Environmental Epidemiology
Environmental Epidemiology
Epidemiology
Understanding the impact of environment
on health
By
Akash Ajay
Jiwan Chauhan
SPH&CM
BPKIHS 2024
General Outlines
• Introduction
• Historical Background
• Key concepts in environmental epidemiology
• Methods and tools
• Major environmental exposures
• Case studies
• Challenges in environmental epidemiology
• Today’s scenario
• Opportunities
• Recent advances and future direction
• Conclusion
• References
Introduction
• Human environment consists of very basic elements: the air we
breathe, the water we drink, the food we eat, the climate surrounding
our bodies and the space available for our movements.
• In addition, we exist in a social and cultural environment, which is of
great importance for our mental and physical health.
• Most diseases are either caused or influenced by environmental
factors.
Contd…
• Therefore, we need to understand the ways in which specific
environmental factors can interfere with health to design effective
prevention programmes.
• Environmental epidemiology provides a scientific basis for studying
and interpreting the relationships between the environment and
population health.
• Before the second half of 20th century, environmental epidemiology
focused on disease-causing infectious agents or pathogens and
factors such as water and food quality as well as waste control.
Contd…
• Increasing life expectancy and movement from infectious to chronic
diseases has changed the environmental epidemiology focused from
disease-causing infectious agent to chemical and physical agents that
have large impacts on chronic illnesses.
• Environmental epidemiology studies the distribution and
determinants of health and diseases, morbidity, injuries, disability,
and mortality in populations as they relate to environmental factors.
Environmental Change and Health
• Changes in the environment may cause adverse health effects to
human.
• Human have caused environmental problems by interfering with the
hydrological cycle, nitrogen cycle, phosphorus cycle, sulfur cycle
and carbon cycle.
• Climate change may affect human health through temperature-
related illness or death.
• Stratospheric ozone depletion may cause ULV radiation.
Types of Environmental exposures
1. Point Source
is a specific source of pollution that can be identified.
Contd…
In his book ( Chirurgical observations relative to the cataract, the
polypus of the nose, the cancer of the scortum, the different kinds of
ruptures and the Mortification of the toes and feet, 1755) he wrote a
chapter called A short Treatise of the chimney sweeper’s cancer.
Environmental Agents:
• Chemical: Pesticides, heavy metals (lead, mercury), solvents.
• Physical: Radiation, noise, heat.
• Biological: Bacteria, viruses, Mold.
Cont..,
• Dose-Response Relationships: Concept that the magnitude of
exposure to a risk factor correlates with the severity of the health
outcome.
Study Designs:
1. Air Pollution:
• Sources: Transportation, industrial activities, burning of fossil fuels.