Regulation of priority carcinogens and reproductive or developmental toxicants
- 1 January 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in American Journal of Industrial Medicine
- Vol. 22 (6) , 793-808
- https://doi.org/10.1002/ajim.4700220603
Abstract
In California. 370 carcinogens and 112 reproductive/developmental toxicants have been identified as a result of the State's Safe Drinking Water and Toxic Enforcement Act of 1986. They include pesticides, solvents, metals, industrial intermediates, environmental mixtures, and reactive agents. Occupational, environmental, and consumer product exposures that involve these agents are regulated under the Act. At levels of concern, businesses must provide warnings for and limit discharges of those chemicals. The lists of chemicals were compiled following systematic review of published data, including technical reports from the U.S. Public Health Service—National Toxicology Program (NTP), and evaluation of recommendations from authoritative bodies such as the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA). Given the large number of chemicals that are carcinogens or reproductive/developmental toxicants, regulatory concerns should focus on those that have high potential for human exposure, e.g., widely distributed or easily absorbed solvents, metals, environmental mixtures, or reactive agents. In this paper, we present a list of 33 potential priority carcinogens and reproductive/developmental toxicants, including alcoholic beverages, asbestos, benzene, chlorinated solvents, formaldehyde, glycol ethers, lead, tobacco smoke, and toluene.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Prioritizing candidate reproductive/developmental toxicants for evaluationReproductive Toxicology, 1992
- Risk Assessment for Carcinogens Under California's Proposition 65Risk Analysis, 1990
- Mortality of a cohort of workers in the styrene-butadiene polymer manufacturing industry (1943-1982).Environmental Health Perspectives, 1990
- An Incentive-Conscious Approach to Toxic Chemical ControlsEconomic Development Quarterly, 1989
- A Corrosive Fight Over California's Toxics LawScience, 1989
- Laboratory Animal Toxicity and Carcinogenesis TestingAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1988
- Warnings and the hazards of drinking alcoholic beverages during pregnancyTeratology, 1988
- California's Proposition 65: A ReplyScience, 1987
- Ranking the potential carcinogenic hazards to workers from exposures to chemicals that are tumorigenic in rodents.Environmental Health Perspectives, 1987
- The Predictive Value of Rodent Carcinogenicity Tests in the Evaluation of Human RisksAnnual Review of Pharmacology and Toxicology, 1979