When Risk Assessment Came to Washington: A Look Back

Federal regulatory agencies had, by the 1970s, been charged with enforcing a host of new laws requiring that they establish controls on human exposures to chemicals necessary to protect health. The agencies relied upon a methodology introduced in the 1950s to identify safe levels of exposure to chem...

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Main Author: Joseph V. Rodricks
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2019-02-01
Series:Dose-Response
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/1559325818824934
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spelling doaj-b5ff8b2a87034a199b3ad3ea9f10af9d2020-11-25T02:52:31ZengSAGE PublishingDose-Response1559-32582019-02-011710.1177/1559325818824934When Risk Assessment Came to Washington: A Look BackJoseph V. Rodricks0 Ramboll, Arlington, VA, USAFederal regulatory agencies had, by the 1970s, been charged with enforcing a host of new laws requiring that they establish controls on human exposures to chemicals necessary to protect health. The agencies relied upon a methodology introduced in the 1950s to identify safe levels of exposure to chemicals known to display toxicity. During the 2 decades prior to the 1970s, federal authorities had come to treat carcinogens as distinct from other toxic agents, and to regard them as unsafe at any level of exposure, and no systematic methods had been developed to deal with the rapidly increasing numbers of carcinogens. Beginning in the mid-1970s, some scientists and policy makers in regulatory agencies, including the present author, began to propose adopting emerging quantitative methods to evaluate the risks of carcinogens and introduced new notions of safety based on explicit consideration of risk. Quantitative risk assessment rose to prominence in the decade reviewed in this article (1974-1984) and began to replace the unsystematic approaches that provided no view of how well health would be protected under various regulatory controls. This article offers the author’s recollections of that important decade.https://doi.org/10.1177/1559325818824934
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joseph V. Rodricks
spellingShingle Joseph V. Rodricks
When Risk Assessment Came to Washington: A Look Back
Dose-Response
author_facet Joseph V. Rodricks
author_sort Joseph V. Rodricks
title When Risk Assessment Came to Washington: A Look Back
title_short When Risk Assessment Came to Washington: A Look Back
title_full When Risk Assessment Came to Washington: A Look Back
title_fullStr When Risk Assessment Came to Washington: A Look Back
title_full_unstemmed When Risk Assessment Came to Washington: A Look Back
title_sort when risk assessment came to washington: a look back
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Dose-Response
issn 1559-3258
publishDate 2019-02-01
description Federal regulatory agencies had, by the 1970s, been charged with enforcing a host of new laws requiring that they establish controls on human exposures to chemicals necessary to protect health. The agencies relied upon a methodology introduced in the 1950s to identify safe levels of exposure to chemicals known to display toxicity. During the 2 decades prior to the 1970s, federal authorities had come to treat carcinogens as distinct from other toxic agents, and to regard them as unsafe at any level of exposure, and no systematic methods had been developed to deal with the rapidly increasing numbers of carcinogens. Beginning in the mid-1970s, some scientists and policy makers in regulatory agencies, including the present author, began to propose adopting emerging quantitative methods to evaluate the risks of carcinogens and introduced new notions of safety based on explicit consideration of risk. Quantitative risk assessment rose to prominence in the decade reviewed in this article (1974-1984) and began to replace the unsystematic approaches that provided no view of how well health would be protected under various regulatory controls. This article offers the author’s recollections of that important decade.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/1559325818824934
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