Title: 1
1Residential/ Non- occupational Exposure Assessment
Jeff Evans Biologist Health Effects
Division Office of Pesticide Programs
2Purpose
- To present our use of a calendar based model
(Calendex), to address the temporal aspects of
OP pesticide use - Approach is similar to the OP case study
presented to SAP (12/7-8/00) - To discuss the data used in our cumulative
residential exposure assessment - To discuss with the Panel
- Use of distributions of the available data
- Additional ways to incorporate survey data and
other pesticide use in future assessments
3Residential OP Assessment Uses
- Indoor use DDVP (crack and crevice, pest strips)
- Pet use DDVP and Tetrachlorvinphos (spray/dip,
collars) currently only qualitatively
assessed - Home Lawns Bensulide, Malathion, Trichlorfon
- Golf Course Acephate, Bensulide, Fenamiphos,
Malathion, Trichlorfon - Home Garden Acephate and Disulfoton
(ornamental) , Malathion (ornamental and
edible food) - Public Health Fenthion, Malathion, Naled
4Expression of Residential Risk
MOE POD (mg/kg/day) Exposure (mg/kg/day)
- Routes considered, as appropriate
- Oral, Dermal, Inhalation
5Age Groups
- Assessment performed for the following age
groups - Children 1-2 years old
- Children 3-5 years old
- Adults 20
6Scope
- Assessments conducted for 12 distinct
geographical regions, reflecting climate pest
pressure differences - One region split into two residential assessments
- Includes remaining residential OPs that have
significant exposure and appropriate exposure
data - Pet products not quantified
- Only screening level SOPs available at this time
7Regional Framework
Source USDA ERS
8Region 5 Eastern Uplands
- Lawn DDVP, Malathion, Trichlorfon
- Golf Course Acephate, Bensulide, Fenamiphos,
Malathion, Trichlorfon - Ornamental Gardens Acephate, Disulfoton,
Malathion - Home Garden Malathion
- Indoor DDVP (pest strips and crack and crevice
treatments)
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11Road Map
- Key Data Used (distributions selected)
- Lawn
- Golf Courses
- Public Health
- Home Garden
- Characterization
- Future Consideration of Survey Data
12Lawns Use Information
- National Home Garden Pesticide Use Survey
(NHGPUS 1991) - percent of households using a given pesticide
regional distinctions - Treated lawns based on regions using the National
Garden Survey 1996-1997 - Percent of population hiring lawn care services
- Lawn Size (Vinlove and Torla 1995 and ORETF
Survey)
13Lawn Size
- Uniform Distribution 500 15,000 ft2
- Difficult to quantify
- Only considers lot size minus footprint
- Does not consider other structures/green space
14Lawns Use Information
- Label
- site/pest relationships
- application rates
- State Cooperative Extension services
- Timing of applications to control common pests
- Comparative Insecticide Effectiveness for Major
Pest Insects of Turf in the United States
15Lawn Applicator Exposure Data
- Data source ORETF
- Application Type
- Granular push-type rotary spreaders
- Hose-end sprayer ready to use and one requiring
the user to add the concentrate - Clothing types
- Range of clothing
- Short-sleeved shirt, short pants and long-sleeved
shirt, long pants
16Lawn Applicator Exposure
- Unit Exposure (UE)
- mg of exposure/amount of active ingredient (a.i.)
