@article {1390706, title = {Evolving Science and Practice of Risk Assessment}, journal = {Risk Anal}, volume = {41}, year = {2021}, note = {

PMID:\ 33295028;\ PMCID:\ PMC8257268\ (available on\ ); DOI:\ 10.1111/risa.13647

}, month = {2020 Dec 08}, pages = {571-583}, abstract = {Managing public health risks from environmental contaminants has historically relied on a risk assessment process defined by the regulatory context in which these risks are assessed. Risk assessment guidance follows a straightforward, chemical-by-chemical approach to inform regulatory decisions around the question "what is the risk-based concentration protective of human and ecological health outcomes?" Here we briefly summarize regulatory risk assessment in the context of innovative risk assessment approaches based on an evolving understanding of the underlying scientific disciplines that support risk analysis more broadly. We discuss scientific versus regulatory tensions in the application of these approaches for future risk assessments, and challenges in translating our improved understanding of the underlying scientific complexity to the regulatory landscape to better inform decision making that extends beyond conventional regulatory mandates.
PMID:\ 33295028;\ PMCID:\ PMC8257268\ (available on\ ); DOI:\ 10.1111/risa.13647}, issn = {1539-6924}, doi = {10.1111/risa.13647}, url = {https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33295028/}, author = {von Stackelberg, Katherine and Williams, Pamela R D} }