• Exposure assessment for Deepwater Horizo

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Thursday, April 14, 2022 22:30:44
    Exposure assessment for Deepwater Horizon oil spill: Health outcomes


    Date:
    April 14, 2022
    Source:
    West Virginia University
    Summary:
    Mathematicians have developed statistical methods that lay the
    framework for the crucial first step of determining whether there
    are any linkages between exposures and health outcomes from the
    2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill, which is considered the largest
    marine oil spill in the history of the U.S.



    FULL STORY ========================================================================== Nearly 12 years after the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, scientists are
    still examining the potential health effects on workers and volunteers
    who experienced oil-related exposures.


    ==========================================================================
    To help shape future prevention efforts, one West Virginia University researcher -- Caroline Groth, assistant professor in the School of Public Health's Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics -- has developed
    novel statistical methods for assessing airborne exposure. Working with collaborators from multiple institutions, Groth has made it possible
    for researchers to characterize oil spill exposures in greater detail
    than has ever been done before.

    With very few Ph.D. biostatisticians in the area of occupational health,
    there were few appropriate statistical methodologies for the assessment
    of inhalation exposures for the GuLF STUDY, a study launched by the
    National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences shortly after the
    Deepwater Horizon oil spill.

    The purpose of the study, which is the largest ever following an oil
    spill: examine the health of persons involved in the response and
    clean-up efforts.

    Groth was part of the exposure assessment team tasked with characterizing worker exposures and led by Patricia Stewart and Mark Stenzel.

    Groth's statistical methods, which she began in 2012, laid the framework
    for a crucial step for determining whether there are associations between exposures and health outcomes from the oil spill and clean-up work,
    which involved over 9,000 vessels deployed in the Gulf of Mexico waters
    across Alabama, Florida, Louisiana and Mississippi and tens of thousands
    of workers on the water and on land.

    The Deepwater Horizon oil spill is considered the largest marine oil
    spill in the history of the U.S.

    "Workers were exposed differently based on their activities, time of
    exposure, etc., and our research team's goal was to develop exposure
    estimates for each of those scenarios and then link them to the
    participants' work history through an 'exposure matrix,'" Groth said.



    ========================================================================== These methods make it possible for other researchers to estimate
    individuals' levels of exposure and link it to their health outcomes.

    Additionally, Groth uncovered a new way of accounting for exposures
    that instruments cannot detect. The threshold at which exposures cannot
    be detected is referred to as the LOD, or limit of detection. Groth's
    methods go beyond that limit, accounting for the fact that there is
    uncertainty in exposure measurements below the LOD.

    "Basically, what happens is the instrument reports undetectable,
    or 'zero,'" Groth explained. "Previously, less reliable approaches
    were likely used -- such as replacing it with a single value or
    forecasting. Those approaches do not consider actual variability in
    the data which, if not considered, can lead to inaccurate exposure
    estimates. However, we know with certainty they cannot be 'zero.'
    "We know it's between that threshold and zero, and there is likely
    variability in these measurements that we should account for. Our methods
    allow us to account for this variability and get a quantitative estimate
    of concentration." Her findings, along with her team's, were recently published in the Annals of Work Exposures and Health. Dale Sandler,
    chief of the Epidemiology Branch and senior investigator at the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, said the efforts of Groth --
    who served as primary author for two of the manuscripts and co-author for
    eight published manuscripts -- and her colleagues have opened new doors.

    "The Gulf Long-term Follow-up Study is larger and more long-term than
    research on other oil spills, but the major defining feature of the study
    is the level of detail on potential oil-spill exposures and the extensive efforts made to characterize the exposures of those who helped to clean
    up following this environmental and potential public health disaster,"
    Sandler, principal investigator of the study, said. "Dr. Groth, who has
    played a key role in characterizing the chemical exposures of persons participating in the GuLF Study, and her colleagues have allowed us
    to characterize respiratory exposures to a broad class of chemicals
    resulting from the oil spill." Research continues to be conducted,
    with plans to continue following these workers for additional health
    effects going forward to determine if any exposures were associated with detrimental health outcomes. Both Groth and Sandler see the effort as
    an important step to identifying factors that contribute to long-term
    safety and health.

    Sandler added, "This will help us identify links between specific
    exposures and health effects and could help us identify targets for
    future prevention efforts."

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by West_Virginia_University. Note:
    Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Deborah C Glass. Evaluating the Exposures of Clean-up Personnel
    after an
    Oil Spill. Annals of Work Exposures and Health, 2022; 66
    (Supplement_1): i1 DOI: 10.1093/annweh/wxab103 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/04/220414125026.htm

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