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Policy relevant results from an expert elicitation on the health risks of phthalates

BACKGROUND: The EU 6th Framework Program (FP)-funded Health and Environment Network (HENVINET) aimed to support informed policy making by facilitating the availability of relevant knowledge on different environmental health issues. An approach was developed by which scientific agreement, disagreemen...

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Autores principales: Zimmer, Karin Elisabeth, Gutleb, Arno Christian, Ravnum, Solveig, Krayer von Krauss, Martin, Murk, Albertinka J, Ropstad, Erik, Skaare, Janneche Utne, Eriksen, Gunnar Sundstøl, Lyche, Jan Ludvig, Koppe, Janna G, Magnanti, Brooke L, Yang, Aileen, Bartonova, Alena, Keune, Hans
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3388473/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22759506
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1476-069X-11-S1-S6
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author Zimmer, Karin Elisabeth
Gutleb, Arno Christian
Ravnum, Solveig
Krayer von Krauss, Martin
Murk, Albertinka J
Ropstad, Erik
Skaare, Janneche Utne
Eriksen, Gunnar Sundstøl
Lyche, Jan Ludvig
Koppe, Janna G
Magnanti, Brooke L
Yang, Aileen
Bartonova, Alena
Keune, Hans
author_facet Zimmer, Karin Elisabeth
Gutleb, Arno Christian
Ravnum, Solveig
Krayer von Krauss, Martin
Murk, Albertinka J
Ropstad, Erik
Skaare, Janneche Utne
Eriksen, Gunnar Sundstøl
Lyche, Jan Ludvig
Koppe, Janna G
Magnanti, Brooke L
Yang, Aileen
Bartonova, Alena
Keune, Hans
author_sort Zimmer, Karin Elisabeth
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The EU 6th Framework Program (FP)-funded Health and Environment Network (HENVINET) aimed to support informed policy making by facilitating the availability of relevant knowledge on different environmental health issues. An approach was developed by which scientific agreement, disagreement, and knowledge gaps could be efficiently identified, and expert advice prepared in a way that is usable for policy makers. There were two aims of the project: 1) to apply the tool to a relevant issue; the potential health impacts of the widely used plasticizers, phthalates, and 2) to evaluate the method and the tool by asking both scientific experts and the target audience, namely policy makers and stakeholders, for their opinions. METHODS: The tool consisted of an expert consultation in several steps on the issue of phthalates in environmental health. A diagram depicting the cause-effect chain, from the production and use of phthalates to potential health impacts, was prepared based on existing reviews. This was used as a basis for an online questionnaire, through which experts in the field were consulted. The results of this first round of consultation laid the foundation for a new questionnaire answered by an expert panel that, subsequently, also discussed approaches and results in a workshop. One major task of the expert panel was to pinpoint priorities from the cause-effect chain according to their impact on the extent of potential health risks and their relevance for reducing uncertainty. The results were condensed into a policy brief that was sent to policy makers and stakeholders for their evaluation. RESULTS: The experts agreed about the substantial knowledge gaps within the field of phthalates. The top three priorities for further research and policy action were: 1) intrauterine exposure, 2) reproductive toxicology, and 3) exposure from medical devices. Although not all relevant information from the cause-effect chain is known for phthalates, most experts thought that there are enough indications to justify a precautionary approach and to restrict their general use. Although some of the experts expressed some scepticism about such a tool, most felt that important issues were highlighted. CONCLUSIONS: The approach used was an efficient way at summarising priority knowledge gaps as a starting point for health risk assessment of compounds, based on their relevance for the risk assessment outcome. We conclude that this approach is useful for supporting policy makers with state-of-the-art scientific knowledge weighed by experts. The method can assist future evidence-based policy making.
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spelling pubmed-33884732012-07-03 Policy relevant results from an expert elicitation on the health risks of phthalates Zimmer, Karin Elisabeth Gutleb, Arno Christian Ravnum, Solveig Krayer von Krauss, Martin Murk, Albertinka J Ropstad, Erik Skaare, Janneche Utne Eriksen, Gunnar Sundstøl Lyche, Jan Ludvig Koppe, Janna G Magnanti, Brooke L Yang, Aileen Bartonova, Alena Keune, Hans Environ Health Methodology BACKGROUND: The EU 6th Framework Program (FP)-funded Health and Environment Network (HENVINET) aimed to support informed policy making by facilitating the availability of relevant knowledge on different environmental health issues. An approach was developed by which scientific agreement, disagreement, and knowledge gaps could be efficiently identified, and expert advice prepared in a way that is usable for policy makers. There were two aims of the project: 1) to apply the tool to a relevant issue; the potential health impacts of the widely used plasticizers, phthalates, and 2) to evaluate the method and the tool by asking both scientific experts and the target audience, namely policy makers and stakeholders, for their opinions. METHODS: The tool consisted of an expert consultation in several steps on the issue of phthalates in environmental health. A diagram depicting the cause-effect chain, from the production and use of phthalates to potential health impacts, was prepared based on existing reviews. This was used as a basis for an online questionnaire, through which experts in the field were consulted. The results of this first round of consultation laid the foundation for a new questionnaire answered by an expert panel that, subsequently, also discussed approaches and results in a workshop. One major task of the expert panel was to pinpoint priorities from the cause-effect chain according to their impact on the extent of potential health risks and their relevance for reducing uncertainty. The results were condensed into a policy brief that was sent to policy makers and stakeholders for their evaluation. RESULTS: The experts agreed about the substantial knowledge gaps within the field of phthalates. The top three priorities for further research and policy action were: 1) intrauterine exposure, 2) reproductive toxicology, and 3) exposure from medical devices. Although not all relevant information from the cause-effect chain is known for phthalates, most experts thought that there are enough indications to justify a precautionary approach and to restrict their general use. Although some of the experts expressed some scepticism about such a tool, most felt that important issues were highlighted. CONCLUSIONS: The approach used was an efficient way at summarising priority knowledge gaps as a starting point for health risk assessment of compounds, based on their relevance for the risk assessment outcome. We conclude that this approach is useful for supporting policy makers with state-of-the-art scientific knowledge weighed by experts. The method can assist future evidence-based policy making. BioMed Central 2012-06-28 /pmc/articles/PMC3388473/ /pubmed/22759506 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1476-069X-11-S1-S6 Text en Copyright ©2012 Zimmer et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Methodology
Zimmer, Karin Elisabeth
Gutleb, Arno Christian
Ravnum, Solveig
Krayer von Krauss, Martin
Murk, Albertinka J
Ropstad, Erik
Skaare, Janneche Utne
Eriksen, Gunnar Sundstøl
Lyche, Jan Ludvig
Koppe, Janna G
Magnanti, Brooke L
Yang, Aileen
Bartonova, Alena
Keune, Hans
Policy relevant results from an expert elicitation on the health risks of phthalates
title Policy relevant results from an expert elicitation on the health risks of phthalates
title_full Policy relevant results from an expert elicitation on the health risks of phthalates
title_fullStr Policy relevant results from an expert elicitation on the health risks of phthalates
title_full_unstemmed Policy relevant results from an expert elicitation on the health risks of phthalates
title_short Policy relevant results from an expert elicitation on the health risks of phthalates
title_sort policy relevant results from an expert elicitation on the health risks of phthalates
topic Methodology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3388473/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22759506
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1476-069X-11-S1-S6
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