Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_T - Toxins Environment

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 4     61-80 of 104    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Toxins Environment:     more books (41)
  1. The Water Environment:Algal Toxins and Health (Environmental Science Research)
  2. Tests show falling levels of algae toxins.(Environment)(An advisory to avoid boating on the east side of Odell Lake is dropped): An article from: The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR)
  3. Agency: Scores of youths exposed to toxins.(Environment)(Toxics alliance lists 56 suspected cases of Oregon schoolchildren exposed to pesticides since ... from: The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR) by Gale Reference Team, 2008-11-12
  4. Prevalence, structure and expression of urease genes in Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli from humans and the environment [An article from: International ... Journal of Hygiene and Environmental Health] by D. Orth, K. Grif, et all 2006-11-15
  5. Pathways of Mycobacterium ulcerans infection: A review [An article from: Environment International] by A.A. Duker, F. Portaels, et all 2006-05-01
  6. Saving nature's medicine chest: snail toxins yield medical breakthroughs.(Environment): An article from: The Futurist
  7. Ruling to protect fish from toxins is mired in confusion.(Environment): An article from: The Register-Guard (Eugene, OR)
  8. 29 Ways to Keep Your Children Toxin Free: Eliminate the Toxic Chemicals from Your Children's Environment by Marie Gagne, 2005-07-08
  9. Pollution: Treating Environmental Toxins (Green Technology) by Anne E. Maczulak, 2009-10-30
  10. Polychlorinated Dibenzo-p-dioxins and -furans (PCDDs/PCDFs): Sources and Environmental Impact, Epidemiology, Mechanisms of Action, Health Risks (Environmental Toxin Series)
  11. Microbial Pest Control (Books in Soils, Plants, and the Environment) by Sushil Khetan, 2000-10-17
  12. Environmental Toxins: Psychological, Behavioral, and Sociocultural Aspects, 1973-1989 (Bibliographies in Psychology) by Cheryl Brown Travis, Barbara E. McLean, 1989-06
  13. Algal Toxins in Seafood and Drinking Water
  14. Toxic Legacy: Synthetic Toxins in the Food, Water and Air of American Cities by Patrick Sullivan, James J.J. Clark, et all 2006-12-04

61. TVA: InsideTVA
Technology Microbes may take toll on toxins. Biofilters, bioreactors harnesstiny organisms to destroy hazardous chemicals contaminating the environment.
http://www.tva.gov/insidetva/aug_13_02/microbes.htm
Features Changes meet challenges Risk watch eyes future A unified approach to reducing cost of power Bradley, Marshall named to SVP posts ... Retirees Departments Inside Briefs TVA Insiders People, Plaudits, and Promotions Return to InsideTVA Main
Microbes may take toll on toxins Biofilters, bioreactors harness tiny organisms to destroy hazardous chemicals contaminating the environment By TERRY JOHNSON Microbes include a wide range of microscopic organisms, which collectively have almost unlimited abilities. Reed Gamble (left) and Jeff Boles with the bioreactor being used at the Wetlands Complex in Muscle Shoals Chemicals with scary-sounding names such as tricholorethylene, methyl tertiary butyl ether, methylene chloride and ethyl benzene are just a sampling of some of the compounds that have found their way into the environment. Removing such chemicals can be expensive and complicated. A TVA biofilter process using microbe-rich composted poultry litter was demonstrated from 1997 to 1999 to remove hazardous chemicals from contaminated air released from air-stripping operations at the Anniston Army Depot in Alabama.

