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Back to California Reports. Chemical contaminants disposed or released into the environment have the potential to cause adverse health effects. However, a release does not always result in exposure.
People can only be exposed to a contaminant if they come in contact with that contaminant. Exposure may occur by breathing, eating, or drinking a substance containing the contaminant or by skin contact with a substance containing the contaminant. ATSDR scientists evaluate site conditions to determine if people could have been a past scenario , are a current scenario , or could be a future scenario exposed to site-related contaminants.
When evaluating exposure pathways, ATSDR identifies whether exposure to contaminated media soil, water, air, waste, or biota has occurred, is occurring, or will occur through ingestion, dermal skin contact, or inhalation. If exposure was, is, or could be possible, ATSDR scientists then considers whether contamination is present at levels that might affect public health.
ATSDR scientists select contaminants for further evaluation by comparing them against health-based comparison values. Comparison values are developed by ATSDR from scientific literature available on exposure and health effects. These comparison values are derived for each of the different media and reflect an estimated contaminant concentration that is not likely to cause adverse health effects for a given chemical, assuming a standard daily contact rate e.
Comparison values are not thresholds for adverse health effects. ATSDR comparison values establish contaminant concentrations many times lower than levels at which no effects were observed in experimental animals or human epidemiologic studies. If contaminant concentrations are above comparison values, ATSDR further analyzes exposure variables for example, duration and frequency , the toxicology of the contaminant, other epidemiology studies, and the weight of evidence for health effects.