Foreword
In the United States and its territories, thousands of abandoned industrial and commercial facilities and hazardous waste disposal sites exist. Some of these sites may have the potential to adversely affect public health. The mission of the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) is to serve the public by using the best science, taking responsive public health actions and providing trusted health information to prevent harmful exposures and disease related to toxic substances. The ATSDR public health assessment process serves as a mechanism to help ATSDR sort through the many hazardous waste sites in its jurisdiction and determine when, where, and for whom, public health actions should be taken. Through this process, ATSDR finds out whether people living near or at a hazardous waste site are being exposed to toxic substances, whether that exposure is harmful, and what must be done to stop or reduce any exposure.
This manual is a revision of ATSDR’s 1992 Public Health Assessment Guidance Manual. The revised manual builds upon the process described in the 1992 manual and draws from the lessons learned through conducting public health assessments for nearly two decades. More detailed guidance on many of the procedures used to identify hazards and needed public health actions is presented in the manual. New information and techniques that reflect advances in science and technology, including tools and resources available to health assessors, are also presented. Advancements in geographical information systems, computational modeling techniques, exposure investigation approaches, and toxicologic knowledge, for example, enable a more sophisticated analysis of environmental data and exposures than was previously possible.
The manual emphasizes a team approach and the importance of careful planning, coordination of scientific analyses, and communication throughout the public health assessment process. ATSDR recognizes that effective collection, analysis, interpretation, and dissemination of public health assessment information often requires the cooperation and coordination of multi-disciplinary teams of scientists, health communication specialists, health educators, and/or medical professionals. Good communication with other governmental agencies, tribes, the community, and other stakeholders is critical and integral to the process.
This Public Health Assessment Guidance Manual is just one tool available to the health assessment team. It is not intended to supplant the professional judgment or discretion of the health assessor (or public health assessment team) in compiling and analyzing data, drawing conclusions, and making pubic health recommendations. Instead, the manual is intended to serve as a uniform tool to help discriminate and prevent poor professional judgment calls, and to provide a logical approach to the team in evaluating the public health implications of hazardous waste sites, while still allowing the health assessor to develop new approaches to the process and apply the most current and appropriate science and methodology. The public health assessment process adapts to changing scientific technology and public health procedures to remain dynamic.
ATSDR is committed to updating the manual as new technical information becomes available. The agency welcomes comments from users of the manual.
William Cibulas, Jr., Ph.D.
Director
Division of Health Assessment and Consultation/ATSDR
Captain, U.S.P.H.S.
Henry Falk, M.D., M.P.H.
Director
National Center for Environmental Health (NCEH)/ATSDR
Rear Admiral, U.S.P.H.S. (Retired)
- Page last reviewed: November 30, 2005
- Page last updated: November 30, 2005
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