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1 rch synthesis in evidence-based medicine and environmental health.
2 mportant to the assessing human exposure and environmental health.
3 the potential to positively impact human or environmental health.
4 s) have serious adverse effects on human and environmental health.
5 relatively new subjects within the field of environmental health.
6 as important implications for both human and environmental health.
7 f nutritious foods is critical for human and environmental health.
8 gression of diabetes is an emerging issue in environmental health.
9 oss a variety of decision-making contexts in environmental health.
10 bacterial genera with interest in public and environmental health.
11 ty pollutant of growing concern to human and environmental health.
12 gression of diabetes is an emerging issue in environmental health.
13 ly important for engineered applications and environmental health.
14 ial diversity in determining both public and environmental health.
15 d dioxins pose a serious threat to human and environmental health.
16 or drug discovery, genotoxicity testing, and environmental health.
17 of public policy and, eventually, human and environmental health.
18 Biodiversity is key for human and environmental health.
19 could have a devastating effect on human and environmental health.
20 to address challenges in human, animal, and environmental health.
21 ti-faceted challenges related to arsenic and environmental health.
22 logy, Fe biogeochemistry, and both human and environmental health.
23 nvestigate how social science contributes to environmental health.
24 Social science collaboration with environmental health.
25 reaching strength of evidence conclusions in environmental health.
26 transparent method of research synthesis in environmental health.
27 of these conditions is an emerging issue in environmental health, although identifying and prioritiz
29 tudies being conducted within the Children's Environmental Health and Disease Prevention Research Cen
30 interdisciplinary approaches that integrate environmental health and economic disciplines are greatl
32 lth research and discuss the intersection of environmental health and reproductive justice issues in
33 hnology advancements should be fostered, the environmental health and safety (EHS) of nanoparticles u
34 ndustry has raised public concerns about the environmental health and safety impact of engineered nan
36 O(2) (E171) rather than that adopted in many environmental health and safety tests (i.e., P25), which
37 as extraction wells and wells with disclosed environmental health and safety violations, we different
38 iseases, health statistics, occupational and environmental health and safety, injury prevention and c
40 driven, solution-oriented problem solving in environmental health, and to inspire more members of the
41 practices, this paper analyzes U.S. federal environmental, health, and safety (EHS) regulations usin
43 ked networks and for the potential to reduce environmental, health, and safety impacts associated wit
44 on's material and energy needs must consider environmental, health, and social impacts while developi
45 Health approach, in which human, animal and environmental health are considered together, such a gen
47 al hazard screening, this work suggests that environmental health assessments should consider effects
49 are used as sentinels for the assessment of environmental health but sex or stage in the reproductio
50 gical effects constitutes a new paradigm for environmental health but still lacks high-throughput, us
51 diments is important for long-term human and environmental health, but site-management decisions are
52 of age in the Columbia Center for Children's Environmental Health (CCCEH) longitudinal cohort study.
53 posity in the Columbia Center for Children's Environmental Health (CCCEH) New York City birth cohort.
54 In 1998-2002, the Mount Sinai Children's Environmental Health Center (New York City) investigated
55 has the opportunity to address its national environmental health challenges and to assume a central
56 y by adding programs in reproductive health, environmental health, chronic diseases, nutrition, injur
57 sed Dutch cohort study, the Occupational and Environmental Health Cohort Study (AMIGO) (n = 14,829; a
60 l health, and to inspire more members of the environmental health community to consider this approach
65 anophosphate insecticide, has raised serious environmental health concerns since it is a potent neuro
67 als, but also assess the long-term human and environmental health consequences of dendrimer exposure
68 est investment, the world's most challenging environmental health crises can be addressed by adapting
69 he nation's leadership with country-specific environmental health data that can be used to protect th
72 ntended to link exposure science and diverse environmental health disciplines including toxicology, e
73 and generate scientific knowledge to reduce environmental health disparities in low-income, minority
74 be integrated into future assessments of the environmental health effects and utilization of AgNP-con
75 necessitate increased mining with attendant environmental, health, energy, water, and carbon-footpri
76 ds in allergy/allergens, immunology, asthma, environmental health, environmental exposures and pollut
77 l substance and their grouping for human and environmental health evaluation through read-across.