used - UE x ai/sq ft x area treated
- Divided by body weight
17Lawn Applicator Exposure Data
- Hose-end Sprayer
- Uniform Distribution 0.017 49 mg/lb ai
- Granular Applicator
- Uniform Distribution 0.02 7.6 mg/lb ai
18Lawn Applicator Exposure Data
- Well understood activity pattern
- Easy to measure and develop distributions
- However, selected a uniform distribution that
- Reflects range of clothing that can be worn
- Survey data suggest that clothing worn while
applying pesticides changes as growing season
progresses - seasonal changes are only based on formulation
type not equipment used - Hose-end includes both mix you own and ready
to use
19Lawn Post- Application Exposure Data
- Difficult activity pattern to determine what is
representative - Residue transfer to skin (transfer coefficient)
- Choreographed Activities of Adults Measured Using
Biological Monitoring, (Vacarro 1996) - Crawling, football, Frisbee
- Non-Scripted Activities of Children Measured
Using Fluorescent Tracers, (Black 1993) - Mostly solitary play with toys and books. Also
activities such as cartwheels
20Lawn Post- Application Exposure Data
- Duration up to 2 and 3.5 hrs for adults and
children respectively (Cumulative, EFH) - Adult TC 1,930 13,200 cm2/hr
- Uniform distribution (n 16 Vacarro)
- Child TC 700 16,000 cm2/hr
- Uniform distribution Vacarro (n 16) and Black
(n 14)
21Lawn Post- Application Exposure Data
- Turf Transferable Residues (TTR)
- Chemical specific dissipation data (mg/cm2)
- Uniform distribution selected for each days
residues - Each day includes a range of values instead of
mean - First day values include as soon as dry up to 8
hours after application - Watering in and not watering in
- Other days include potential for rainfall
22Lawn Post- Application Exposure Data
- Non-Dietary Ingestion (Hand-to-Mouth)
- Most challenging activity pattern to assess
- Hand-to-mouth frequency of events, (Reed 1999)
- Adjust lawn residue data (TTR) to account for
saliva wetted hands, (Clothier 2000) - Saliva extraction e.g., (Camann 1995)
23Lawn Post- Application Exposure Data
- Hand-to-mouth frequency of events (Reed 1999)
- Children in day-care (n-20) at home (n-10)
- Uniform distribution 0.4 to 26 events/hr
- Mean 9.5, median 8.5, 90th percentile 20
- Issue indoors vs. outdoors, active vs. quiet
play - Freeman et al., 2001 outdoors (2-3x less than
indoors) - Small subset (4 out of 19)
24Lawn Post- Application Exposure Data
- Lawn residue data to account for saliva wetted
hands (Clothier 2000) - Compared wet hand efficiency vs. dry hand
efficiency (cyfluthrin, chlorthalonil and
chlorpyrifos) - Dry hand transfer efficiency is similar to TTR
measurements (0.9 to 3) for 2 chemicals - Chlorpyrifos much lower overall (0.05 - 0.15)
- Wet palms uniform distribution 1.4-3x higher
than TTRs
25Lawn Post- Application Exposure Data
- Saliva extraction (uniform 10 to 50)
- 50 removal by saliva wetted sponges vigorous
(Camann et al., 1995) - 20 40 hands rinsed with water/Ethanol and
water/Isopropanol (Fenske and Lu, 1994) - 10 22 soil removal from hands to account for
possible residue/soil matrix (Kissel et al., 1998)
26Golf Courses Post- Application Exposure Data
- Percent of individuals participating in golf,
1992 Golf Course Operations by the Center for
Golf Course Management - Number of hours playing golf
- Percent of Golf Courses Applying Selected
Pesticides (Doane GolfTrak, 1998-1999) - An activity pattern that is easy to understand
and measure
27Golf Courses Post- Application Exposure Data
- Residue transfer to skin (transfer coefficient)
- Uniform distribution 200 to 760 cm2/hr
- Small data set (less than 10) includes walking
and using a cart. - Chemical-specific turf residue data
28Public Health Post- Application
- Range of residues that deposit onto lawns is
based on a percent of public health use
