Title: Environment and health EEA assessment perspectives
1 Environment and health EEA assessment
perspectives
- Ingvar Andersson
- European Environment Agency
2Outline
- EEA tasks
- Assessment and reporting frameworks
- The shift from uni-causality to multi-causality
- Conclusions
- Some sources
3The EEA mission
The European Environment Agency is the EU body
dedicated to providing sound, independent
information on the environment We are a main
information source for those involved in
developing, adopting, implementing and evaluating
environmental policy, and also the general
public Â
4What is our mandate?
- To help the Community and member countries make
informed decisions about improving the
environment, integrating environmental
considerations into economic policies and moving
towards sustainability - To coordinate the European environment
information and observation network (Eionet)
5The EEA is...
- An independent information provider
- An analyst and assessor
- Building bridges between science and policy
- Dependent upon strong networks to carry out its
work - ...to support policy processes and inform the
public
6How does the EEA reach its objectives?
- By providing a wide range of information and
assessments of - The state of the environment and trends
- Pressures on the environment and the driving
forces behind them - Policies and their effectiveness
- Outlooks/scenarios
7Who are EEAs clients?
- Institutions and governments
- European Commission, Parliament, Council, EEA
member countries - Influencers
- NGOs, business, media, advisory groups,
scientists, debaters - General public
8What are our products?
- EEA 5-year state and outlook reports
- EEA Signals
- EEA Reports
- EEA Briefings
- EEA Technical reports
- EEA Fact sheets
- EEA Multimedia publications
- Information services on the internet
- Platform for meetings in the interfaces
EIONET/scientific networks/policy networks
9Assessment and reporting frameworks
10The DPSIR assessment framework
11.
Effectiveness of responses
D
R
Costs and benefits of action/in-action
Poverty Lifestyle Nutrition
I
P
- Exposure/effect relationships
- Biomarkers
S
Exposure routes Fate
12The OECD Pressure-State-Response Model
(e.g. OECD, 1985)
13The WHO DPSEEA framework
14Source Briggs (2003).
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16Knowledge
Evidence
Health
Action
Exposure assessment
Multi- causality
Exposure
Chemical body burden
Public perception
Cancer
Legislation
Combined exposures
Vulnerability
Lung diseases
Exposure routes
Nutrition
State-of- the-art
Risk management
Asthma
Timing
Lifestyle
Neuro-toxicity
Psychology
Endocrinedisorders
Information
Prevention
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18The shift from uni-causality to multi-causality
19- The two perspectives
- Pollution perspective
- Public health perspective
20Pollution management perspective
21Public health
22Management of public health and pollution
main differences
23Some challenges
- Evidence public perception State of the art -
early warning - Multi-stakeholder perspective (together with the
the full chain approach) - Combined exposures
- Multi-causality - look at more stressors and
combinations - Early exposure late effects
- Expand the causal chain, including driving forces
and effectiveness of policies - Integrated risk assessment how to combine
epidemiology, toxicology and eco-toxicology - Europe in a global context and Europes impact on
developing countries
24Burden of disease in 2000 due to selected health
determinants for Western Europe, Europe and
worldwide, as a percentage of total burden of
disease (Guus de Hollander 2007, adapted from
Ezzati et al., 2002).
.
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26EEA needs links to EEA products services
- Science-based assessments, indicator development,
reporting and communication - Environmental burden of disease, development of
quantitative estimates of health impacts - Spatial EH information
- Bio-monitoring for follow up of interventions and
early warning
27Conclusions
- EEA SOER EH assessment a combination of DPSEEA
with different focus - Be flexible - use framework depending on purpose
and target group - Scientist have to respond to these user needs,
EEA has to rely upon scientific networks
28Some sources
- EEA state of the Environment reporting 1995-2005
http//www.eea.europa.eu - EEA and Joint Research Centre, 2005 Environment
and health. EEA Report No 10/2005. ISSN 1725-9177 - Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, 2005. Ecosystems
and Human Well-being Synthesis. Island Press,
Washington, DC. - OECD, 2005 Childrens environment and health
indicators, A survey ENV/EPOC/WPNEP 16 FINAL - David J.Rapport Ashbindu Singh An EcoHealth
based framework for State of Environment
Reporting. Ecological indicators 6(2006) 409-428