Program - iseepi.org files/PROGRAM-ISEE-A4_F… · Pechakucha and curious about what a Pechakucha...

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31 st Conference of the International Society for Environmental Epidemiology Program

Transcript of Program - iseepi.org files/PROGRAM-ISEE-A4_F… · Pechakucha and curious about what a Pechakucha...

Page 1: Program - iseepi.org files/PROGRAM-ISEE-A4_F… · Pechakucha and curious about what a Pechakucha session looks like? Come to the session on Tuesday at 10.30! ... Keynote by Kristie

ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 1 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

31st Conference of the International Society for Environmental Epidemiology

Program

Page 2: Program - iseepi.org files/PROGRAM-ISEE-A4_F… · Pechakucha and curious about what a Pechakucha session looks like? Come to the session on Tuesday at 10.30! ... Keynote by Kristie

ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 2 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ISEE 2019 MEETING-AT-A-GLANCETime Sunday

25/8Monday

26/8Tuesday

27/8Wednesday

28/87:30 AM - 8:00 AM ISEE New and

Prospective Members Coffee Hour

Early Morning Sessions

Early Morning Sessions8:00 AM - 8:30 AM

8:30 AM - 9:00 AM Opening Ceremony Goldsmith Lecture Awards Ceremony

9:00 AM - 9:30 AMKeynote Lectures Keynote Lectures Keynote Lectures

9:30 AM - 10:00 AM

10:00 AM - 10:30 AM

Pre- Con-ference Work-shops

Coffee Break Coffee Break Coffee Break

10:30 AM - 11:00 AM

ISEE Board Meeting (closed)

Symposia, Parallel Oral Sessions & Poster

Discussion Sessions

Symposia, Parallel Oral Sessions & Poster

Discussion Sessions

Symposia, Parallel Oral Sessions &

Poster Discussion Sessions

11:00 AM - 11:30 AM

11:30 AM - 12:00 PM

12:00 PM - 12:30 PMLunch &

Chapter MeetingsLunch &

Committees FairLunch &

Lunch Meetings12:30 PM - 1:00 PM

1:00 PM - 1:30 PM

1:30 PM - 2:00 PM Symposia, Parallel Oral Sessions & Poster

Discussion Sessions

Symposia, Parallel Oral Sessions & Poster

Discussion Sessions

Symposia, Parallel Oral Sessions &

Poster Discussion Sessions

2:00 PM - 2:30 PM

2:30 PM - 3:00 PM

3:00 PM - 3:30 PM

Tea Break & Thematic Poster Sessions

Tea Break & Thematic Poster Sessions

Tea Break & Thematic Poster Sessions

3:30 PM - 4:00 PM

4:00 PM - 4:30 PM

4:30 PM - 5:00 PM Parallel Oral Sessions & Poster Discussion

Sessions

Parallel Oral Sessions & Poster Discussion

Sessions

SNRN Awards and Closing Ceremony5:00 PM - 5:30 PM

5:30 PM - 6:00 PM General Membership Assembly6:00 PM - 6:30 PM

Welcome Reception6:30 PM - 7:00 PM

SNRN Social Event

7:00 PM - 7:30 PM

7:30 PM - 8:00 PM

Conference Dinner

8:00 PM- 8:30 PM

8:30 PM- 9:00 PM

9:00 PM - 9:30 PM

9:30 PM - 10:00 PM

10:00 PM - 10:30 PM

10:30 PM - 11:00 PM

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TABLE OF CONTENTSWELCOME MESSAGES .......................................................................................................................................................... 4

GREENNESS AND SUSTAINABILITY ............................................................................................................ 7

DETAILED PROGRAM ........................................................................................................................................................... 8

ISEE ORGANIZATION ........................................................................................................................................................18

CONFERENCE ORGANIZERS.................................................................................................................................19

GENERAL INFORMATION ........................................................................................................................................22

ABOUT ThE ISEE 2019 ..................................................................................................................................................23

MEETING VENUE AND APP ...................................................................................................................................25

MEETING VENUE FLOORPLAN .......................................................................................................................26

hOW TO GET TO UTREChT .................................................................................................................................32

hOW TO GET AROUND UTREChT .........................................................................................................33

ISEE 2019 DAILY MEETINGS ..................................................................................................................................35

PRESENTER GUIDELINES .............................................................................................................................................36

TRAVEL AWARDS ......................................................................................................................................................................40

STUDENTS AND NEW RESEARChERS PROGRAM .......................................................41

PRE-CONFERENCE WORKShOPS ................................................................................................................42

EARLY MORNING SESSIONS .................................................................................................................................49

SOCIAL PROGRAM ................................................................................................................................................................56

ISEE 2019 AWARDS ..................................................................................................................................................................57