62. Center For Construction & Environment | Past
Protect Nature; Minimize toxins in the environment MINIMIZE RESOURCE CONSUMPTION. SiteDesign; Materials Selection; Construction MINIMIZE toxins IN THE environment.
http://www.cce.ufl.edu/past/botanical/
Home Past Kanapaha Botanical Gardens Summer House
The Summer House at the Kanapaha Botanical Gardens, Alachua County, Florida, is a proposed new building that will demonstrate ‘sustainable design’ practices suitable to North Central Florida. The Summer House Project is a collaboration by the North Florida Botanical Society, the Center for Construction and Environment, the Alachua County Government, and members of the local community. Kanapaha Botanical Gardens, founded in 1977, has become the second largest botanical garden in the state of Florida. Kanapaha’s mission is to be both a recreational and educational garden for the residents of North Central Florida. While Kanapaha has the botanical resources to teach others about plants and ecosystems, it does not have the facilities that can support the large numbers of people that could benefit from the gardens. The new building, Summer House, will allow Kanapaha Botanical Gardens to hold museum-quality exhibitions, workshops, conferences, and other forums, all focused on spreading knowledge about our natural environment. Sustainable Design Principles Demonstrated in the Summer House:

63. State Of The Environment Norway - Toxic Contamination
and oil spills disposed of on landfills, leaching into the environment. Traces ofPCB can as a consequence be found accumulated in food chains. Natural toxins.
http://www.grida.no/soeno98/contam/subs.htm
GRID-Arendal State of the Environment Norway Toxic contamination
    Other toxic substances
    Photo: "What have we done?", Paul Van Pennen, Canada.
PAH
    The combustion of fossil fuels and other matter containing carbon and hydrogen produce carbondioxide and water. In addition other dangerous substances may form. Besides the possible release of heavy metals and dioxins, tar is often produced. Tar components, or PAH; polycyclical aromatic hydrocarbons , are as a rule carcinogens. PAH has been a common industrial discharge, and is found in sediments in the sea as well as in land deposits. PAH represents a hazard when present in air, water or in biological material.
PCB
    PCB , polychlorinated biphenyls, has been used in synthetic paints, rubber, electrical isolation material, hydraulic oils, plastic etc.
    PCB is very persistent, and has a tendency to accumulate in living tissues. In particular marine organisms; fish, fisheating animals and birds are vulnerable, and increasingly so the higher up in the food chain the organism is. PCB has only a moderate acute toxicity, and gives no symptoms until a threshold level is reached. PCB is suspected of being a carcinogen, it may effect the nervous system and the fertility rate in several organisms, including man. PCB was phased out from use in Norway in 1980. However, there are several small condensators and oil spills disposed of on landfills, leaching into the environment. Traces of PCB can as a consequence be found accumulated in food chains.

64. BW Online | July 2, 2001 | A Deadly Legacy Of Poisons From The Past
JULY 2, 2001 environment A time. The tars and toxins generated by manufacturedgas are the 19th century equivalent of nuclear waste.
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/01_27/b3739186.htm

Register/Subscribe

Home

Search
Advanced Search

Latest Issue
Magazine Search Special Reports ... News Headlines GETTING IN Full-Time MBA New Full-Time MBA Search Full-Time MBA Comparator ROI Calculator Part-Time MBA ... Profiles New Part-Time MBA Search Part-Time MBA Comparator Distance MBA Profiles New Executive MBA EMBA Search EMBA Comparator Exec Ed ... GMAT Prep B-SCHOOL LIFE MBA Journals Reading List B-School Videos CAREER MOVES Career Advice Company Research Who's Hiring VC People Finder ... Careers Main NEWS News Archive Career Strategies For Managers Work Life ... Who's Hiring New Company Research Compare Salaries Compare Living Costs Exec MBA Search ... Sign-Up
U.S. EDITION
Full Table of Contents

Cover Story

Up Front

Readers Report
... Editorials INTERNATIONAL EDITIONS International Asian Cover Story International European Cover Story International Spotlight on Poland International Readers Report ... Marketplace JULY 2, 2001 ENVIRONMENT A Deadly Legacy of Poisons from the Past Gas waste from the 19th century is haunting communities all across America Printer-Friendly Version E-Mail This Story Map: Where the Toxins Are Buried Table: Who's Holding the Bag on Cleanup Find More Stories Like This Barrie Park is the kind of neighborhood you want to raise your kids in. Located just outside Chicago in Oak Park, Ill.home to Ernest Hemingway and Frank Lloyd Wrightthe schools are good and the neighbors friendly. The park itself, surrounded by about three dozen houses, is a gem, with two baseball diamonds and a sledding hill. But it has been more than two years since anybody has played here. Fenced off, padlocked, and festooned with warning signs, the lush green landscape hides a dark secret: a toxic stew of coal tars left behind by a manufactured-gas plant that was closed more than 70 years ago. It will cost the local power company $50 million to clean it up. And if all goes well, residents will never get sick from the poisons in their midst.

