NEW: Coccidioidomycosis is increasing in incidence throughout the US Southwest. In an analysis of long-term trends, Weaver et al. identify configurations of exposure and climate conditions that may be helping to drive the increase ➡️ https://buff.ly/3PxhOSk
EHP Publishing
Book and Periodical Publishing
Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 833 followers
A leader at the intersection of environmental health sciences and scholarly publishing with support from the NIEHS.
About us
EHP Publishing publishes Environmental Health Perspectives (EHP) and the Journal of Health and Pollution (JHP) with support from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences. As a leader in fully transparent scientific reporting, EHP Publishing is committed to the highest standards in peer review and publication ethics. As Diamond Open Access journals, all EHP and JHP content is available for free. However, some images published in the journals and posted on EHP Publishing's social media channels may be copyrighted. Such images may not be used without approval from the copyright holder.
- Website
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https://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/
External link for EHP Publishing
- Industry
- Book and Periodical Publishing
- Company size
- 11-50 employees
- Headquarters
- Research Triangle Park, North Carolina
- Type
- Government Agency
- Founded
- 1972
- Specialties
- environmental science, public health, environmental health, toxicology, risk assessment, environmental health science, epidemiology, experimental toxicology, exposure science, systematic review, and meta-analyses
Locations
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Primary
PO Box 12233
K3-01
Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 27709, US
Employees at EHP Publishing
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Windy Boyd
Senior Science Editor at Environmental Health Perspectives
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Cynthia Washam
Independent Writing and Editing Professional
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Florencia Pascual
Scientific Communications Manager at FUJIFILM Holdings America Corporation | Science Writer
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Ami Zota
Associate Professor of Environmental Health Sciences | Founding Director, Agents of Change in Environmental Justice
Updates
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NEW: In a study of Campylobacter infections in the US Southwest, Austhof et al. found the magnitude of weather-related rises in cases appears related to soil moisture levels prior to a rainfall event. Read our summary ➡️ https://buff.ly/4j6yVIa
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NEW: Ndikubwimana et al. assessed associations between household air pollution and glycated hemoglobin. Their results, while inconclusive, point to BMI as a potential effect modifier between the two ➡️ https://buff.ly/3C352YC
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NEW: Karakwende et al. characterized exposure to household air pollution among pregnant Rwandan women. While lighting and cooking practices predicted exposures to a degree, the authors found that substantial variability remained unexplained ➡️ https://buff.ly/40cyLWZ
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NEW: Hilz et al. assessed the effects of direct and ancestral exposures to EDCs across 6 generations on anxiety-like behaviors in male rats using their “two hits, three generations apart” multigenerational EDC exposure experimental model ➡️ https://buff.ly/3DFPevx
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NEW: Hilz et al. assessed the effects of direct and ancestral exposure to EDCs across six generations on anxiety-like behaviors in female rats using their “two hits, three generations apart” multigenerational EDC exposure experimental model ➡️ https://buff.ly/4gYbX40
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NEW: The healthcare sector has made progress in addressing its environmental impact, but more is needed, write Stobernack et al.—starting with simple standardized methods for environmental impact assessment and greater data transparency ➡️ https://buff.ly/4gSogPl
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NEW: Many hospital services are a major source of greenhouse gas emissions. Kouwenberg et al. quantified the carbon footprint of various care pathways and identified hotspots, a first step toward targeted and prioritized mitigation efforts ➡️ https://buff.ly/41N61Xt
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NEW: Pooling biospecimen samples before assay could both save money and conserve samples for future research. Shi et al. developed and evaluated a pooling strategy for case-cohort analyses that relate an exposure to risk of a rare disease ➡️ https://buff.ly/3VVB0wP
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NEW: California’s Proposition 65 established a list of chemicals aimed at discouraging their use in consumer products. Knox et al. explored whether Prop 65 did, in fact, reduce population-level exposures to these chemicals. Read our summary ➡️ https://buff.ly/4gpcvAb