Assessment of non-dietary, human exposure to pesticides.

Assessment of non-dietary, human exposure to pesticides is an integral part of pesticide authorisation at the EU level. In this thesis, models were used to predict exposure of vulnerable human sub-populations to pesticides and thus to assess risks to health. Two high-quality pesticide usage datasets...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wong, Hie Ling
Format: UMK Etheses
Language:English
Published: 2018
Online Access:http://discol.umk.edu.my/id/eprint/10729/1/WONG%20HIE%20LING.pdf
http://discol.umk.edu.my/id/eprint/10729/
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id my.umk.eprints.10729
record_format eprints
spelling my.umk.eprints.107292022-08-28T03:58:54Z http://discol.umk.edu.my/id/eprint/10729/ Assessment of non-dietary, human exposure to pesticides. Wong, Hie Ling Assessment of non-dietary, human exposure to pesticides is an integral part of pesticide authorisation at the EU level. In this thesis, models were used to predict exposure of vulnerable human sub-populations to pesticides and thus to assess risks to health. Two high-quality pesticide usage datasets previously collected by Fera Science Ltd. and for EFSA were analysed. Trends in pesticide usage and major drivers of exposure and thus risk were identified, including any implications for regulatory procedures over the period investigated. Residential exposure of pregnant women living at 100 and 1000 m downwind of treated orchards indicated improving fate (vapour pressure) and hazard profiles (reproductive/developmental toxicities) of pesticides applied in England and Wales over a 25- year period (1987, 1996, 2004 and 2012). Overall, results reflected the influence of changing policies during the 1990s and the ongoing review programme at national level. Assessment of 50 agricultural professional operators across five cropping systems in Greece, Lithuania and the UK indicated a range of applications with potential for risk. Estimated exposure was significantly influenced by variations in agricultural practices and working behaviours involving the use of personal protective measures, including the extensive use of wettable powder formulations in Greece and large areas of land treated per day in Lithuania and the UK. The 50 selected professional operators handled a range of active substances and/or coformulants with known/possible endocrine disrupting activity during single spray days. At maximum, one operator handled five such active substances and ten such co-formulants in a single day. Thus, higher risk is expected in mixture than that predicted for single active substances. Although the use of models in risk assessment has inherent uncertainties, these results add to the existing body of knowledge and allow a holistic assessment of the pesticide regulatory procedures over the period investigated. 2018 UMK Etheses NonPeerReviewed text en http://discol.umk.edu.my/id/eprint/10729/1/WONG%20HIE%20LING.pdf Wong, Hie Ling (2018) Assessment of non-dietary, human exposure to pesticides. Doctoral thesis, University of York.
institution Universiti Malaysia Kelantan
building Perpustakaan Universiti Malaysia Kelantan
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaysia Kelantan
content_source UMK Institutional Repository
url_provider http://umkeprints.umk.edu.my/
language English
description Assessment of non-dietary, human exposure to pesticides is an integral part of pesticide authorisation at the EU level. In this thesis, models were used to predict exposure of vulnerable human sub-populations to pesticides and thus to assess risks to health. Two high-quality pesticide usage datasets previously collected by Fera Science Ltd. and for EFSA were analysed. Trends in pesticide usage and major drivers of exposure and thus risk were identified, including any implications for regulatory procedures over the period investigated. Residential exposure of pregnant women living at 100 and 1000 m downwind of treated orchards indicated improving fate (vapour pressure) and hazard profiles (reproductive/developmental toxicities) of pesticides applied in England and Wales over a 25- year period (1987, 1996, 2004 and 2012). Overall, results reflected the influence of changing policies during the 1990s and the ongoing review programme at national level. Assessment of 50 agricultural professional operators across five cropping systems in Greece, Lithuania and the UK indicated a range of applications with potential for risk. Estimated exposure was significantly influenced by variations in agricultural practices and working behaviours involving the use of personal protective measures, including the extensive use of wettable powder formulations in Greece and large areas of land treated per day in Lithuania and the UK. The 50 selected professional operators handled a range of active substances and/or coformulants with known/possible endocrine disrupting activity during single spray days. At maximum, one operator handled five such active substances and ten such co-formulants in a single day. Thus, higher risk is expected in mixture than that predicted for single active substances. Although the use of models in risk assessment has inherent uncertainties, these results add to the existing body of knowledge and allow a holistic assessment of the pesticide regulatory procedures over the period investigated.
format UMK Etheses
author Wong, Hie Ling
spellingShingle Wong, Hie Ling
Assessment of non-dietary, human exposure to pesticides.
author_facet Wong, Hie Ling
author_sort Wong, Hie Ling
title Assessment of non-dietary, human exposure to pesticides.
title_short Assessment of non-dietary, human exposure to pesticides.
title_full Assessment of non-dietary, human exposure to pesticides.
title_fullStr Assessment of non-dietary, human exposure to pesticides.
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of non-dietary, human exposure to pesticides.
title_sort assessment of non-dietary, human exposure to pesticides.
publishDate 2018
url http://discol.umk.edu.my/id/eprint/10729/1/WONG%20HIE%20LING.pdf
http://discol.umk.edu.my/id/eprint/10729/
_version_ 1763304282567737344
score 13.18916