65. Risk And The Environment: Facts Vs. Phantoms
We're rightly concerned about the potential harm, both to us and the environment,from the products of our As a result our diet is rich in natural toxins.
http://www.free-eco.org/pub/030312pg.htm
In the Bozeman Daily Chronicle, March 12, 2003 Risk and the Environment: Facts vs. Phantoms
By Pete Geddes In 1989, 60 Minutes produced a panicky story alleging the chemical Alar (used to retard the rotting of apples) greatly increased the risk of childhood cancers. Across America, parents poured apple juice down the drain and stores pulled apple products from shelves. The Washington Post described the event as "one of several food scares that turned out to be baseless." Science editorialized that the incident resulted from a "clearly dubious report...by a special interest group [the Natural Resources Defense Council, NRDC]...without the most simple checks on its reliability...." The EPA noted the claims NRDC made against Alar had been rejected in 1985 by an independent congressional scientific advisory board. It turns out the PR firm Fenton Communications promoted the report to 60 Minutes. Fenton later boasted, "The campaign was designed so...revenue would flow back to NRDC from the public." And it did, to the tune of hundreds of thousands of dollars. We're rightly concerned about the potential harm, both to us and the environment, from the products of our technologically advanced society. But people often perceive risks to be far greater than they really are. I have many friends who, in an effort to avoid trace amounts of synthetic chemicals found on "regular" produce, eat only organic. Yet they rock climb, kayak, and ski the backcountry. These activities are far riskier than consuming chemical residues on food.

66. ACRE - Advisory Committee On Releases To The Environment
genetically modified to produce proteins, the socalled Bt toxins, in its on thesafety of releases of genetically modified organisms into the environment.
http://www.defra.gov.uk/environment/acre/advice/advice02.htm
@import url(../acre.css); ACRE
Advisory Committee on Releases to the Environment
ACRE Advice
ACRE Home
3 August 1998
MICHAEL MEACHER CALLS FOR MORE RESEARCH ON LACEWINGS AND GM MAIZE
Environment Minister, Michael Meacher has called for more research into the effects genetically modified (GM) maize might have on the lacewing insect. He has accepted the Government's advisory body's advice that further research is necessary before a ban could be justified. The maize, Novartis Bt, has been genetically modified to produce an insecticidal protein from Bacillus thuringiensis , making it resistant to the European Corn Borer. Pests feeding on the plant are killed or avoid the plant because they are unpalatable. The maize also contains genes for antibiotic resistance and herbicide tolerance. A recent report by The Advisory Committee on Releases to the Environment (ACRE), the Government’s advisory body, was prompted by Mr Meacher after laboratory studies showed that lacewings, a beneficial insect, could be harmed when it fed on prey which had itself fed on the Novartis maize. The Novartis Bt maize is a different variety from that currently being grown in the field trials in Devon, which is not insect resistant. Although widely grown in the USA, no maize has been given approval for growing in the United Kingdom, although the grain can be imported into the EU.

