Chemicals listed for a location are only suggestions of what MIGHT be found in a
school or factory or farm or other place in town. They are listed to alert you
to the possible places you might find chemicals of concern and to encourage you
to consider what might be in your neighborhood.
Most locations in a real town would have none or a few of the chemicals listed.
It's not very likely that a real location would have every chemical.
The web sites listed for each chemical can help you understand where and how
you might be exposed to a chemical, how to avoid exposure, and how dangerous a
chemical might be.
To find out about environmental hazards in YOUR region, search the web sites at the
bottom of this page by city, state or zip code.
What is relative risk?
We are constantly exposed to chemicals in our everyday lives. In many cases, these
chemicals are involved in products and processes that improve our quality of life.
At the same time, these chemicals can also get into our food, water, and air and have
a negative effect on us. We cannot avoid exposure to chemicals on any given day. The
amount and duration of exposure to a chemical impacts the toxicity of that chemical.
Simply put, the dose makes the poison. We, therefore, have to look at exposure to
chemicals in terms of our relative risk.
When reading and learning about chemicals and locations in Tox Town, keep in mind your
relative risk and use common sense when thinking about your risk in a given situation.
The risk of suffering from symptoms of lead poisoning is significantly greater for a
child living in a home with peeling lead-based paint on the wall than for a child
living in a home with unleaded latex paint that is not peeling. Similarly, if you work
in an occupation where you remove asbestos and repair buildings containing asbestos,
you have a much greater risk of exposure to asbestos than someone who does not perform
this kind of work. It is important to learn about environmental health concerns so
that you can use this knowledge to minimize unnecessary exposures.
Health professionals and toxicologists define relative risk, or risk ratio, as the risk
of harm among a population exposed to a potentially damaging substance compared to the
risk to an unexposed population. In other words, relative risk is the rate of disease
among the population exposed to a potentially damaging substance divided by the rate of
the disease among the unexposed population. A relative risk of 1.0 means there is no
difference among the two populations while a relative risk of 2 means that the exposed
group has twice the disease risk as the unexposed group.
Understanding
Risk: What Do Those Headlines Really Mean? (National Institute on Aging).
Factsheet designed to help the public understand research results and interpret risk.
Air, Land & Water
My Environment (Environmental
Protection Agency). Create maps showing local geography and demographics. Find
out about the quality of your local environment.
TOXMAP (National Library of Medicine).
Search by chemical name or by city, state, or zip code to find out about toxic
chemicals in your location.
Tox Town links to TOXMAP (http://toxmap.nlm.nih.gov),
a Geographic Information System (GIS) from the National Library of Medicine (NLM), which
uses maps of the United States to help users visually explore data from the US
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)'s Toxics Release Inventory (TRI)
and Superfund Program.
Tox Town links to TOXMAP only for those chemicals whose releases are reported
to EPA. The chemical map shown in Tox Town lists both TRI and Superfund data when available.
If only Superfund data is available, then the map will only show Superfund sites. Similarly,
only TRI data is shown when there is no Superfund site data.
Federal law requires facilities in certain industries, which manufacture, process, or
use significant amounts of toxic chemicals, to report annually on their releases of
these chemicals to the EPA TRI Program. Superfund sites are those throughout the United
States and its territories which contain substances that are either designated as
hazardous under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability
Act (CERCLA), or identified
as such under other laws. To learn more about how TOXMAP works visit the
TOXMAP FAQ section.
Toxics Release
Inventory Reporting Facilities. TOXMAP (National Library of Medicine).
Map of US industries that must report routine releases of toxic chemicals.
National Priorities
List (Superfund) Sites. TOXMAP (National Library of Medicine). Map of
Superfund sites contaminated with hazardous waste and eligible for clean up by
the US government.
Air
Today's National
Air Quality Forecast map (Environmental Protection Agency). There are
also daily maps for
ozone and
particles.
Water
Surf Your Watershed (Environmental
Protection Agency). From your backyard to local streams and rivers, follow the
flow of your local rain and check the health of your watershed.
Last updated: May 3, 2011
|