Annals of
Burns and Fire Disasters - vol. XII - n° 3 - September 1999
BOOK REVIEWS
NEW BOOK
FLAME RETARDANTS:
TRIS (CHLOROPROPYL) PHOSPATE
AND TRIS(2-CHLOROETHYL) PHOSPHATE
WHO Environmental Health Criteria, No. 209
1998, xix + 106 pages (English with summaries in French and Spanish)
ISBN 92 4 157209 4
Sw. fr. 27 / US $ 24.30 - In developing countries: Sw. fr. 18.90 - Order No. 1160209
This book evaluates the
risks to human health and the environment posed by exposure to three flame retardants:
tris(I-chloro-2-propyl) phosphate (TCPP), tris(1,3-dichloro-2-propyl) phosphate (TDCPP),
and tris(2-chloroethyl) phosphate (TCEP). In view of their many similarities, TCPP and
TDCPP are covered together. Data on all three flame retardants are extremely limited and
largely confined to studies of environmental levels and adverse effects detected in
experimental animals and in vitro test systems.
The monograph on TCPP and TDCPP describes manufacturing processes and summarizes current
uses. The vast majority of TCPP is used in rigid polyurethane foams, with main
applications in insulation for buildings and in refrigerator casings. TDCPP is likewise
added as a flame retardant to polyurethane foam and has some additional applications as a
flame retardant for non-woven fabrics. For both chemicals, studies show that residues are
found infrequently and at low concentrations in food items. For TCPP, traces have been
detected in industrial and domestic effluents but not in surface water or drinking-water.
Traces of TDCPP have been detected in sewage effluent, river water, seawater,
drinkingwater, and water sediment, and in fish. In view of the low volatility of both
chemicals, the report concludes that human exposure from these sources will be very low
and will not present an acute health hazard for the general population.
Likewise, no adverse effects on the environment are anticipated from the use of either of
these flame retardants.
Experimental studies of TCPP in laboratory animals demonstrate low to moderate toxicity by
the oral, dermal, and inhalation routes. Tests indicate that the chemical is neither a
skin nor an eye irritant. No studies were available to evaluate reproductive toxicity,
immunotoxicity, or carcinogenic potential. In vitro and in vivo mutagenicity
studies produced negative results.
Toxicity studies of TDCPP show low to moderate acute toxicity by the oral route and low
acute toxicity by the dermal route. The report found no evidence of teratogenicity or
mutagenicity. A single carcinogenicity study found an increased occurrence of several
turnouts at all exposure levels tested in both male and female rats. In the absence of
data on the mechanisms of carcinogenic action, the relevance of these findings to humans
could not be assessed. The limited studies of occupationally exposed workers were judged
inadequate for evaluation.
The second monograph evaluates TCEP, a flame retardant with declining uses in the
production of liquid polyester resins and in textile back-coating formulations. Traces
have been detected in river water, seawater, drinking-water, sediment, fish and shellfish,
and a few food items. Experimental studies show low to moderate acute oral toxicity. In
repeat dose experiments, TCEP caused adverse effects on the brain, liver, and kidneys. ne
report concludes that TCEP is not an irritant to the eye or skin and is not teratogenic,
although some adverse effects on the fertility of male rats and mice have been
demonstrated. Data indicating low environmental exposures support the conclusion that TCEP
poses a very low risk of adverse health effects for the general population. Use of TCEP is
not expected to cause any adverse effects on the environment.
NEW WHO BOOK
RAPID HEALTH ASSESSMENT PROTOCOLS FOR EMERGENCIES
1999, vi + 97 pages (available in English; French and Spanish in preparation)
ISBN 92 4 154515 1
Sw. fr. 31 / US $ 27.90 - in developing countries Sw. fr. 21.70 - Order No.
1150463
This book provides a
collection of ten protocols for conducting rapid health assessments in the immediate
aftermath of different types of emergencies. Noting the vital importance of rapid and
accurate information in the earliest stage of an emergency, the protocols respond to the
urgent need for common standardized technical tools for assessing damage, gauging health
risks, and gathering the information immediately needed by decision-makers at the national
and international level.
The protocols were prepared by WHO in collaboration with a large number of international
agencies and experts with broad experience in the field of emergency management. Although
all protocols follow a common format, each is specific to the circumstances, potential
hazards, and immediate information needs that characterize a distinct type of emergency.
Emphasis is placed on the exact information needed, the best sources of data and methods
for rapid collection, and the specific questions that need to be answered in order to draw
initial conclusions and direct immediate actions. Although the advantages of using
experienced assessments teams are stressed, the book also explains how the protocols can
be used to train general health workers as part of emergency preparedness.
The book opens with an introductory protocol covering the aims and methods,
responsibilities, complexities, and inherent difficulties of rapid health assessments.