67. ACRE - Advisory Committee On Releases To The Environment
Advice of the Advisory Committee on Releases to the environment to the Secretaryof State and of the work for the release of GM crops, which express Bt toxins.
http://www.defra.gov.uk/environment/acre/advice/advice07.htm
@import url(../acre.css); ACRE
Advisory Committee on Releases to the Environment
ACRE Advice
ACRE Home 8 February 2000
Advice of the Advisory Committee on Releases to the Environment to the Secretary of State and Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food Under Section 124 of the Environmental Protection Act 1990
Insecticidal Toxin in Root Exudates from Bt Corn
ACRE was asked to consider the recent Nature article by Saxena et al. . This concerns a laboratory study of maize genetically modified (GM) to express an insecticidal toxin from the bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt). The Bt toxin (CRY 1AB) has activity against lepidopteran caterpillars (butterflies and moths) The Nature article reports that Bt toxin is present in root exudates from the GM maize and is able to bind to soil particles where it retains insecticidal activity and is protected from degradation. ACRE considered the implications of the work for the release of GM crops, which express Bt toxins. ACRE's advice: The article by Saxena et al 1999 raises some important issues that merit further consideration both in the risk assessment of Bt crops and in the funding of more research.

68. Monarch Butterflies And Bacterial Toxins - Suite101.com
Monarch Butterflies and Bacterial toxins Author Neal Rolfe Chamberlain Publishedon June 18 This is a real problem for the environment and for people working
http://www.suite101.com/article.cfm/microbiology/21476

69. Tufts E-News -- Are Environmental Toxins Causing Breast Cancer?
milk for toxins, scientists hope to track what sorts of chemicals are entering women'sbodies. Due to the vast number of chemicals in the environment, linking
http://enews.tufts.edu/stories/102802AreEnvironmentalToxinsCausingBreastCancer.h
PRINT THIS ARTICLE SUBMIT YOUR COMMENTS Are Environmental Toxins Causing Breast Cancer? More emphasis must be placed on environmental factors in the fight against breast cancer, says a Tufts medical expert. San Francisco [10-28-02] In the 1940s, a woman's lifetime risk of breast cancer was 1 in 22. Today, the risk has risen to 1 in 8. The swift increase, says Tufts scientist Ana Soto M.D. , cannot be attributed to just genetics long believed to be the largest factor in whether women develop breast cancer. It's time to examine our environment for causes of this deadly disease, says the Tufts expert. "This increase [in breast cancer] can't be attributed totally to genetic causation, and yet genetic causes remain the focus of most research," Soto a breast cancer researcher at Tufts' School of Medicine told Reuters . "I believe it is high time to seriously consider environmental chemicals as the most likely cause of this sudden increase in risk."

70. ETWB (Environment)
environment and Conservation Fund Woo Wheelock Green Fund List of Approved Projects.Project Title environmental Toxicology Screening for Natural toxins in
http://www.info.gov.hk/etwb-e/link/wwgf/list_6.htm
Environment and Conservation Fund
Woo Wheelock Green Fund List of Approved Projects
Project Title: Environmental Toxicology: Screening for Natural Toxins in Seafood Applicant: University of Hong Kong Total Approved Grant: $120,000 Duration: 01/07/95 to 11/97 Project Status/Remarks: Completed Scope: To find out the link between environmental pollution and presence of marine neurotoxins in locally consumed seafood. Summary of the Findings/Outcomes: The study covered 4 major natural toxins in seafood. The major findings were :
Paralytic Shellfish Poison : SPS was the most toxic among the natural marine toxins and was associated with redtide microplanktonic dinoflagellates. On sampling a number of local dinoflaellates, it was found that the toxic species belonged to Alexandrium, which lived in clean seawater. This species was very sensitive to salinity, temperature, pH and nutrients in the water. Peak occurrence for the toxin is Feb-Apr, with a minor peak in Sep-Oct. Over the past few years, the level of PSP contamination of local shellfish had been on the decline. The dinoflagellate synthesized the toxin during the night. Contaminated shellfish could convert the dinoflagellate toxins to other analogues, and could be depurated in clean seawater in 6-7 days.
Ciguatera Poisons : This group of toxins were getting more common, and even relatively small fish had been shown to contain sufficient levels of the poison to cause clinical symptoms. Unfortunately their occurrence did not follow a set pattern - presumably owing to importation of marine fish from so many difference places including places where cigurtera were known to occur.

