Results 211 to 220 of about 512,886 (252)
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Environmental epidemiology forward

Chemosphere, 2000
Environmental epidemiology is the specialized aspect of public health science that studies human health risk from environmental hazards. It is rises largely upon a foundation of public health surveillance, and relies heavily upon analyses of data for small areas and sparse population groups.
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Epidemiology Needs and Perspectives in Environmental Epidemiology

Archives of Environmental Health: An International Journal, 1988
(1988). Epidemiology Needs and Perspectives in Environmental Epidemiology. Archives of Environmental Health: An International Journal: Vol. 43, No. 2, pp. 130-132.
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The Epidemiology of Pediatric Environmental Exposures

Pediatric Clinics of North America, 2007
Currently, the only national databases that are available to aid in a search to assess the effect of environmental exposures on children's health are those provided by the Pediatric Environmental Health Specialty Units and poison control centers. Both have limitations and are largely deficient in accurate, helpful numbers.
Kathryn, Veal   +2 more
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Environmental Epidemiology

2003
Abstract Epidemiology is the study of the distribution and determinants of health conditions in human populations as a basis for preventive and other interventions. Unique to environmental epidemiology is its focus on environmental factors to which humans are unwittingly exposed.
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Environmental Epidemiology

2019
Frederick C. Kopfler, Gunther F. Craun
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Environmental epidemiology and risk assessment

Toxicology Letters, 2008
Epidemiology is the science of public health. Environmental epidemiology specially focuses on human health risks related to exposures in the general (non-occupational) environment. Epidemiology studies may contribute to human risk assessment by identifying hazards, by assessing human exposures to toxicants, and by establishing exposure response ...
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Molecular Epidemiology of Environmental Carcinogenesis

1998
Environmental factors such as smoking, diet, and pollutants act in concert with individual susceptibility to cause most human cancers. This article briefly reviews molecular evidence that two types of susceptibility factors--common predisposing genetic traits and young age at exposure--convey heightened risk from certain exposures.
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