Author: Jack Caravanos (Page 2 of 2)

New York Times – Letter to the Editor

Photo

Ivory set on fire in Nairobi National Park in Kenya last year. CreditBen Curtis/Associated Press

To the Editor:

Re “Ivory Prices May Mean a Reprieve for Elephants” (news article, March 30):

While global efforts to disband the elephant ivory trade should be commended, I was quite disheartened to see the continued burning of ivory tusks. Aside from the fact that ivory, essentially bone, is not terribly combustible, the burning generates vast amounts of air pollution in the form of fine respirable particulates. And this is done in countries that already have large populations exposed to fine particulates from dung-fueled indoor cook stoves.

So while the story presents an ecological success, unfortunately, the local and regional public health impact is serious and being ignored. In short, this burning must stop. There are many environmentally friendly ways of destroying elephant ivory — such as crushing, pulverizing or even burial at sea, which can help restore marine environments — that do not add to the already high public health burden in these communities.

JACK CARAVANOS, NEW YORK

The writer is a clinical professor of environmental public health at the College of Global Public Health, New York University.

Licenses / Accreditations

  • Authorized OSHA 10hr/30hr Construction Industry Health & Safety Trainer Jan 2016 – present
  • Asbestos Building Inspector / Management Planner (US EPA) 1987 – present
  • Board Certified in Industrial Hygiene (CIH), American Board of Industrial Hygiene 1990 – present
  • Board Certified in Industrial Safety (CSP), American Board of Industrial Hygiene 1991-1998
  • NJ Licensed Lead Inspector / Risk Assessor 1996 – 2006
  • 40 hr Hazardous Waste Operation and Emergency Response Training (as per 29 CFR 1910.120)

Contact Information

Jack Caravanos, DrPH, CIH
New York University
College of Global Public Health
Program in Global Health and Env Public Health
14 East 4th Street, Room 309
New York, NY 10012

jack@nyu.edu
212-992-5624
Skype name: jackcaravanos
Twitter: @jcaravanos

Biography

Profile Pic

Few people have the opportunity to jump on a motorcycle and travel around the jungles of Madre de Dios in the Peruvian Amazon studying toxic substances. But for Dr. Jack Caravanos, our new Clinical Professor of Environmental Public Health Sciences at CGPH, who is also Director of Research at Pure Earth, this is everyday life in the field. Carrying only a few hand-held machines in his backpack, he travels to remote areas of Zambia, Indonesia, and Bolivia to study lead and other toxic wastes in the earth and provide safe and healthy solutions to improve community health. In cooperation with research partner, Pure Earth, an international non-profit organization dedicated to solving pollution problems in low- and middle-income countries, Jack is working to “quantify the global burden of disease of air and soil pollutants.” Using a cooperative model, he works within the structures of local governments to convince them with evidence-based research what steps they can take to lower pollution levels in the soil. With sometimes 500 known toxic waste sites in a given country, there is much research to do and the impact on reducing the toxins can be staggering.

“Because of the elusive nature of pollution, people who are impacted by contaminants don’t see the effects right away in comparison to malaria or other diseases that cause immediate health issues,” Jack said. “If you do the math and look at the DALYS (Disability-Adjusted Life Years) in certain countries, the quantities of environmental diseases are significantly elevated and in some countries, it can exceed that of malaria.” In many of the countries where Jack is studying contamination, he has found the impact of lead poisoning cases far exceeds what we’ve ever seen in the U.S. in the 1970s and 1980s.

One of the biggest obstacles to controlling lead contamination is the improper recycling of batteries. A common practice in low- to- middle-income countries is to resell automobile batteries for their 20 pounds of lead. Today, lead sells for $1 a pound and $20 can convert to valuable sums in most countries. Jack said, “What happens is that with improper disposal of batteries, the acid in the batteries leaches into the soil and water where children are then exposed and develop lead poisoning. Countries are trying to improve the process and regulate automotive battery recycling by insisting that old batteries are handed in when the battery is replaced to moderate the waste stream. But it’s been difficult because it is a source of income for a lot of people. You have to convince them that this can reduce your lifespan, hurt your children, etc. That’s the challenge when, in many of the same countries, cases of cholera, malaria and other diseases take priority over environmental concerns,” he said.

“With technology, these problems are so fixable. And we’ve done it. The U.S. is very clean: our water, our land, and our diet have never been cleaner or free of unintentional contaminants. But when you go into Manila or Nairobi, they don’t have the resources or the technology to improve their water system. This is what I want to address in other countries,” Jack added.