71. LINKS Home Page The Chiropractic Resource Organization Chiro.Org
Pages that caught my eye were Children's Vulnerability to toxins in the environment and a page devoted to Indoor Air Contamination and Childhood Asthma .
http://www.chiro.org/LINKS/Environmental_Toxins.shtml
LINKS Home Page The Chiropractic Resource Organization Chiro.Org Home Page
The Indoor Air Quality and Environmental Toxins Page
This section is maintained by Frank M. Painter, D.C.
Send all comments or additions to: Frankp@chiro.org

If there are terms in these articles you don't understand, you can get a definition from the Merriam Webster Medical Dictionary . If you want information about a specific disease, you can access the Merck Manual . Search PubMed for more abstracts on this topic.
Jump to: IAQ Resources Abstracts of Interest Asthma and Allergens
Immune Response to Allergens
... Systemic Fungal Diseases
Introduction

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has determined that indoor air pollution is a major health risk –– indoor air pollutants can accumulate at 2 to 100 times higher concentrations than outdoor pollution. Why is that? Because modern homes have been built to be "leak-proof" –– with tighter seals on our doors and windows.
The average person spends 90% of their time indoors, surrounded by a vast array of modern chemicals –– including the glues and coatings on our furniture and walls, the plastic cases on our electronic toys, synthetic fabrics, disinfectants, soaps, perfumes, insecticides, lubricants and more. All these products "breath" out some level of pollution –– as described by the term out–gas
Did you see Bill Moyers recent documentary about the chemical industry? It was pretty scary! By the time there have been enough clinical studies to confirm the health risks of any particular substance, it may be too late for the generation of people who have been exposed and are at risk.

72. Canada And The United States Achieving Elimination Of Toxins In The Great Lakes
Canada and the United States Achieving Elimination of toxins in the Great targets, said the Honourable David Anderson, Canada's Minister of the environment.
http://www.on.ec.gc.ca/announce.cfm?ID=623&Lang=e

73. Environmental Title
to set environmental health and safety standards that recognize that children aremore vulnerable and more exposed to many toxins in the environment than are
http://www.cdfactioncouncil.org/environmental title.htm
Environmental Title of the Act to Leave No Child Behind S. 940 and H.R. 1990 The problem: We know now that children are particularly vulnerable to environmental hazards and toxins. Because children’s immune systems are not fully developed, they are less able to handle toxins, and as they grow, the development of their organ systems can be disrupted by toxic exposures. Unfortunately, federal health and safety standards are often based on adults, meaning that children, who are more vulnerable, are less likely to be protected.
  • For their body size and weight, children drink more water, eat more food, and breath more air than adults, which means they have substantially heavier exposure to any toxins present in the air, food, or water. Very young children, who crawl or sit on the floor and are more likely to put objects in their mouths, are at increased risk of exposure to the toxins that accumulate in carpets, floorboards, and soil. Low-income children, who are already more likely to suffer from poor health, are also more likely to be exposed to environmental risk factors such as poor air quality, hazardous waste disposal sites, and other environmental hazards in their communities. Parents are often unaware that their children may be exposed to highly toxic pesticides at schools and other locations or to toxins in consumer products targeted for use by children.

74. City To Wipe Toxins From Water
Publication Date Wednesday Jun 28, 2000. environment City to wipe toxins fromwater. Mercury, dioxin targeted in new city policy by Marcella Bernhard.
http://www.paweekly.com/PAW/morgue/news/2000_Jun_28.DIOXIN.html
Publication Date: Wednesday Jun 28, 2000
ENVIRONMENT: City to wipe toxins from water
Mercury, dioxin targeted in new city policy by Marcella Bernhard A sweeping city policy to wipe local air and water clean of two toxic pollutants may target some surprising sourcesincluding the metal fillings in your teeth. The policy, which goes to the Palo Alto City Council for approval on July 17, encourages homes, small businesses and city departments to use or create less mercury and dioxin, and to release less of both into the environment. The City Council's Policy and Services Committee passed the proposed mercury and dioxin elimination policy unanimously last week, meaning it will likely go to the council for a rubber-stamp on the one-vote consent calendar. "We do intend to eliminate mercury and dioxin emissions," said Councilman Bern Beecham, the commission's chair. "And as much as possible we will focus on the sources of (emissions)." Councilwoman Judy Kleinberg, who is also on the commission, called the policy "very well thought out. "It will be implemented slowly, with support for small businesses," Kleinberg said.