application rate (3.8 to 30) using values
presented in Tietze et al., 1994 and the Spray
drift model, AgDrift - Once an estimate of deposition is made the post
application is assessed in the same way that lawn
chemicals are - Estimates of population based on percent of
homes having lawns - Timing and pesticide used based on personal
communication and publications prepared by
organizations such as the Florida Coordinating
Council of Mosquito Control
29Garden Applicator Exposure Data
- An activity pattern that is easy to understand
and measure - Shaker Can (n-20) uniform, 0.0034-0.356 mg/lb ai
- Garden Duster (n-20) uniform, 7.99-1375.4 mg/lb
ai - Small Tank Sprayer (n-20), uniform, 7.99-354.4
mg/lb ai - Similar issues regarding clothing as in lawn
applications
30Garden Applicator Exposure Data
- Area Treated
- Ornamental Gardens uniform, 500 to 2,000 ft2
- No data. Defined in the assessment as the area
consisting of the perimeter around a median home
area 2,250 sq ft2., with a 2.5 to 8 ft border - Vegetable gardens log-normal, 135 to 8,000 ft2
- May be easier for people to estimate than lawns
-
31Garden Post- Application Exposure
- Post-application dermal exposure
- An easily defined activity in agriculture
- Home gardens are more difficult due to wide
variety of crops grown (fruits and vegetables)
and a wide variety of activities - Uniform distribution of 100 to 5,000 cm2/hr
- Duration of garden activities uniform, 5 to 60
min. - Chemical/regional specific residue data
32Indoor Inhalation Exposure Data
- Applicator uniform range of inhalation exposure
values for pressurized aerosol can (PHED) - 0.72 2.499 mg/lb ai
- Post application inhalation exposure (adults and
children) - Pest Strips 0.005 0.11 mg/m3
- (Collins et al., 1973)
- Crack and Crevice 0.075 0.548 mg/m3
- (Gold et al., 1983)
- Duration of time spent indoors, and breathing
rates - Up to 24 hours, at rest to moderate
33Methods Summary
- All available data considered
- e.g.,Lawn residue data available for all
compounds and made regional adjustments where
feasible - Addressed a variety of activity patterns
- Some more straight forward Application
- Some more difficult Hand-to-Mouth
- Tended to use uniform distributions when
presented with scenarios that had confounding
variables
34Characterization
over estimate - under estimate neutral
35Characterization
over estimate - under estimate neutral
36Characterization
over estimate - under estimate neutral
37Characterization
over estimate - under estimate neutral
38Survey Data
- Overview of our use of survey data to address use
and co-occurrence - Future considerations
- Use of existing macro activity pattern data
- SHEDS example
- Upcoming pesticide use survey
39Survey Data Macro Activity Patterns
- Human Activity Patterns
- Calendar based models present an opportunity to
consider an individuals macro activity patterns
that can lead to exposure to one or more
chemicals - Macro Activity Patterns are broadly defined as
where individuals spend their time - In the garden
- Driving to work
40Survey Data Macro Activity Patterns
- Our Basic Approach (Independence/Dependence)
- Identify households based on reported use of an
OP for a given scenario (e.g., NHGPUS) - 6 of households in Region 5 use lawn chemical A
- Identify the time individuals spend on lawns or
other locations - In the Exposure Factors Handbook, there are
recommended values taken from surveys such as the
National Human Activity Pattern Survey (NHAPS)
41Survey Data Macro Activity Patterns
- STEP 1 Calculate Exposure from Food for
Individual 1 on a given day (Food Exposure(from
DEEM)) - STEP 2 Select Residential Treatments for
Individual 1 on a given day - Specific to region, time and demographics of
individual - Were pesticides applied in/around home?
- If so, which treatments?