In partnership with Pure Earth, Jack is also studying the impact of gold extraction with mercury in Peru (in partnership with the U.S. Department of State) and Indonesia (in partnership with the Global Environmental Fund.) Eighty percent of today’s gold comes from extraction. One method of extracting gold from rock sediment using mercury includes heating the mercury and sediment. Miners handling the materials are in danger of mercury poisoning. There are a couple of philosophies: to either ban the use of mercury in gold mining or to find safer alternatives. Jack and his research team are planning interventions to teach safer techniques for gold extraction.

Currently, Jack is doing research in Kabwe, Zambia, in a mining town to assess community exposures to lead from historical lead smelting and mining activities there. Jack is hoping to bring a team of students to Zambia, including environmental students to do the measurements, as well as, biostatisticians, epidemiologists and health policy writers to help develop policy proposals to improve laws around environmental remediation. He’d like to use Kabwe as a way to help students get hands-on experience measuring contamination in the earth. Learning these practices will provide students with strong background skills that they can take into the field. He also has ongoing projects in Indonesia (mercury) Ghana (e-waste) for which he could recruit student researchers.

At the same time, Jack hopes to provide the Kabwe town council with a report on the health impacts associated with the former lead smelter, a template for ways to institute safer mining practices, and policy recommendations. Simultaneously, Jack is hopeful to make CGPH Environmental Science courses available to government leaders and local development agencies over time to bring sustainable change in approaches to environmental health issues. This fall, Jack teaches courses at CGPH: Online Environmental Health for MPH students, and the classroom-based undergraduate course, Environmental Health in a Global World. He especially likes teaching the undergraduate course. “It’s so rewarding to say something or share something with this group of bright-eyed and bushy-tailed students and see the light bulb go on when you say something that really rings true to them. I’m enjoying it.” Broadly speaking, his aim is to help them learn from opinions.

Jack holds a DrPH in Environmental Health from Columbia University and a Master of Science from NYU in Environmental Health Engineering. He is also a member of the American Industrial Hygiene Association and is board certified in Industrial Hygiene (CIH)

