Exploring Global Exposure Factors Resources for Use in Consumer Exposure Assessments
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Identified Resources
2.1. General Exposure Factor Data Resources: Published Compendia and Databases
2.1.1. North America
- The U.S. EPA “Exposure Factors Handbook” (EFH) (2011) contains general information for the U.S. population [30]. Exposure factors include anthropometric data (e.g., body weights, skin-surface areas and life expectancy), behavioral data (e.g., activity/time use patterns, consumer product use), physiology (e.g., inhalation rates, dermal adherence factors), ingestion (drinking water consumption, soil ingestion, consumption of fruits and vegetables, fish, meats, dairy products, homegrown foods, human milk intake) and environmental (housing characteristics). Recommended values are for the general population and also for various segments of the population who may have characteristics different from the general population. Full distributional data are provided in the EFH when available, to support both probabilistic and stochastic exposure and risk assessment. It also includes product-specific information. The current version incorporates information from the previous “Child-Specific Exposure Factors Handbook” [31] and is meant to supersede the stand-alone child-specific version [30]. A related U.S. EPA effort led to the “Child-Specific Exposure Scenarios Examples” as a companion document to the EFH [32]. The example scenarios were compiled from questions and inquiries received from users of the EFH on how to select data from the EFH to assess childhood exposures.
- The “Residential Exposure Assessment Sourcebook” (2001) [2] was the result of a multiyear effort known as the Residential Exposure Assessment Project (REAP) initiated by the Society for Risk Analysis (SRA) and what is now the International Society of Exposure Science (ISES). Expert working groups were organized for each of the thirteen chapters to develop the content, e.g., chapters on consumer products, human exposure factors, residential exposure factors, assessment of dermal, oral and inhalation exposures in the residential environment, uncertainty analysis, communication of results, etc.
- “Toxicology and Risk Assessment” (2015) contains multiple chapters summarizing exposure factor information, primarily based on the U.S. population, with the U.S. EPA EFH serving as a key information source [33]. Chapters address exposure factors, such as age-specific physiology and time-activity patterns. The report also includes some information on consumer product usage, as well as food consumption.
- “Data Sources Available for Modeling Environmental Exposures in Older Adults” (2011) is an EPA report that discusses the information currently available on the unique factors that shape seniors’ exposure, in the context of providing inputs to EPA exposure models. It includes information on day-to-day habits, activity levels and the environments in which older adults typically live and work. Topics include anthropogenic and physiological values, energy expenditures and indices of physical activity, time use patterns and impairment and disability [34].
- “A review of physiological and behavioral changes during pregnancy and lactation: Potential exposure factors and data gaps” (2014) provides information on physiological and behavioral exposure factors that may change during pregnancy [35]. Exposure factors investigated include water ingestion, dietary intake, inhalation rate, location based activities, activities associated with exposure to water and the use of selected personal care products.
- The “Canadian Exposure Factors Handbook” (2013) was recently developed to replace the “Compendium of Canadian Human Exposure Factors for Risk Assessment” as a resource for risk assessments that reflect the Canadian population [36,37]. The data and statistics presented in this handbook are based on more current surveys that better reflect current Canadian population characteristics, behaviors and activities. The analyses and statistics are based on datasets from a variety of Statistics Canada surveys, including the 2000–2010 Canadian Community Health Surveys, the 2005 and 2010 General Social Surveys and the 2007 Canadian Health Measures Survey. Statistics are provided by age group and gender for life expectancy, body dimensions, inhalation rates, time-activity patterns and soil ingestion rates. Most notably, time-activity data have been significantly updated to reflect the increasing time spent by teens, adults and seniors in indoor sedentary activities.
2.1.2. Europe
- The E.U. ExpoFacts database is an online database of exposure factors information for multiple E.U. populations, hosted by the European Commission’s Joint Research Centre (JRC) [38,39]. Parameters include physiology, dietary ingestion, non-dietary ingestion, time-activity, housing characteristics and population indices. ExpoFacts contains data from 31 European countries: Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, The Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, the Slovak Republic, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom. The ExpoFacts database was a follow-up to the “Exposure Factors Sourcebook for European Populations (with a focus on U.K. data)” [40]. This document was an initial effort to collect exposure factor data (physiological parameters, time-activity patterns and receptor contact rates) specific to European populations. A section on good exposure assessment practices is also included in the document.
