Should Modern Living Carry A Health
Warning?
A new £4.4m partnership programme to explore the impacts of modern
living on our health has just started to fund its first research
projects.
The Environment and Human Health Programme comprises 37 projects that
cover a broad field of environmental concerns linked to human health,
including inhalation of nanoparticles, long-term exposure to pollution
in urban environments, harmful algal toxins, climate change and emerging
diseases perhaps resulting from changing agricultural practices.
Professor Mike Moore, Science Co-ordinator for the programme, said
"We know that human activity has an impact on our environment but
what is not known, in many cases, is what impact environmental
degradation is having on our health. The natural environment contributes
to our health in many ways, for example through the quality of air we
breathe, the food we eat and the water we drink."
The programme identifies and prioritises research areas where the
natural environment and human health interact, and is building a
community of scientists in the UK committed to researching this
relationship. Their research should improve our ability to identify and
predict emerging health concerns, and will also improve the evidence
available to support risk assessments and regulation-setting by the
government and other policy makers.
One of the newest emerging concerns is the possible hazard to human
health from engineered nanoparticles in our environment. Nanotechnology
involves manipulating material and creating devices on a nanometre scale
(a nanometre is one thousand-millionth of a metre). The environmental
behaviour of engineered nanoparticles is currently unknown and their
potential to harm human health is a major concern. Their miniscule size
means they can easily be inhaled, ingested or absorbed without
knowledge. The particles are currently used in over 200 commercial
products including sunblocks, creams, cosmetics and fabric coatings, and
are inevitably entering the environment either through manufacturing
discharge, accidental spillage or general use.
In one of the projects, researchers will be investigating the possible
effects of nanoparticles in the body by introducing two widely used
types of engineered nanoparticle to synthetic lung lining liquid and
blood plasma (a liquid component of blood). They will test how the
synthetic liquids affect the physical properties of the nanoparticles,
and the most and least reactive particles will then be tested with
primary human lung cells to find out whether the more reactive particles
are of danger to our health.
Lead investigator, Dr Eva Valsami-Jones from the Natural History Museum,
said, "The ecological cost of many emerging technologies is not yet
known. Nanotechnology is already widely used and standard toxicity tests
are not necessarily effective as nanoparticles do not behave like their
larger counterparts. During these first stage tests we will be looking
for any physical changes to the nanoparticles when introduced to liquids
such as blood plasma. We will look for changes to their size and
structure, and test their ability to dissolve or accumulate. Dissolved
particles could be a cause for concern as they may release potentially
toxic components."
The 37 projects all started this year and will be completed in 2008 and
2009. Environment and Human Health is led by the Natural Environment
Research Council (NERC) and is a partnership programme supported by the
Natural Environment Research Council, the Environment Agency (EA); the
Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra); the Ministry
of Defence (MOD); the Medical Research Council (MRC); the Welcome Trust;
the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC); the Engineering and
Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC); the Biotechnology and
Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) and the Health Protection
Agency (HPA)
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