Environmental Issue & Sick Building Syndrome Blog


NLM Toxicology and Environmental Health Info
Environmental Health & Toxicology Update from the National Library of Medicine

Tox-App: An App to Search for Potential Environmental Health Hazards in your Community

Use Tox-App, a free mobile app for iOS users from the National Library of Medicine, to search for industrial facilities that reported releasing certain chemicals into the environment (based on data from the US EPA TRI program). Tox-App includes a subset of about 100 TRI chemicals for the most current TRI year. You can download Tox-App     Link to Toxix Chemical App Announcement

from the Apple App Store: https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/tox-app/id1227471020?mt=8

Tox-App is based on the National Library of Medicine online tool TOXMAP and provides some of the basic TOXMAP functions, including:

Search for reporting facilities by name or state
Browse for facilities by chemical, state, or county
View locations of reporting facilities on an interactive map
Learn more about Tox-App here: https://go.usa.gov/xRhbY


Posted by Dan Howard on October 4th, 2017 10:16 PM

 

   The first step is to start a diary for the sick person. Remember that we react in time delay. We also often react to a combination of issues.  If the furnace is a problem, we will only get sick after it has run for a long time. The clue in that instance is that the problem raises its ugly head in cold snaps. If the problem is really an automobile, problems will occur after longer car trips. If a major part of a problem is the workplace, you will be sicker after work and feel better your second day of time away for the workplace. If you want a personal example, it took a while for me to understand that when I had a beverage or food with Aspartame as an ingredient, I would have nightmares and other physical reactions. 

            Keep track of places, meals, the weather and how the person that is experiencing the health issues feels. 
 

Also provide background health issues to help your environmental professional to gather information that may help your medical provider to determine if the exposures are health risks for their patient.  That diary provides an environmental investigator and medical provider a great place to start the search for avoiding health risks.    

In general, if something smells, taste, feels bad, it is not healthy for us. When we feel ill, it is our warning to do something different to avoid becoming unhealthier.  However to avoid environmental problems we need to identify them first. If you or someone in your home feels yucky, do something about it.    

You will find links and information in the online copy of this article at: www.Envirospect.info/EnvironmentalHazards

Posted by Dan Howard on November 15th, 2014 8:45 AM

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