- The European Chemicals Agency (ECHA) “Guidance on Information Requirements and Chemical Safety Assessment” and Chapters R. 15 “Consumer Exposure Estimation and R. 17 Estimation of Exposure from Articles” (2012) aim to describe an efficient, step-wise and iterative procedure for the estimation of consumer exposure to chemicals on their own, in mixtures or in articles [41,42]. The guidance focus is on the European population. The document includes defaults for multiple exposure factors and also lists of exposure models.
- The “Existing Default Values and Recommendations for Exposure Assessment” (2012) by the Nordic Council of Ministers gives an overview of non-chemical-specific exposure factors to be used during the process of assessing exposure to both adults and children, as well as of risk assessment in relation to REACH [43]. Its purpose is to contribute towards a further harmonization of such exposure factors to be used in exposure assessments. The following non-chemical-specific exposure factors are addressed: body weight, body surface areas, inhalation rates, ingestion of drinking water, intake of food, ingestion of soil and dust, non-dietary ingestion factors, lifetime expectancy, activity factors and consumer products.
- The Dutch National Institute for Public Health and the Environment (RIVM) ConsExpo “General Fact Sheet” (2006, 2014) includes data aimed at the Dutch population, but with broader information considered [44,45]. The focus is on exposure parameters that can be applied in various exposure scenarios within the ConsExpo model to produce a quantitative estimate of exposure to substances in consumer products. The general fact sheet includes information on body surface area and housing characteristics (ventilation and room size). The 2014 update also includes data on activity patterns. The RIVM ConsExpo website also provides a set of product-specific fact sheets (as discussed later in this document), which have been periodically updated with new information. [46]
- The German Exposure Factors Database (RefXP) [47] contains exposure factor data for food and drinking water consumption, time-location and activity patterns, soil and dust ingestion, residential characteristics and anthropometrics for the German population. A major update and expansion of the database occurred in 2006. Reference values and distributions are provided in the database. Data descriptions are available in English, and the database can be downloaded free of charge.
2.1.3. Asia
- The “Korean Exposure Factors Handbook” (2006–2014) provides information specific to the Korean population. It includes information for physiological factors, soil ingestion, food intake, time-activity patterns, life expectancy and housing characteristics [48,49]. The resource is available in Korean, with summaries available in English [50,51,52,53,54,55].
- The “Japanese Exposure Factors Handbook” (2006) Contains data for the Japanese population [56]. The full resource is available in Japanese; a summary table in English is also available. The summary table includes representative values of daily intake for food categories, including mother’s milk or formula for infants. Time-activity information, physiological factors and soil ingestion are also included, as described in Phillips and Moya (2014) [49].
- “Highlights of the Chinese Exposure Factors Handbook (Adults)” (2015) was developed by the Ministry of Environmental Protection of the People’s Republic of China. The recently-published “highlights” book provides a brief, but comprehensive understanding of the environmental exposure-related factors for the Chinese population based on data from a national survey conducted by the Chinese Research Academy of Environmental Sciences [57]. Each chapter provides definitions, influencing factors and recommended values (at the mean, median, P5, P25, P75 and P95), stratified by urban/rural areas, regions, gender and age groups. The handbook covers inhalation rates, water and food ingestion rates, time-activity factors, anthropometric reference data and residential factors.
- The “Australian Exposure Factor Guide” [58] serves as a companion to the 2012 update of the Australian Environmental Health Standing Committee guidance document “Environmental Health Risk Assessment: Guidelines for assessing human health risks from environmental hazards” [59]. As with similar documents from other countries, the handbook is intended to provide risk assessors with sets of tabulated data on human factors that may be used as inputs to the exposure assessment component of an environmental health risk assessment. Australian exposure factor information is juxtaposed with overseas data, revealing that some overseas data may not reflect sectors of the current Australian population. The guide includes data for exposure factors related to physiology, both dietary and non-dietary ingestion, housing characteristics and time-activity patterns.