75. Pesticides & Environment
to ridding our world, and us of environmental toxins. Our goals embody educatingpeople (including public officials) about the environment’s connection to
http://www.northstar.sierraclub.org/Pesticides_Home.htm

Alternative Living

Fact Sheet

Pesticides and GMOs

Pesticides Atrazine
...
Mosquito Control
To Protect the Earth and Save the Humans! Fact Sheet on Pesticides
Genetically Modified Organisms

Tell the EPA to Ban Cancer-Causing Atrazine!

Tips for you to use to reduce exposure to toxics
... The Mosquito Control Agency is spraying pesticides on thousands of acres in the Metro Area. You have the right not to be sprayed ... Find Out How.
…..A two-tier committee dedicated to ridding our world, and us of environmental toxins. Our goals embody educating people (including public officials) about the environment’s connection to health / dis-ease and disabilities while advocating for protective laws through legislative action. Learn how we can “clean up” poisons that surround and permeate us in our every day living as well as working towards eliminating toxins dumped in our air and water and on land here on Earth. Click on as well as www.sierraclub.org/cato to check out national Sierra Club’s land, air and water campaign as well as www.sierraclub.org/toxics

76. Toxins Found In Blood
the subject of toxic chemicals to most people, and the usual association will likelybe the impact that toxins have on wildlife and the natural environment.
http://www.njpcgreens.org/toxins.html
Study Finds Toxins are in Most American's Blood Posted
From: http://www.enn.com/ By Margot Higgins,
Environmental News Network,
March 26, 2001 Mention the subject of toxic chemicals to most people, and the usual association will likely be the impact that toxins have on wildlife and the natural environment. But toxic pollution may hit far closer to home. Levels of toxic metals, pesticides and plastics can be found in the blood and urine of most Americans, the first national study of environmental toxins reveals. Released by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the study reviewed 27 chemicals found in a general sample of 5,000 men, women and children. Prior to the study, scientists had only been able to measure the levels of many of these chemicals in air, water, and food. "This report should serve as a wake-up call," said John Balbus, director of the Center for Risk Science and Public Health. "It is the first time the government has made an inquiry into the level of contaminants in human bodies, and the public has the right to know this." While Balbus maintains that the "CDC took a small but significant step," he says that the report falls short on interpretation and context.

77. What Are Blue-green Algae?
To make matters worse, different cyanobacteria produce different toxins with different CanberraConnect Translation Services Site Map environment ACT, 12
http://www.environment.act.gov.au/ie4/airandwater/whatarebluegreenalgae.html

78. Jonathan Campbell, Natural Therapies For Cancer, AIDS, Heart Disease, And Other
Health alert and toxic alert information about health, fitness, and the environment and their intimate Category Society Issues environment Health...... Personal environmental consulting – advising individuals who suspectthat they are being harmed by toxins in their immediate environment.
http://www.cqs.com/

Jonathan Campbell, Alternative Health Consultant
Natural Therapies for Chronic Illness
Let thy food be thy medicine, and thy medicine be thy food.
Hippocrates, Father of Medicine, 400 B.C.
Helping people take charge of their health Introduction to Natural Therapies Free Health Report Free Health Newsletter Natural Therapy Forum ... Contact Jonathan Campbell Welcome to the Natural Therapy website. If you or anyone you love is affected by chronic illness, or you are seeking a program to maintain health, you've come to the right place. Here you will find information about proven natural therapies for cardiovascular disease cancer AIDS , and other chronic illnesses, and regimens for maintaining health , based on the research and clinical work of some of the world's foremost natural health experts: Matthias Rath, Linus Pauling, Hugh Riordan, Robert Cathcart, Ian Brighthope, and Michael Murray. Conventional medicine does not provide answers Natural Therapies for Chronic Illness and Health Maintenance The doctor is mistaken. You do have an alternative. These life-saving natural therapies are not just possibilities or exotic research. They are real, proven safe natural therapies based on sound biological science and testing, developed by some of the world's foremost medical researchers.

