急性化学事故和伤害的时间趋势——危险物质紧急事件监测,9个州,1999-2008。

Q1 Medicine MMWR supplements Pub Date : 2015-04-10
Perri Zeitz Ruckart, Maureen F Orr
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引用次数: 0

摘要

问题/状况:危险化学品在美国的广泛使用与意外的急性化学事件(即危险物质的不受控制或非法释放或持续释放的威胁)有关。报告期间:1999-2008。系统描述:1991年1月至2009年9月期间,有毒物质和疾病登记局(ATSDR)运行了有害物质紧急事件监测系统,以描述化学品释放对公共卫生的影响,并制定旨在减少危害的活动。本报告总结了过去10年(1999-2008年)参与HSEES的9个州(科罗拉多州、爱荷华州、明尼苏达州、纽约州、北卡罗来纳州、俄勒冈州、德克萨斯州、华盛顿州和威斯康星州)的事故数量、受伤人数、死亡人数和疏散人数的时间趋势。结果:共报告了57,975起事件和15,506人受伤,其中354人死亡。在监测期间,观察到几个趋势:固定设施的事件总体上略有下降(R²= 0.6),死亡人数呈上升趋势(R²= 0.7),特别是对一般公众(R²= 0.9)。春季3 - 6月的事件数量增加,其余时间减少(R²= 0.5)。周一至周日期间的事故发生率(R²= 0.7)与受伤人数(R²= 0.6)相似,呈下降趋势。发生次数最多的时段是上午6点~ 11点59分,之后依次减少(R²= 0.9);受伤人数(R²= 1.0)也是如此。解释:化学品事件继续影响公众健康,对公众来说似乎是一个日益严重的问题。事故和受伤的数量因月份、天数和时间的不同而不同,可能还受到天气和经济等其他因素的影响。公共卫生影响:公共和环境卫生与安全从业人员、工人代表、应急规划人员、备灾协调员、行业、应急响应人员和其他人员可以利用本报告的调查结果防备和预防化学品事故和伤害。具体来说,知道什么时候可能会发生最多的事故和伤害,可以指导准备和预防工作。此外,还需要作出新的或扩大的努力,向可能接触化学品的消费者提供教育(例如,向可能因天气原因断电的地区的消费者提供有关一氧化碳中毒危险的教育)。应探索改变诸如促进本质上更安全的技术等努力的方向,以完全减少或消除危险。
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Temporal trends of acute chemical incidents and injuries—Hazardous Substances Emergency Events Surveillance, nine states, 1999-2008.

Problem/condition: Widespread use of hazardous chemicals in the United States is associated with unintentional acute chemical incidents (i.e., uncontrolled or illegal release or threatened release of hazardous substances lasting <72 hours). Efforts by industries, government agencies, academics, and others aim to reduce chemical incidents and the public health consequences, environmental damage, and economic losses; however, incidents are still prevalent.

Reporting period: 1999-2008.

Description of system: The Hazardous Substances Emergency Events Surveillance (HSEES) system was operated by the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) during January 1991-September 2009 to describe the public health consequences of chemical releases and to develop activities aimed at reducing the harm. This report summarizes temporal trends in the numbers of incidents, injured persons, deaths, and evacuations from the nine states (Colorado, Iowa, Minnesota, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Texas, Washington, and Wisconsin) that participated in HSEES during its last 10 full years of data collection (1999-2008).

Results: A total of 57,975 incidents and 15,506 injured persons, including 354 deaths, were reported. During the surveillance period, several trends were observed: a slight overall decrease occurred in incidents for fixed facilities (R² = 0.6) and an increasing trend in deaths (R² = 0.7) occurred, particularly for the general public (R² = 0.9). The number of incidents increased in the spring during March-June, and a decrease occurred in the remainder of the year (R² = 0.5). A decreasing trend in incidents occurred during Monday-Sunday (R² = 0.7) that was similar to that for the number of injured persons (R² = 0.6). The highest number of incidents occurred earlier in the day (6:00 a.m.-11:59 a.m.) and then decreased as the day went on (R² = 0.9); this trend was similar for the number of injured persons (R² = 1.0).

Interpretation: Chemical incidents continue to affect public health and appear to be a growing problem for the general public. The number of incidents and injuries varied by month, day of week, and time of day and likely was influenced by other factors such as weather and the economy. PUBLIC HEALTH IMPLICATIONS: Public and environmental health and safety practitioners, worker representatives, emergency planners, preparedness coordinators, industries, emergency responders, and others can use the findings in this report to prepare for and prevent chemical incidents and injuries. Specifically, knowing when to expect the most incidents and injuries can guide preparedness and prevention efforts. In addition, new or expanded efforts and outreach to educate consumers who could be exposed to chemicals are needed (e.g., education about the dangers of carbon monoxide poisoning for consumers in areas likely to experience weather-related power outages). Redirection of efforts such as promoting inherently safer technologies should be explored to reduce or eliminate the hazards completely.

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来源期刊
MMWR supplements
MMWR supplements Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
48.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
8
期刊介绍: The Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR ) series is prepared by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Often called “the voice of CDC,” the MMWR series is the agency’s primary vehicle for scientific publication of timely, reliable, authoritative, accurate, objective, and useful public health information and recommendations. MMWR readership predominantly consists of physicians, nurses, public health practitioners, epidemiologists and other scientists, researchers, educators, and laboratorians.
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