2.1.4. International and Nonspecific
- Exposure factors resources: contrasting EPA’s Exposure Factors Handbook with international sources provides a general overview of the contents of the EPA’s and comparisons with other selected international exposure factors resources (including the Korean and Japanese Handbooks, the Australian Guide and the European ExpoFacts Database described above). Recommended values are compared across countries [49]. It identifies those exposure factors that are similar across most international populations because of their relationship to the physiological requirements of the human body (e.g., total water intake) and those that differ because they are influenced by dissimilar geographical, cultural or social factors (e.g., time-activity patterns, food preferences and intake rates). The authors identify areas where international standardization of methods for collecting and reporting exposure factor data can be beneficial to increase the overall data pool and leverage limited resources.
- U.S. EPA and the International Life Sciences Institute (ILSI) Databases for Physiological Parameters for Physiologically-Based Pharmacokinetic (PBPK) Modeling (2009) represents combined information from the initiatives of ILSI and the U.S. EPA. An ILSI work group developed a Database of Physiological Parameters for Early Life Stages, which has since been incorporated into the U.S. EPA’s downloadable Physiological Information Database (PID) [60]. EPA’s PID “contains physiological parameter values for humans from early childhood through senescence as well as similar data for laboratory animal species (primarily rodents).” These databases represent a readily-available compendium of the types of detailed internal physiological data that are needed to move from external to internal target organ exposure estimations. While a detailed review of internal physiological exposure factor data relevant to PBPK modeling was not conducted for this document, the utility and growing need for this type of information should be recognized.
- The International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) “Report of the Task Group on Reference Man” (1975) was intended primarily for health physicists in making calculations of doses from internally-distributed radionuclides and to help in distinguishing experimental causes of differences in dose estimates from those due to differences in anatomical or physiological assumptions [61]. The report provides standardized values for the constituent parts and functions of an arbitrary average man and is divided into three major sections: anatomical values (e.g., organ weight, volume, specific gravity and volume of blood), elemental content and physiological data. A subsequent report, “Basic anatomical and physiological data for use in radiological protection: reference values” moves beyond an emphasis on a “reference man” and presents a series of reference values for both male and female subjects of six different life stages [62].
2.2. Specific Exposure Factor Data Resources Presented in Greater Detail
2.2.1. Human Activity Patterns
- The U.S. EPA Consolidated Human Activity Database (CHAD) (2000, 2010) compiles detailed data on human behavior and activity patterns from separate pre-existing U.S. human activity pattern studies and presents the data in a consistent format [63]. Two versions are available, CHAD-2000 containing detailed information on early studies, and CHAD-Master, which is the most current version and contains information from 22 studies performed during the period 1982–2010. The database includes more than 54,000 individual study days of detailed human behavior, with each day broken down into individual hours and activity types. The database also includes demographic information, such as age, sex, employment and education level, which allows researchers to examine specific groups within the general population and how their unique behavior patterns influence their exposures to chemicals. It is available for download in comma-separated value (CSV) and Statistical Analysis System (SAS) dataset formats.
- The American Time Use Survey was initiated in 2003 and has continued annually, with over 159,000 interviews conducted between 2003 and 2014 [64]. This survey is designed to provide nationally-representative estimates of how and where Americans spend their time. Summary reports, charts, user-support documents and microdata files are available online.
- The Multinational Time Use Research Database includes links to time use activity data for surveys from 22 countries [65]. Datasets are available in a harmonized form and/or aggregate form depending on the survey. Multiple surveys are available for some countries. The surveys range from the years 1965–2015 depending on the country and are available from the Centre for Time Use Research at the University of Oxford. Access to the main data requires registration, and access to some included datasets is further restricted and requires additional authorization.
- “Age Determination Guidelines: Relating Children’s Ages to Toy Characteristics and Play Behavior” from the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) addresses the physical, cognitive, emotional and social development of children to identify the types of toys parents and others would purchase for children and how the children interact with those toys [66]. The information in this report can be used to better understand the types of toys that children are likely to play with at a given age.
- “Consideration of Age-Related Changes in Behavior Trends in Older Adults in Assessing Risks of Environmental Exposures” (2013) explores age-related differences in activity patterns and provides activity patterns for older U.S. adults [67]. The authors utilized information in the U.S. EPA EFH, U.S. EPA Consolidated Human Activity Database and peer-reviewed literature.