79. Breast Cancer And The Environment The Chlorine Connection By Megan Williams
the toxic and persistent organochlorines, state the Greenpeace report, BreastCancer And The environment The Chlorine This class of toxins behave in an
http://www.voiceofwomen.com/articles/breastcancer.html
The Frightening Facts About Breast Cancer
Breast cancer is the most common form of cancer in women in the United States.
In 1992, 180,000 women were diagnosed with breast cancerone woman every three minutes.
In 1992, 46,000 women died of breast cancerevery 12 minutes another woman dies of breast cancer.
Breast cancer is the leading cause of cancer death for African-American women.
One in eight women will get breast cancer in her lifetime, up from one in twenty in 1960. If these numbers continue to increase at their current rate, by the year 2000 at least one in every seven women can expect to get breast cancer.
Breast cancer is more than 15 percent of all cancers diagnosed annually but it gets only about 6 percent of the National Cancer Institute's budget.
Worldwide trends indicate the mortality rate of breast cancer to be epidemic. In 1980, an estimated 560,000 women worldwide died of breast cancer making it one of the main causes of premature loss of life in women throughout the developed world.
Breast Cancer and the Environment
The Chlorine Connection
by Megan Williams
The worldwide increase in breast cancer rates has occurred during the same period in which the global environment has become contaminated with industrial synthetic chemicals, including the toxic and persistent "organochlorines."

80. Ask NOAH About: Environmental Health
New York Online Access to Health directories provide links to consumer health information on various Category Science environment environmental Health Directories...... Lead Noise Pollution Radiation Safety Recycling toxins and Pesticides Water QualityWeather and Health, Advocacy for the environment General Resources Glossary
http://www.noah-health.org/english/illness/environment/environ.html
Ask NOAH About: Environmental Health
Environmental Health Topics Resources
Air Quality
The Basics
Asbestos
Biological Contaminants ...
Technical/Professional Resources
Environmental Health Topics
Air Quality
The Basics
Airnow - Environmental Protection Agency
Air Pollution And Health: The Ozone And Particulate Story - National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
Air Pollution and Exercise - American Lung Association
Air Pollution: Protecting Yourself - American Lung Association ...
National Environmental Respiratory Center - NERC
Asbestos
Asbestos - American Lung Association
Asbestos Awareness - Wayne State University
Asbestos: General Info - Environmental Protection Agency
Asbestos Glossary - Environmental Protection Agency ...
Asbestos in Your Home - American Lung Association
Other Resources/Technical/Professional (Asbestos)
Asbestos Institute
Federal Asbestos Regulations and Guidance - Department of Ecology, Washington State
Biological Contaminants
Anthrax
Biological Contaminants: Basic Facts - Environmental Protection Agency
Indoor Air Quality (IAQ) Tools for Schools Kit-Environmental Protection Agency
Flood Cleanup: Avoiding Indoor Air Quality Problems - Environmental Protection Agency ...
Use and Care of Home Humidifiers - Environmental Protection Agency
Combustion Appliances
Carbon Monoxide-Centers for Disease Control
Combustion Appliances: What You Should Know - Environmental Protection Agency
Carbon Monoxide
Carbon Monoxide - Environmental Protection Agency
Carbon Monoxide Poisoning: Protect Your Family and Yourself - Environmental Protection Agency
Nitrogen Dioxide - Environmental Protection Agency
Indoor Air Quality (General)

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 4     61-80 of 104    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20

free hit counter