Project Details
Description
The overarching goal of the European Human Biomonitoring Initiative (HBM4EU) is to generate knowledge to inform the safe management of chemicals and so protect human health. We will use human biomonitoring to understand human exposure to chemicals and resulting health impacts and will communicate with policy makers to ensure that our results are exploited in the design of new chemicals policies and the evaluation of existing measures.
Key objectives include:
• Harmonizing procedures for human biomonitoring across 26 countries, to provide policy makers with comparable data on human internal exposure to chemicals and mixtures of chemicals at EU level;
• Linking data on internal exposure to chemicals to aggregate external exposure and identifying exposure pathways and upstream sources. Information on exposure pathways is critical to the design of targeted policy measures to reduce exposure;
• Generating scientific evidence on the causal links between human exposure to chemicals and negative health outcomes; and
• Adapting chemical risk assessment methodologies to use human biomonitoring data and account for the contribution of multiple external exposure pathways to the total chemical body burden.
We will achieve these objectives by harmonizing human biomonitoring initiatives in 26 countries, drawing on existing expertise and building new capacities. By establishing National Hubs in each country to coordinate activities, we will create a robust Human Biomonitoring Platform at European level.
This initiative contributes directly to the improvement of health and well-being for all age groups, by investigating how exposure to chemicals affects the health of different groups, such as children, pregnant women, foetuses and workers. We will also investigate how factor such as behavior, lifestyle and socio-economic status influence internal exposure to chemicals across the EU population. This knowledge will support policy action to reduce chemical exposure and protect health.
Key objectives include:
• Harmonizing procedures for human biomonitoring across 26 countries, to provide policy makers with comparable data on human internal exposure to chemicals and mixtures of chemicals at EU level;
• Linking data on internal exposure to chemicals to aggregate external exposure and identifying exposure pathways and upstream sources. Information on exposure pathways is critical to the design of targeted policy measures to reduce exposure;
• Generating scientific evidence on the causal links between human exposure to chemicals and negative health outcomes; and
• Adapting chemical risk assessment methodologies to use human biomonitoring data and account for the contribution of multiple external exposure pathways to the total chemical body burden.
We will achieve these objectives by harmonizing human biomonitoring initiatives in 26 countries, drawing on existing expertise and building new capacities. By establishing National Hubs in each country to coordinate activities, we will create a robust Human Biomonitoring Platform at European level.
This initiative contributes directly to the improvement of health and well-being for all age groups, by investigating how exposure to chemicals affects the health of different groups, such as children, pregnant women, foetuses and workers. We will also investigate how factor such as behavior, lifestyle and socio-economic status influence internal exposure to chemicals across the EU population. This knowledge will support policy action to reduce chemical exposure and protect health.
Acronym | HBM4EU |
---|---|
Status | Finished |
Effective start/end date | 01/01/2017 → 31/12/2021 |
Collaborative partners
- Federal Environment Agency UBA (Beneficiary) (lead)
- Environment Agency Austria (Beneficiary)
- Scientific Institute of Public Health (WIV-ISP) (Beneficiary)
- Flemish Institute of Technological Research (Beneficiary)
- Croatian Institute of Public Health (Beneficiary)
- State General Laboratory, Cyprus. (Beneficiary)
- Masaryk University (Beneficiary)
- Capital Region of Denmark (Beneficiary)
- Technical University of Denmark (Beneficiary)
- National Research Centre for the Working Environment (Beneficiary)
- European Environment Agency (Beneficiary)
- National Institute for Health and Welfare (Beneficiary)
- Finnish Institute of Occupational Health (Beneficiary)
- French National Institute of Health (Beneficiary)
- Aristotle University of Thessaloniki (Beneficiary)
- National and Kapodistrian University of Athens (Beneficiary)
- National Institute of Environmental Health, Hungary. (Project partner)
- University of Iceland (Beneficiary)
- Health Service Executive, Dublin (Beneficiary)
- Ministry of Health, State of Israel (Beneficiary)
- Nationale Centre of Epidemiology, Surveillance and Health Promotion, Italien Institute of Health, Rome (Beneficiary)
- Ministero della Salute (Beneficiary)
- State Education Development Agency Republic of Latvia (Beneficiary)
- Riga Stradins University (Beneficiary)
- Lithuanian National Public Health Surveillance Laboratory (Beneficiary)
- Lithuanian Agency for Science, Innovation and Technology (Beneficiary)
- Laboratoire National de Santé, Luxembourg. (Project partner)