Addressed to health authorities as well as assessment teams, the chapter also includes
abundant advice on preparedness for emergencies. Details range from the comparative need
for speed in different types of emergencies, through a suggested format for presenting the
results of assessments, to a list of common logistic, organizational, and technical
errors. Advice on the best working practices, including ways to avoid being an
"emergency tourist", is also provided.
Against this background, the additional nine protocols are presented according to a common
format which covers the purpose of the assessment, preparedness, the steps to follow
during the assessment, assessing the impact on health, assessing local response capacity
and immediate needs, and presenting results. A general protocol on epidemics of infectious
origin is followed by protocols specific to meningitis outbreaks, outbreaks of viral
haemorrhagic fever, including yellow fever, and outbreaks of acute diarrhoeal disease,
with information specific to dysentery and cholera.
Sudden-impact natural disasters are covered in the next protocol, which includes a
day-by-day list of information priorities for different stages of the disaster. A protocol
dealing with sudden population displacements offers guidelines for conducting rapid health
assessments in all emergencies caused by sudden displacement of refugees or population
groups within a country. Included are a sample checklist for rapid assessments and a
sample form for weekly reports on morbidity and mortality. Subsequent protocols deal with
the special situations of nutritional emergencies and chemical emergencies, including
those caused by food contaminated with chemicals or toxins. The final protocol addresses
the difficult task of conducting assessments in complex emergencies in which the cause of
the emergency, as well as the assistance to the afflicted, is complicated by intense
levels of political considerations. The protocol includes a form which has recently been
used for rapid health assessment at local level in Bosnia and Herzegovnia.
The book concludes with a brief summary of survey techniques, followed by a tabular
presentation of reference values for assessing needs, hazards, and logistic requirements,
in developing countries.
The MBC is WHO Collaborating Centre in the field of burns and fire disasters.
ADVANCES IN ISSUE
BANKING, Vol. I
G.O. Phillips (The North Wales and Oswestry Bank, UK), R. von Versen
German Institute for Cell and Tissue Replacement, Germany)
D.M. Strong (Puget Sound Blood Center, USA), and A. Nather
(National University Hospital Bone Bank, Singapore)
1997, 340 pp., ISBN 981-02-3190-3; price $US 68 / Y47
This volume initiates the
publication of a series of specific articles in the field of tissue banking. The book is
an instrument for the spreading and extension of know-how in the sector, which the authors
thus put at the disposal of all those who in their various specialities use a tissue bank
in their professional and research activity. The volume opens with a description and
comparison of "Regulatory models for safety and quality of allografts" in Europe
and the United States. Chapter 2 considers '7ransplant donation co-ordination" and
describes experiences in the United Kingdom, together with the Spanish model. The
following chapters deal with the use of autologous bone in orthopaedics, the use of foetal
membranes and autologous keratinocyte cultures, and heart valve banking. The volume is
completed by an ample consideration of the principles of cell and tissue conservation and
sterilization.
Contents: Regulatory models for the safety and quality of
allografts; Transplant donation co-ordination; Allografts in orthopaedics; Foetal
membranes and cultured keratinocytes; Heart valve banking; Cell and tissue preservation;
Sterilization.
Readership: Orthopaedic surgeons, general surgeons, cardiologists,
transplantologists, cryobiologists, National Health regulators, and tissue bankers.
ADVANCES IN ISSUE
BANKING, Vol. 2
G.O. Phillips (The North Wales and Oswestry Bank, UK), R. von Versen
German Institute for Cell and Tissue Replacement, Germany)
D.M. Strong (Puget Sound Blood Center, USA), and A. Nather
(National University Hospital Bone Bank, Singapore)
1998, 384 pp., ISBN 981-02-3534-8; price $US 78 / t52
The authors of the first volume in the series continue in the same manner in this second
volume, considering the activity of Dr Kenneth W. Sell, the pioneer of the modern concept
of issue banking. The volume presents the important contributions that the various
authors, each in his own field, have given to the development of medical science. Ample
chapters are dedicated to important topics of current interest such as the
cryoconservation of tissues and organs, the use of allografts in cardiovascular surgery
and neurosurgery, as well as the clinical use of human skin, biological membranes, and
dermis preserved in the tissue bank.
Contents: The contribution of Kenneth W. Sell to the progress of
tissue banking; Progress in blood transfusion and marrow transplantation; Immunological
developments in support of orthopaedic surgery; Cryopreservation of organs and tissue;
Osseous and osteochondral transplantation; The contribution of issue banking in
cardiovascular surgery and neurosurgery; Banking and clinical use of human skin;
Biological membranes and acellular dermis.
Readership: Orthopaedic surgeons, general surgeons, neurosurgeons,
cardiologists, transplant surgeons, cryobiologists, health regulators, tissue bankers,
burn specialists, students.
N. D'Arpa M.D.
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