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  • Imagine you take a lungful of air laced with toxic chemicals. How do you

  • know what the risk is of something unpleasant happening to you?

  • Risk Bites has already covered the difference between "hazard" - the potential

  • of something to cause harm - and "risk" - the probability or chance of harm occuring.

  • What we need to know is how do you get from one to the other?

  • If you want to put a number on the risk of something bad happening,

  • dose-response is what you need.

  • But what is it, exactly?

  • Try this experiment:

  • Hold your right ear lobe very lightly between your right index finger and your thumb.

  • What do you feel?

  • Probably not a lot.

  • Now increase your hold slightly.

  • You probably feel an increase in pressure on your ear.

  • Now pinch hard -

  • do you feel the pain?

  • Congratulations, you have just experienced dose-response!

  • The "dose" is the amount of pressure you put on your ear lobe,

  • and the "response" is the pain you feel.

  • The greater the pressure, the greater the response.

  • Dose-response is simply the relationship between how much of something our body is

  • exposed to, and the way it responds to that something.

  • When it comes to chemicals, the "dose" is the amount of stuff that gets into a

  • particular part of the body where it can do harm. And the "response" is the harm

  • a given amount of stuff does.

  • This becomes pretty important when a small amount of something is safe or

  • even good for you, while a large amount might to kill you.

  • A German-Swiss dude called Paracelsus put his finger on it, metaphorically speaking,

  • in the sixteenth century

  • when he declared that "it's the dose that makes the poison."

  • And in saying so he became a father of modern toxicology.

  • Dose-response is what allows scientists to connect hazard to risk,

  • and to put a number on the probability of something bad happening.

  • And because of this it is incredibly powerful.

  • But as we'll see in future Risk Bites in this series, it can also

  • get rather complex.

  • We'll be looking more closely at dose- responsive how it helps shed light on

  • risk over the next few months, but until then, stay safe.

Imagine you take a lungful of air laced with toxic chemicals. How do you

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リスク、ハザード、用量と反応の意味づけ (Risk, hazard, and making sense of dose and response)

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    kuoyumei に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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