78 s study was to measure the effect of various environmental health factors and household demographics
79 an analyte of great importance to human and environmental health for which, like so many other small
83 ual pollutants and comparing IAPs with other environmental health hazards require a common metric of
85 re emissions (CO(2), PM(2.5), NO(X), HC) and environmental health impacts (primary PM(2.5)) from the
87 rid average" electricity increases monetized environmental health impacts by 80% or more relative to
90 ties, the net result is that primary PM(2.5) environmental health impacts per passenger-km are greate
93 utrient and microbial pollution on human and environmental health, improvements in both access to ade
95 ndicators of physiological, biochemical, and environmental health in participants in the US National
97 f expert-based narrative review prevalent in environmental health include a prespecified protocol, st
100 ics sensors are increasingly used to monitor environmental health interventions, but the effect of se
102 Balancing productivity, profitability, and environmental health is a key challenge for agricultural
103 Understanding feedbacks between human and environmental health is critical for the millions who co
104 tion of genetics and genomics to problems in environmental health is only the beginning yet, by itsel
107 thods of research synthesis commonly used in environmental health lag behind systematic review method
109 nce, support community empowerment, increase environmental health literacy, and generate individual a
110 The built environment, a key component of environmental health, may be an important contributor to
111 impacts of both cost-savings information and environmental health messaging strategies with residenti
112 nd Disease Registry, and National Center for Environmental Health); New York City Department of Healt
113 DC's expanded mission into chronic diseases, environmental health, occupational health, and injury co
114 hronic disease, injury prevention, violence, environmental health, occupational safety and health, an
115 observations by community health workers and environmental health officers, and (ii) sensor-equipped
118 impacts, with special emphasis on improving environmental health policies through better scientific
119 the American Thoracic Society Committees on Environmental Health Policy and International Health, we
121 ntly, lead poisoning remains the most common environmental health problem affecting American children
123 lop a systematic-review framework to address environmental health questions by extending approaches d
124 ematic review can be successfully applied to environmental health questions to provide greater object
127 outbreaks; creation and implementation of 6 environmental health regulations; establishment of a cen
128 ries and investments in capacity for further environmental health-related research are positive steps
129 Novel technologies are being integrated into environmental health research and are also applicable to
130 indigenous communities in various stages of environmental health research and discuss the intersecti
131 ngaging community partners in the conduct of environmental health research and in the development of
133 ple levels, to examine how transdisciplinary environmental health research fosters better science, an
134 atic and transparent method for synthesizing environmental health research from multiple evidence str
138 hould be considered mainstream in children's environmental health research with particular focus on i
139 mitations of the FDA's regulatory action for environmental health research, advocacy, and regulation,
143 igenome is a primary interest for children's environmental health researchers studying the environmen
145 me, the food color debate offers a lesson to environmental health researchers; namely, too narrow a f
150 ies face disproportionate health burdens and environmental health risks compared with the average Nor
154 kshop for the Development of a Framework for Environmental Health Science Language" hosted at North C
157 and train the next generation of leaders in environmental health science while recognizing that most
158 ion-making that incorporates cancer biology, environmental health science, translational toxicology,
161 ne to handle the breadth of data relevant to environmental health sciences (e.g., human, animal, and
162 elds of risk communication, health literacy, environmental health sciences (EHS), communications rese
164 1-13 January 2011, the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) Division of the Na
165 ubstantially since the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) environmental just
167 nology Initiative, the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) has developed an i
168 Specifically, the National Institutes of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) Superfund Research
169 EHSCCs), funded by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS), formed a working
173 er 17-18, 2014, by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences and the National Cancer In
175 ur work bridges the gap between clinical and environmental health sciences by increasing physicians'
177 l Institutes of Health/National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences Environmental Genome Singl
178 d 7-8 June 2012 at the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences in Research Triangle Park,
182 Institutes of Health's National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences Superfund Research Program
183 Institutes of Health's National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences Superfund Research Program
184 exposure and BP in the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences' Sister Study, a large U.S
185 tection Agency and the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, it is solely the consensu
186 earch supported by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, the Agency for Toxic Subs
187 tection Agency and the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, where gaps between the em
191 d Infectious Diseases; National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences; National Heart, Lung, and
192 This paper provides an introduction for environmental health scientists to emerging population-b
193 d faculty in chemical sciences, engineering, environmental health, social sciences, public policy, an
199 asingly support stakeholder participation in environmental health studies, and yet there is very litt
203 ironmental hazards, is an emergent notion in environmental health that may contribute to these dispar
205 llutants are closely correlated to human and environmental health, thus their monitoring is of paramo
206 ate change will inevitably intensify China's environmental health troubles, with potentially catastro
207 ics in which social scientists have expanded environmental health understandings at multiple levels,
208 public funds to maximize expected returns in environmental health, where returns are measured in term
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