆地联盟(PBC)成立于25年前,旨在应对该地区环境威胁给弱势群体带来的重大公共卫生挑战,这些地区包括太平洋沿岸及周边地区。PBC最初专注于有毒废物污染问题,多年来其工作范围不断扩大,更加注重健康,并在工程与公共卫生之间取得了更好的平衡。这一转变得益于PBC与美国国立卫生研究院(NIH)下属的国立环境卫生科学研究所(NIEHS)的超级基金有害物质基础研究与培训项目(超级基金研究项目,简称SRP)的密切关系,该项目从早期就一直在PBC中发挥着积极作用。此外,对儿童环境健康的关注也日益凸显,这为该地区儿童环境健康研究设定了议程。在减少一些威胁造成的危害方面也取得了进展,特别是通过在孟加拉国、泰国西部和越南开展的广泛干预措施来治理饮用水中的砷。然而,太平洋盆地地区的许多环境卫生问题依然存在,包括空气污染、安全饮用水供应不足、营养不良以及电子垃圾问题日益严重。在太平洋盆地及其他地区,收入最低的人群往往生活在污染最严重的地区。尽管实施起来困难重重,但充满活力的战略网络建设对于理解和纠正全球环境卫生领域持续存在的不平等现象至关重要。PBC可以通过继续并扩大其工作来促进和加强环境卫生与工程领域研究人员之间的合作与交流,并整合研究人员发起的研究,从而帮助实现这一目标。展望未来,PBC还需要加大力度建立和维护合作伙伴关系,为弱势群体开发基于社区的初级保健和健康服务,并与太平洋盆地东侧的研究人员以及较小岛屿国家的研究人员建立联系。