2.2.2. Child Non-Food Mouthing Behavior
- For the U.S., the EFH indicates key studies for mouthing duration, including Juberg et al. (2001), Greene (2002) and Beamer et al. (2008) [71,72,73]:
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- Juberg et al. (2001) was a phased study [71]. In Phases 1 and 2, parental observations were collected for 107 children aged 0–<18 months and 110 children aged 19–36 months each for a one-day period for the type and duration of each item mouthed. In Phase 3, 168 children were each observed for five nonconsecutive days over a two-month period for total mouthing time of objects exclusive of pacifiers. Results are provided for the categories of pacifier, teether, plastic toy and other objects [71].
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- Greene (2002) represents one of the most detailed studies of mouthing available [72]. U.S. children of age 3–36 months were each observed for a total of four hours (N = 169). Mouthing time includes time in child’s mouth or touching lips. Daily mouthing times were estimated as hourly mouthing time multipled by totals hours awake and not eating. Mouthing observations are available by specific object types; categories include: all objects, pacifiers, non-pacifiers (subcategories of soft plastic items, not food contact; soft plastic toys, teethers and rattles; soft plastic toys; soft plastic rattlers; other soft plastic items), soft plastic food contact items, anatomy, non-soft plastic toys teethers and rattles, other items (including non-soft plastic food contact items—tableware, drinking cups, bottle nipples), furniture, clothing and miscellaneous items. Additional information on mouthing behavior studies sponsored by the Consumer Product Safety Commission can be found on the CPSC website [74,75].
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- Beamer et al. (2008) observed microactivity patterns of 23 farmworker children aged 6–27 months [73]. Each child was videotaped for 2–6 h in their home. Information on the frequency of mouthing and duration per mouthing event were reported. Categories included animal, body/head, clothes/towel/washcloth, fabric (wall/furniture), floor (asphalt/sidewalk, carpet/mat, dirt, rock/brick floor, tile/linoleum floor, wood floor), food (food container/other food, sticky food, water/beverage), footwear, hands or mouth, metal (wall/furniture, tool/appliance), non-dietary water (pool, puddle), paper/wrapper, plastic (wall/furniture, tool/appliance), rock/brick (wall/furniture), toys (fabric, hard, porous plastic, wood), vegetation (grass, vegetation) and wood (tool/appliance, wall/furniture).
- For the E.U., the RIVM “Children’s Toys Fact Sheet” [69] includes data from Groot et al., 1998, and Juberg et al. (2001) (discussed above). An additional and somewhat more recent study is Norris and Smith (2002):
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- Groot et al. (1998) collected parental observations for 42 children aged 3–36 months living in The Netherlands [76]. Each child was observed for 15-min periods 10-times per day over two days. Results are provided for the categories of dummy (pacifier), fingers, non-toys, toys for mouthing and other toys. Total mouthing duration is provided. Observations on time spent sucking/biting vs. licking were also made.
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- Norris and Smith (2002) reported parental observations of 236 U.K. children aged 1 month–5 years [77]. Each child was observed for 20 sessions of 15 min each over a two-week period. Observations were not requested to be done to cover a specific day, but were split as follows: four weekday and one weekend observation for each of the following periods—waking to 11 a.m., 11 a.m.–2 p.m., 2 p.m.–6 p.m., 6 p.m. and going to bed. Results are presented for total mouthing time, and categories of dummy (pacifier), fingers, toys, other objects and not recorded. Observations on whether mouthing time was licking, sucking or biting are also reported. Furthermore, all specific items recorded as mouthed are provided along with the number of times they were reported as mouthed.
- For Asia, one detailed study is available:
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- Sugita et al. (2003) provide results of a mouthing observation study of 25 Japanese children aged 6–10 months [78]. Children were observed 15 min/waking hour over two days. Results are presented as total mouthing time with or without pacifiers. Categories in the study included toys, plastics other than toys, finger/body parts, others (cloth, paper, etc.) and pacifiers. Time by category is visualized in Figure 1 of the article [78].
- The HESI Residential Exposure Factors database was developed by Infoscientific.com, Inc. (Manassas, VA, USA) for Health and Environmental Sciences Institute (HESI) [81]. It includes tables of data on mouthing activity. The database provides ready access to mouthing data in one common format and also includes information on child finger and palmar surface area. It was last updated in 2004. The database can be downloaded free of charge.
