Worldwide Regulations of Standard Values of Pesticides for Human Health Risk Control: A Review
Abstract: The impact of pesticide residues on human health is a worldwide problem, as human exposure to pesticides can occur through ingestion, inhalation, and dermal contact. Regulatory jurisdictions have promulgated the standard values for pesticides in residential soil, air, drinking water, and a...
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doaj-94967a6cf00e4b7a91976cced98cbddf2020-11-25T00:45:00ZengMDPI AGInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health1660-46012017-07-0114782610.3390/ijerph14070826ijerph14070826Worldwide Regulations of Standard Values of Pesticides for Human Health Risk Control: A ReviewZijian Li0Aaron Jennings1Department of Civil Engineering, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH 44106, USADepartment of Civil Engineering, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH 44106, USAAbstract: The impact of pesticide residues on human health is a worldwide problem, as human exposure to pesticides can occur through ingestion, inhalation, and dermal contact. Regulatory jurisdictions have promulgated the standard values for pesticides in residential soil, air, drinking water, and agricultural commodity for years. Until now, more than 19,400 pesticide soil regulatory guidance values (RGVs) and 5400 pesticide drinking water maximum concentration levels (MCLs) have been regulated by 54 and 102 nations, respectively. Over 90 nations have provided pesticide agricultural commodity maximum residue limits (MRLs) for at least one of the 12 most commonly consumed agricultural foods. A total of 22 pesticides have been regulated with more than 100 soil RGVs, and 25 pesticides have more than 100 drinking water MCLs. This research indicates that those RGVs and MCLs for an individual pesticide could vary over seven (DDT drinking water MCLs), eight (Lindane soil RGVs), or even nine (Dieldrin soil RGVs) orders of magnitude. Human health risk uncertainty bounds and the implied total exposure mass burden model were applied to analyze the most commonly regulated and used pesticides for human health risk control. For the top 27 commonly regulated pesticides in soil, there are at least 300 RGVs (8% of the total) that are above all of the computed upper bounds for human health risk uncertainty. For the top 29 most-commonly regulated pesticides in drinking water, at least 172 drinking water MCLs (5% of the total) exceed the computed upper bounds for human health risk uncertainty; while for the 14 most widely used pesticides, there are at least 310 computed implied dose limits (28.0% of the total) that are above the acceptable daily intake values. The results show that some worldwide standard values were not derived conservatively enough to avoid human health risk by the pesticides, and that some values were not computed comprehensively by considering all major human exposure pathways.https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/14/7/826pesticide regulationpesticide exposurehuman health risk assessmenthealth risk uncertainty boundsenvironmental regulatory jurisdiction |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Zijian Li Aaron Jennings |
spellingShingle |
Zijian Li Aaron Jennings Worldwide Regulations of Standard Values of Pesticides for Human Health Risk Control: A Review International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health pesticide regulation pesticide exposure human health risk assessment health risk uncertainty bounds environmental regulatory jurisdiction |
author_facet |
Zijian Li Aaron Jennings |
author_sort |
Zijian Li |
title |
Worldwide Regulations of Standard Values of Pesticides for Human Health Risk Control: A Review |
title_short |
Worldwide Regulations of Standard Values of Pesticides for Human Health Risk Control: A Review |
title_full |
Worldwide Regulations of Standard Values of Pesticides for Human Health Risk Control: A Review |
title_fullStr |
Worldwide Regulations of Standard Values of Pesticides for Human Health Risk Control: A Review |
title_full_unstemmed |
Worldwide Regulations of Standard Values of Pesticides for Human Health Risk Control: A Review |
title_sort |
worldwide regulations of standard values of pesticides for human health risk control: a review |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health |
issn |
1660-4601 |
publishDate |
2017-07-01 |
description |
Abstract: The impact of pesticide residues on human health is a worldwide problem, as human exposure to pesticides can occur through ingestion, inhalation, and dermal contact. Regulatory jurisdictions have promulgated the standard values for pesticides in residential soil, air, drinking water, and agricultural commodity for years. Until now, more than 19,400 pesticide soil regulatory guidance values (RGVs) and 5400 pesticide drinking water maximum concentration levels (MCLs) have been regulated by 54 and 102 nations, respectively. Over 90 nations have provided pesticide agricultural commodity maximum residue limits (MRLs) for at least one of the 12 most commonly consumed agricultural foods. A total of 22 pesticides have been regulated with more than 100 soil RGVs, and 25 pesticides have more than 100 drinking water MCLs. This research indicates that those RGVs and MCLs for an individual pesticide could vary over seven (DDT drinking water MCLs), eight (Lindane soil RGVs), or even nine (Dieldrin soil RGVs) orders of magnitude. Human health risk uncertainty bounds and the implied total exposure mass burden model were applied to analyze the most commonly regulated and used pesticides for human health risk control. For the top 27 commonly regulated pesticides in soil, there are at least 300 RGVs (8% of the total) that are above all of the computed upper bounds for human health risk uncertainty. For the top 29 most-commonly regulated pesticides in drinking water, at least 172 drinking water MCLs (5% of the total) exceed the computed upper bounds for human health risk uncertainty; while for the 14 most widely used pesticides, there are at least 310 computed implied dose limits (28.0% of the total) that are above the acceptable daily intake values. The results show that some worldwide standard values were not derived conservatively enough to avoid human health risk by the pesticides, and that some values were not computed comprehensively by considering all major human exposure pathways. |
topic |
pesticide regulation pesticide exposure human health risk assessment health risk uncertainty bounds environmental regulatory jurisdiction |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/14/7/826 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT zijianli worldwideregulationsofstandardvaluesofpesticidesforhumanhealthriskcontrolareview AT aaronjennings worldwideregulationsofstandardvaluesofpesticidesforhumanhealthriskcontrolareview |
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