- And how much, how often, during what time frame,
with what frequency, and by whom? - Repeat Step 2 until all relevant residential uses
are addressed
42Survey Data Macro Activity Patterns
- Co-occurrence is driven by random probabilities
( households being treated) - (6 lawn use) x (10 crack and crevice) 0.6
- However, once a household is selected, the
probability of being on the lawn is 1 because - We used a distribution of time spent on the lawn
based only on individuals who were actually on
lawns - Does not account for individual responses
indicating they did not spend time on lawns
43Survey Data Macro Activity Patterns
- Consolidated Human Activity Database (CHAD)
hhtp//www.epa.gov/chadnet1 - Compilation of pre-existing human activity
surveys collected at the national, state and city
level - Review questionnaires and individual responses
- Develop daily activity patterns for an individual
based on responses to the questionnaires - Most surveys are cross-sectional rather than
longitudinal
44Survey Data Macro Activity Patterns
- Stochastic Human Exposure and Dose Simulation
model - SHEDS - Developed by
- Valerie Zartarian
- Jianping Xue
- Haluk Ozkaynak
45Exposure Rate ug/min
etc...
living room playing
lawn playing
car In-transit
daycare learning
bedroom sleeping
Time (min)
Macro-activities
46Winter Weekday
Winter Weekend
Spring Weekday
Spring Weekend
Summer Weekday
Summer Weekend
Fall Weekday
Fall Weekend
1
360
90
180
270
Day of Year
- 8 CHAD diaries simulate a persons year in
specified age-gender cohort - 1 person from each of 4 seasons
- 1 person from each of 2 day categories (weekend
and weekday) - Fix 5 weekday diaries and 2 weekend diaries
- Repeat 7 day activity patterns within each season
47Survey Data Macro Activity Patterns
- Residential Exposure Joint Venture (REJV)
- Longitudinal survey data addressing the
application pesticides in and around households - When and where applications are made
- Multiple applications made in one day
- What they wore while making those applications
- Demographic information (children)
48- EXTRA SLIDES From other presentations FOLLOW
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51Region 11 had an applicator residue where a
residue for a child should be
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53Questions for the SAP on Residential Exposure
54Question 1
- Historically, the Agency has relied on means
(primarily arithmetic or geometric) from residue
and exposure studies for key input variables in
exposure assessments. The recent development of
calendar based models and others having features
to incorporate distributions of exposure values
has presented the Agency an opportunity to
consider using all available data points from
existing exposure and residue studies. In the
Cumulative Risk Assessment Case study presented
to the FIFRA Scientific Advisory Panel in
September, 2000, most of the exposure variables
were presented as uniform distributions. The
exceptions were for variables that are reasonably
well established , such as exposure durations
taken from the Agencys Exposure Factors
Handbook. The data used in the Case Study and
in the preliminary CRA, are believed to be from
well conducted studies of generally high quality.
However, these data sets tend to be small (e.g.,
n 10 - 30) and are being used to address wide
variety of exposure situations. The uniform
distribution appears to be most appropriate for
these relatively small data sets because it
relies on easily established values such as the
minimum and maximum and provides the most
conservative estimate of the standard deviation
(riskanalal_at_lyris.pnl.gov).
55Question 1 (continued)
56Question 2
- The use of calendar based models also allows
exposure assessors to consider exposure from a
variety of sources from the same or from
different chemicals. Longitudinal survey data
such as the National Human Activity Pattern
Survey (NHAPS) are available for consideration by
HED for use in future assessments. In addition,
from a practical standpoint, the use of such
survey data ensures combinations of exposure do
not come from unrealistic random combinations
that current models may produce (e.g., activities
adding up more than 24 hours in a day).
57Question 2 (continued)
- The use of calendar based models provides an
opportunity to explore the potential for the
co-occurrence of multiple sources of exposures
from residential pathways. In the cumulative
assessment, OPP used summary statistics from
sources such as the Exposure Factors Handbook
(EFH) regarding the time spent indoors, time
spent on lawns and time spent at other outdoor
locations. In the preliminary assessment, we
assumed these activities were stochastically
independent. OPP is currently evaluating data in
the EFH such as data from the National Human
Activity Pattern Survey (NHAPS) to determine if
it can directly incorporate (i.e., empirically)
information on an individuals activity patterns
over a full day from this database to account for
the likelihood and duration that an individual
might be exposed to a pesticide through various
activities over the course of a day.
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