- The E.U. ExpoFacts [38] database (described in Section 2.1) includes information from the Groot et al. (1998) study of children in The Netherlands and the Consumer and Competition Policy Directorate (DTI) 2002 study of children from the United Kingdom [76,77].
2.2.3. Housing
2.3. Exposure Factors Related to Consumer Product Type and Product Use Patterns
2.3.1. Personal Care Products: Cosmetics
2.3.2. Children’s Toys
2.3.3. Air Fresheners
2.3.4. Household Cleaners
2.3.5. Automotive Care
2.3.6. Pesticides: Pest Control Products
2.3.7. Landscape/Yard
2.3.8. Home Maintenance
- The Westat (1987a) Household Solvent Products survey provided information on frequency, amount and some use conditions (e.g., time, location, ventilation) for 32 types of solvent products, including DIY categories, such as degreasers, adhesive removers, paints, wood stains, paint thinners and removers and primers [18].
- Abt, 1992, provided information on frequency, use amount and time for adhesive removers, spray paint and paint removers [118].
- The Westat (1987b) study of interior painters similarly provided information on frequency, time, amount of paint used and protective measures taken for latex paint, oil-based paint and wood stains and varnishes [19].
2.3.9. Arts and Crafts
3. Using Exposure Factors in Consumer Exposure Assessments
4. Conclusions
“We are exposed every day to agents that have the potential to affect our health—through the personal products we use, the water we drink, the food we eat, and the soil and surfaces we touch, and the air we breathe.”[141]
Supplementary Materials
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Population | Housing Factors | Time-Activity Patterns | Physiological Factors | Dietary Intake | Non-dietary Ingestion | Consumer Products |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
North America | ||||||
U.S. [30] | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
U.S. [2] | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |||
U.S. [33] | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||
U.S. elderly [34] | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |||
U.S. pregnant [35] | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||
Canada [36] | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |||
Europe | ||||||
E.U. [38] | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
E.U. [41,42] | ✓ | ✓ | ||||
Nordic Region [43] | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |
Netherlands [44,45] | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |||
Germany [47] | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |
Asia | ||||||
Korea [48,50] | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |
Japan [56] | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||
China [57] | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |
Australia [58] | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |
INTERNATIONAL | ||||||
Multinational [49] | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |||
Multinational [60] | ✓ | |||||
Nonspecific [61,62] | ✓ |
Personal Care | Inside the Home * | Automotive Care | Pesticides/Landscape/Yard | Home Maintenance | Arts and Crafts | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Habits and Practices ** | [17,21,22,23,24,25,26,28,29,30,95,96,99,101] | [17,26,27,30,104,105,106,108,109,110,113] | [18,30,89,90,93,114] | [30,93,115,116,117] | [18,19,118,119,120] | [69,90,119] |
User demographics | [21,22,23,24,29,30] | [10,27,30] | [18,30] | [30] | [18] | |
Ingredient Name | [95,96,97,98] | [89,90,97,98,108,109,110] | [94] | [94,115] | [89,90,94,119,120] | [90] |
Ingredient Weight Fraction | [95,96,97,98] | [89,90,97,98,108,109,110] | [94] | [94,115,116] | [89,90,94,119,120] | [90] |
Ingredient Function | [95,96] | [89,90,108,109,110] | [115] | [89,90,119,120] | [90] |
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Zaleski, R.T.; Egeghy, P.P.; Hakkinen, P.J. Exploring Global Exposure Factors Resources for Use in Consumer Exposure Assessments. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2016, 13, 744. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph13070744
Zaleski RT, Egeghy PP, Hakkinen PJ. Exploring Global Exposure Factors Resources for Use in Consumer Exposure Assessments. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2016; 13(7):744. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph13070744
Chicago/Turabian StyleZaleski, Rosemary T., Peter P. Egeghy, and Pertti J. Hakkinen. 2016. "Exploring Global Exposure Factors Resources for Use in Consumer Exposure Assessments" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 13, no. 7: 744. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph13070744
APA StyleZaleski, R. T., Egeghy, P. P., & Hakkinen, P. J. (2016). Exploring Global Exposure Factors Resources for Use in Consumer Exposure Assessments. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 13(7), 744. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph13070744