Scientific Principles to Protect Public Health
Chronic disease, including cancer, diabetes, and neurological disease, is on the rise, in part driven by exposures to health-harming chemicals from fossil fuels and plastics. PRHE, in partnership with scientists, public health experts and health and environmental organizations, urges the Trump administration to adopt scientific principles that will improve and protect health.
Executive Summary
2024 recommendations to safeguard science integrity, stop corporate interferance in regulatory decision-making, use best available science, and protect health for all.
2020 Recommendations to Strengthen EPA
and its Mission to Protect Public Health
To help EPA put science and public health front and center, PRHE collaborated with top scientists and chemical policy experts from around the country to develop evidence-based recommendations to improve hazard and risk assessment, and prevent harms from chemicals and pollutants.
Below are a set of recommendations to strengthen EPA and its mission to protect public health in six critical areas.
How to Strengthen EPA and Its Mission to Protect Public Health
EPA Chemical Policy Recommendations
Chemical Policy
Using the Best Available Science to Assess Hazards and Risks of Industrial Chemicals Will Ensure Better Public Health Decisions
Systematic Review
To ensure EPA is making decisions based on the best available science, EPA must implement a science-based, validated systematic review method.
Conflicts of Interest
To reduce biased findings, financial conflicts of interest from industry funding in environmental health research as well as industry ties on EPA advisory committees should be eliminated to the extent possible.
Environmental Justice
We must adopt environmental justice principles in chemical policymaking and implement environmental statutes as Congress intended to fundamentally transform chemical policy to address health disparities from harmful chemicals.
Data Infrastructure
EPA must invest in systems to support collecting, organizing and making accessible environmental and health data that allow the Agency and the public to understand, monitor and act on environmental factors that influence health.
Research Funding
EPA must invest in research and workforce training to ensure it has the right and best science for decision-making and that its workforce keeps pace with current scientific advances.