Environmental & Public Health

Fellow Story

From Lab to Law: Using Science to Shape Public Policy (Switzer Foundation Webinar Series)

Amy Clipp gave a webinar for us that offered ideas for bridging the gap between science and policy, with a particular focus on helping scientists apply their work in complex, political environments. Her stories are based on lessons learned advising the State of Louisiana on its 2012 Coastal Master Plan.
November 15, 2012
Fellow Story

Bradman finds high formaldehyde levels at day care centers

UC Berkeley researchers have recorded high levels of the carcinogen formaldehyde at dozens of Northern California day care facilities. Eighty-seven percent of the day care centers studied showed formaldehyde levels above exposure the state considers acceptable during an eight hour period, although not significantly higher than in a typical home. “The primary source is from particle board and other kinds of pressed furniture and plywood,” said Asa Bradman, the study’s lead author. Read more
November 13, 2012
Fellow Story

Sterling on potential costs of health insurance exchanges in Vermont

Thousands of middle income Vermonters could see their health care costs spike when a new federal exchange goes into place in 2014. A group of advocates is urging the Legislature to create a special state subsidy program to make up the difference.
November 9, 2012
Fellow Story

Building Healthier Hospitals

We usually think of hospitals as a beacon of health, but they can have an impact on workers and patients.
October 23, 2012
Fellow Story

Mike Wilson's keynote: "In the Arc of History: AIHA and the Movement to Reform the Toxic Substances Control Act"

In his experience as a firefighter, paramedic, union officer, green chemistry leader, and now Director of the UC Berkeley Labor Occupational Health Program, Switzer Fellow Mike Wilson (2002) has learned that when someone is injured, sickened, or killed on the job, the immediate cause is usually obvious: an unguarded machine, a blocked exit door, a toxic chemical, exposure to silica, and so forth.
October 17, 2012
Fellow Story

Klein on challenges of using local food in hospitals

At dawn, at the loading dock behind the kitchen at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital of Ann Arbor, Michigan, small lift loaders and handcarts trundle boxes from food trucks to storage rooms. The perishables go straight to immense walk-in refrigerators packed with processed produce—buckets of cubed melons, bags of pre-washed lettuce, packages of onions diced by the quarter-, half-, and three-quarter inch.
October 17, 2012
Fellow Story

Cleaning the Beaches of Mahahual

The Los Angeles Times also ran an excellent story on this subject: "An exquisite Mexico beach, cursed by plastic" (January 27. 2012)
September 28, 2012
Fellow Story

Morello-Frosch on lower birthweights of babies born following 2003 wildfires

Babies born to women pregnant during wildfires in Southern California in 2003 tended to have slightly lower birthweights than babies born to women pregnant in the same area at other times, according to a recently released study out of UC Berkeley.
September 24, 2012
Fellow Story

Chiang on how IT departments can make their work greener

Sue Chiang, pollution prevention co-director of the Oakland, California-based Center for Environmental Health, spoke with CIO Journal about how IT departments can make their work greener. Read the full story
August 6, 2012
Fellow Story

Vorhees on assessing health risks in Nigeria

"I've worked on contaminated sites for more than 20 years and I've never seen anything on the scale that I saw in Nigeria," said Donna Vorhees, an adjunct assistant professor of environmental health at BUSPH. "They're not just exposed – these people are actually living in petroleum." Read the full story
July 19, 2012