Publications

  1. Ericson, B., Hariojati, N., Susilorini, B., Crampe, L.F., Fuller, R., Taylor, M.P. and Caravanos, J., 2018. Assessment of the prevalence of lead-based paint exposure risk in Jakarta, Indonesia. Science of The Total Environment. Dec 2018
  2. Sharma P, McCartor A, Guin P, Taylor MP, Fuller R; A Meta-Analysis of Blood Lead Levels in India and the Attributable Burden of Disease; Environment International, Sept 2018
  3. Landrigan PJ, Fuller R, Hu H, Caravanos J, Cropper ML, Hanrahan D, Sandilya K, Chiles T, Kumar P and Suk WA; Pollution and Global Health – An Agenda for Prevention, Environmental Health Perspectives, July 2018
  4. Heacock, M., Trottier, B., Adhikary, S., Asante, K.A., Basu, N., Brune, M.N., Caravanos, J., Carpenter, D., Cazabon, D., Chakraborty, P. and Chen, A., Prevention-intervention strategies to reduce exposure to e-waste. Reviews on Environmental Health, https://doi.org/10.1515/reveh-2018-0014, May 2018
  5. Caravanos J, Risks and Management of Airborne Mercury Levels at Artisanal Gold Processing Shops in the Peruvian Amazon, Occupational and Environmental Medicine; 75:A317, May 2018
  6. Fuller R, Rahona E, Fisher S, Caravanos J, Webb D, Kass D, Matte T, Landrigan PJ; “Pollution and Non-Communicable disease: Time to End the Neglect”; The Lancet Planetary Health, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/S2542-5196 (18)30020-2, March 2018
  7. Ericson B, Caravanos J, Depratt C, Santos C, Cabral M, Fuller R, Taylor M; “Cost Effectiveness of Environmental Lead Risk Mitigation in Low and Middle Income Countries”, GeoHealth, DOI: 10.1002/2017GH000109, February 2018
  8. Johnson G, Pavilonis B, Caravanos J, and Grassman J; “Geo-spatial Characterization of Soil Mercury and Arsenic at a High-Altitude Bolivian Gold Mine”; Bulletin of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology; https://doi.org/10.1007/s00128-017-2213-4, November 2017
  9. Bose-O’Reilly S, Yabe J, Makuma J, Schutzmeier P, Ericson B, Caravanos J; Lead Intoxicated Children in Kabwe, Zambia; Environmental Research; http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envres.2017.10.024, October 2017
  10. Estrada-Sánchez D, Ericson B, Arturo Juárez-Pérez CA, Aguilar-Madrid G, Hernández L, Gualtero S, and Caravanos J;”Loss of IQ in children of Mexican potters.” Medical Journal of the Mexican Social Security Institute [Online], 55.3 (2017): 292-299.  8 May 2017
  11. Caravanos J. “Environmental Contamination in Nigeria.” Journal of Health and Pollution 7.13 (2017): 1-1
  12. Pavilonis B, Grassman J, Johnson G, Diaz Y, Caravanos J; “Characterization and Risk of Exposure to Metals from Artisanal Gold Mining Operations in the Bolivian Andes”, Environmental Research, Vol 154, (2017)
  13. Ericson B, Landrigan P, Taylor MP, Frostad J, Caravanos J, Keith J, and Fuller R; (2016). The Global Burden of Lead Toxicity Attributable to Informal Used Lead-Acid Battery (ULAB) Sites. Annals of Global Health November 2016
  14. Dowling R, Caravanos J, Grigsby P, Rivera A, Ericson B, Amoyaw-Osai Y, Akuffo B, Fuller R; “Estimating the Prevalence of Toxic Waste Sites in Low- and Middle-Income Countries”, Annals of Global Public Health, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aogh.2016.07.008 August 2016
  15. Caravanos J, Carrelli J, Dowling R, Pavilonis B, Ericson B, Fuller R; “Burden of Disease Resulting from Lead Exposures at Toxic Waste Sites in Argentina, Mexico and Uruguay”, Environmental Health; DOI: 1186/s12940-016-0151-y June 2016
  16. Hanrahan D, Ericson B, Caravanos J; “Protecting Communities by Remediating Polluted Sites Worldwide”, ICE, Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers, UK, (Jan 2016), doi:10.1680/jcien.15.00034
  17. Sharov P, Dowling R, Gogishvilli M, Jones B, Caravanos J, McCartor A, Kashdan Z; “The Prevalence of Toxic Hotspots in Former Soviet Countries”, Environmental Pollution (Jan 2016) pp. 346-353, doi:0.1016/j.envpol.2016.01.019
  18. Dowling R, Ericson B, Caravanos J, Grigsby P, Amoyaw-Osei, Y, “Spatial Associations between Contaminated land and Socio Demographics in Ghana”, International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, Oct 2015, 12(10), 13587-13601; doi:10.3390/10.3390/ijerph121013587
  19. Forouzanfar, Mohammad H., et al. “Global, regional, and national comparative risk assessment of 79 behavioural, environmental and occupational, and metabolic risks or clusters of risks in 188 countries, 1990–2013: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2013.” The Lancet (2015)
  20. Téllez-Rojo MM and Caravanos, J. “Exposición a plomo: una tarea pendiente en México. (Lead exposure: a pending task in Mexico.)” Salud Pública de México 57.2 (2015): 115-116.
  21. Caravanos J, Fuller R, Robinson S; Severe Environmental Contamination and Elevated Blood Lead Levels Among Children – Zambia, 2014; Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, CDC, Nov 7, 2014