- Luxembourg Institute of Health (Project partner)
- National Institute for Public Health and the Environment, Bilthoven, Netherlands. (Beneficiary)
- Norwegian Institute of Public Health (Beneficiary)
- Nofer Institute of Occupational Medicine (Beneficiary)
- Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (Beneficiary)
- Instituto Nacional de Saúde Dr. Ricardo Jorge (Beneficiary)
- Portuguese Environment Agency (Project partner)
- Slovak Medical University (Beneficiary)
- Public Health Authority of the Slovak Republic (Beneficiary)
- National Institute of Public Health (Beneficiary)
- Jožef Stefan Institute (Beneficiary)
- Instituto de Salud Carlos III (Beneficiary)
- Swedish Environmental Protection Agency (Beneficiary)
- Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute (Swiss TPH) (Project partner)
- Public Health England (Beneficiary)
- Medical University of Vienna (Project partner)
- UMIT – Private University for Health Sciences, Medical Informatics and Technology (Project partner)
- AGES - Österreichische Agentur für Gesundheit und Ernährungssicherheit GmbH (Project partner)
- Medical University of Innsbruck (Project partner)
- University of Antwerp (Project partner)
- Flemish Government, Environment, Nature and Energy Department (Project partner)
- Hasselt University (Project partner)
- University of Leuven (Project partner)
- University of Liège (Project partner)
- Institute for Medical Research and Occupational Health (Project partner)
- University of Cyprus (Project partner)
- Institute of Health Information and Statistics of the Czech Republic (Project partner)
- University of Chemistry and Technology, Prague (Project partner)
- Institute of Experimental Medicine of the CAS (Project partner)
- Charles University (Project partner)
- Czech University of Life Sciences Prague (Project partner)
- International Clinical Research Center of St. Anne's University Hospital Brno (Project partner)
- University of Southern Denmark (Project partner)
- Aarhus University (Project partner)
- University of Copenhagen (Project partner)
- INRA, Institut national de la recherche agronomique (Project partner)
- Santé Publique France (Project partner)
- INRS - National Research and Safety Institute for the Prevention of Occupational Accidents and Diseases (Project partner)
- French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission (Project partner)
- CNRS - The National Center for Scientific Research (Project partner)
- French National Institute for Industrial Environment and Risks (Project partner)
- Agence nationale de sécurité sanitaire de l’alimentation, de l’environnement et du travail (Project partner)
- Federal Institute for Risk Assessment (Project partner)
- Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research – UFZ (Project partner)
- Fraunhofer Institute for Biomedical Engineering IBMT (Project partner)
- University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany (Project partner)
- Ruhr University Bochum (Project partner)
- University of Crete (Project partner)
- Hellenic Health Foundation, Athens (Project partner)
- Lazio Regional Health Service (Project partner)
- University of Naples Federico II (Project partner)
- University of Modena and Reggio Emilia (Project partner)
- IUSS - Istituto Universitario di Studi Superiori di Pavia (Project partner)
- University of Udine (Project partner)
- University of Latvia (Project partner)
- State Research Institute Centre for Innovative Medicine (Project partner)
- Lithuanian University of Health Sciences (Project partner)
- Utrecht University (Project partner)
- VU Amsterdam (Project partner)
- Wageningen University (Project partner)
- Radboud University Medical Center (Project partner)
- Netherlands Organisation for Applied Scientific Research (Project partner)
- University of Lisbon (Project partner)
- Lisbon School of Health Technology (Project partner)
- Directorate-General of Health (Project partner)
- Constantine the Philosopher University (Project partner)
- Slovak University of Technology in Bratislava (Project partner)
- University Medical Centre Ljubljana (Project partner)
- Chemicals Office of the Republic of Slovenia (Project partner)
- ISGlobal (Project partner)
- University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (Project partner)
- Institut d’Investigació Sanitària Pere Virgili (IISPV) (Project partner)
- Escuela Andaluza de Salud Pública (Project partner)
- University of Granada (Project partner)
- Lund University (Project partner)
- Karolinska Institute (Project partner)
- Umeå University (Project partner)
- Federal Office of Public Health (FOPH), Switzerland. (Project partner)
- Federal Office for the Environment FOEN (Project partner)
- Swiss School of Public Health (Project partner)
- Istituto Alpino di Chimica e Tossicologia (Project partner)
- Brunel University London (Project partner)
- Institute of Occupational Medicine (Project partner)
- British Geological Survey (Project partner)
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Related prizes
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Human Biomonitorying 4 (HB4)
Jensen, Tina Kold (Recipient), 2017
Prize: Prizes, scholarships, distinctions