  22. Caravanos J, Gutiérrez-Hernandez L, Ericson B, Fuller R; Comparison of Burden of Disease from Toxic Waste Sites with other Recognized Public Health Threats in India, Indonesia and the Philippines; Journal of Health and Pollution, Vol. 4 Issue 7, October 2014
  23. Caravanos J, Dowling R, Tellez-Rojo MM, Cantoral A, Kobrosly R, Estrada D, Orjuela M, Gualtero S, Ericson B, Rivera A, Fuller R; Blood Lead Levels in Mexico and Pediatric Burden of Disease, Annals of Global Health, Volume 80, Issue 4, Pages 278–2851, 0.1016/j.aogh.2014.09.001, July–August 2014 (published in English and Spanish)
  24. Caravanos J, Gualtero S, Dowling R, Ericson B, Keith J, Hanrahan D, Fuller R; A Simplified Risk Ranking System for Prioritizing Toxic Pollution Sites in Low- and Middle-Income Countries; Annals of Global Health, Volume 80, Issue 4, doi:10.1016/j.aogh.2014.08.002, July–August 2014
  25. Chatham-Stephens K, Caravanos J, Ericson B, Sunga-Amparo J, Susilorini B, Sharma P, Landrigan PJ, Fuller; The Pediatric Burden of Disease from Lead Exposure at Toxic Waste Sites in Low and Middle Income Countries in 2010; Environmental Research, Volume 132, Pages 379-383, July 2014
  26. Kwame-Aboh IJ, Sampson M, Atiemo M, Nyaab M, Abra-Kom L, Caravanos J, Kuranchie-Mensah, H. (2013). Assessing Levels of Lead Contamination in Soil and Predicting Pediatric Blood Lead Levels in Tema, Ghana. Journal of Health and Pollution, 3(5). May 2013
  27. Chatham-Stephens K, Caravanos J, Ericson B, Sunga-Amparo J, Susilorini B, Sharma P, Landrigan PJ, Fuller R. Burden of Disease from Toxic Waste Sites in India, Indonesia, and the Philippines in 2010, Environ Health Perspectives; .doi:10.1289/ehp.1206127, May 2013
  28. Jones DE, Pérez MC, Ericson B, Sánchez DE, Gualtero S, Smith-Jones A, Caravanos J; Childhood Blood Lead Reductions Following Removal of Leaded Ceramic Glazes in Artisanal Pottery Production: A Success Story, Journal of Health and Pollution, 3(4), pp23-29, 2013
  29. Ericson BC, Caravanos J, Chatham-Stephens K, Landrigan PJ; Approaches to Systematic Assessment of Environmental Exposures Posed at Hazardous Waste Sites in the Developing World: The Toxic Sites Identification Project, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment; Volume 185, Issue 2, pp1755-1766, February 2013
  30. Caravanos J, Chatham-Stephens K, Ericson BC, Landrigan PJ, Fuller R; The Burden of Disease from Pediatric Lead Exposure at Hazardous Waste Sites in 7 Asian Countries, Environmental Research, Volume 120, Pages 119–125, January 2013
  31. Caravanos J, Clarke EE, Osei CS, Amoyaw-Osei Y; Exploratory Health Assessment of Chemical Exposures at an e-Waste Recycling and Scrapyard Facility in Accra, Ghana, Journal of Health and Pollution, 3.4, 2013
  32. Caravanos J, Ericson B, Ponce-Canchihuamán J, Hanrahan D, Block M, Susilorini B; Rapid Assessment of Environmental Health Risks Posed by Mining Operations in Low and Middle Income Countries: Select Case Studies, Environmental Science and Pollution Research, 1-8 2012
  33. Rosen M, Caravanos J, Udasin I, Milek D, An Innovative Approach to Interdisciplinary Occupational Safety and Health Education, American Journal of Industrial Medicine, 54(7): 515-20, July 2011
  34. Caravanos J, Clarke E, Lambertson C, Assessing the Exposure Risks and Potential Health Effects from Chemical Contamination at an Electronic and Electrical Recycling and Waste Site in Accra, Ghana; Journal of Health and Pollution, Vol 1, No 1, February 2011
  35. Vargas, GG García, M. Rubio Andrade, MG Rosales González, R. Goytia Acevedo, G. García, J. L. Arenas, R. Meza Velazquez, and Caravanos. “Contaminacion por Metales en Suelos de la Ciudad de Torreon, Coahuila, Mexico (Metal Contamination in Soil of the City of Torreon, Coahuila, Mexico)” Revista Chapingo Serie Zonas Aridas 6 (2007): 165-168.
  36. Weiss A, Caravanos J, Blaise M , Jaeger R; Distribution of lead in urban roadway grit and its association with elevated steel structures; Chemosphere, Vol 65: pp 1762-1771; December 2006
  37. Caravanos J, Weiss A, Jaeger R; Long Term Exterior Dust Lead Loadings in New York City; Environmental Research, Vol 100(2): pp 159-164; February 2006
  38. Caravanos J, Weiss A, Blaise M, Jaeger R; A Survey of Spatially Distributed Exterior Dust Lead Loadings in New York City; Environmental Research, Vol 100(2): pp 165-172; February 2006
  39. Klitzman S, J. Caravanos J, C. Belanoff, L. Rothenberg; A multi-hazard, multi-strategy approach to home remediation. Environmental Research, Vol 99(3): pp 294-306; Nov. 2005
  40. Klitzman, J. Caravanos, D. Deitcher, L. Rothenberg, Belanoff, R. Kramer, L Cohen;  Prevalence and Predictors of Residential Health Hazards: Results of a Pilot Study. Journal of Occupational and Environmental Hygiene, Vol 2: pp 293-301; June 2005
  41. Caravanos, Sewell G.H., and Shen T.T.; Validation of Mathematical Models Predicting the Emission Rates of Volatile Chemicals from Contaminated Soils; Air Pollution Control Association 78th Annual Conference Proceedings; Detroit, 1985
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