ISEE 2019 NEW RESEARChERS ABSTRACT AWARDS .............................................60

SYMPOSIA .............................................................................................................................................................................................61

ORAL PRESENTATIONS ...............................................................................................................................................70

POSTER DISCUSSIONS ..................................................................................................................................................97

ThEMATIC POSTERS ....................................................................................................................................................113

COMMITTEES FAIR............................................................................................................................................................149

SPONSORS, GRANTS AND EXhIBITORS....................................................................................150

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 4 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

WELCOME MESSAGESWelcome from the Co-ChairsIt’s our great pleasure to welcome you to the 31st annual conference of the International Society for Environmental Epidemiology (ISEE 2019) in the historic city of Utrecht, The Netherlands. The meeting theme is “On Airs, Waters, Places” in recognition of what was probably the first surviving text on environmental health, written by Hippocrates of Kos some 400 years B.C.E. Convening in a city which was founded by the Romans about 2,000 years ago, we thought it would be a good idea to discuss the history and future of Environmental Epidemiology at our meeting.

ISEE 2019 gathers not only academic and government scientists from around the world, but also public health professionals, consultants, industry representatives, and representatives of major international stakeholders such as the World Health Organization, the European Union, the US Environmental Protection Agency and the US based Health Effects Institute to network and discuss issues related to the conference theme.

The scientific program includes about 1,500 oral presentations and posters representing the diverse issues, disciplines, and methods that comprise environmental epidemiological research today. In addition to oral and thematic poster sessions, there will be a revival of the poster discussion session format at ISEE 2019 and a demonstration of the playful Pechakucha format, as well as several pre-conference workshops and early morning sessions. Never heard about Pechakucha and curious about what a Pechakucha session looks like? Come to the session on Tuesday at 10.30!

The program also provides numerous possibilities for networking and dialogue. The Welcome Reception, Chapter meetings, Committees Fair, and General Membership Assembly are open to all attendees; the ISEE Student and New Researchers Network Social event is open to all SNRN attendees. If you are new to ISEE or thinking about joining and want to learn more about ISEE’s mission and how to get involved, please come to the ISEE New and Prospective Members coffee hour at 7:30 AM on Monday, August 26.

All program activities are detailed in the electronic App, developed as part of our efforts to reduce the environmental footprint of the conference. Other green initiatives include providing reusable water bottles to all attendees (tap water is safe to drink in the Netherlands), an emphasis on local and sustainable food in the conference menus, and the collection of carbon offset donations during online registration.

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Finally, we would like to thank everybody who was involved in the planning of this meeting as a member of the International Program Committee or the Local Organizing committee, as an abstract reviewer or pre-conference workshop organizer, etc. We also thank the workshop instructors, volunteers, sponsors and exhibitors, our conference organizer Congress by Design, and the leadership of ISEE and acknowledge the support of the Institute for Risk Assessment Sciences (IRAS).

We are looking forward to seeing you in Utrecht and hope you have a great meeting!

Bert Brunekreef, Ulrike Gehring, Gerard Hoek and Ingrid Dahmen, ISEE 2019 Local Organizing Committee

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 6 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

Welcome from the presidentIt is my great pleasure to welcome you on behalf of the International Society for Environmental Epidemiology to the 31st annual conference in Utrecht, The Netherlands. This 2000-year-old city not only features medieval streets, canals, and churches, but houses The Netherlands’ leading academic environment in our field at a University attended by 30,000 students. Our hosts have served our society in various capacities in the past decades as president, committee chairs, and councilors. It is an honor to join them for our annual meeting with a growing and more and more diverse international ISEE membership. Our society and our hosts are supporting many attendees with a considerable number of travel awards for participants from low- and middle-income countries, as well as for junior researchers and students.

This year’s conference follows the trend of recent meetings with very high attendance. It will continue to provide attendees with unique opportunities to connect and learn about the latest and most interesting environmental research conducted around the world. The range of topics presented at this conference makes for a rich atmosphere, and you will not only find room to exchange scientific knowledge but also activities and events that promote social and policy relevant exchanges. Together, we are facing the biggest threats to our global environment and the health of populations ever in a world of shrinking resources. The challenges and opportunities to meet these are enormous and unequal, dialogue and action are needed more than ever.

Everyone is invited to and we hope to see many of you at our annual general membership assembly as well as our lunchtime chapter meetings and committee fair. Join committees and chapters as volunteers and become engaged in their work! Those who are first ISEE members, please talk to us at the new and prospective members coffee hour. The student and new researcher meet-ups will promote mentorship and peer-to-peer communication. In the past years, ISEE strategically engaged in capacity building and the recently formed Africa chapter is already well-represented. Our latest newly formed North American chapter is dedicated to addressing environmental policy issues in a timely manner and is hoping to recruit volunteer members interested in working on various topics at its chapter meeting in Utrecht.

Our special thanks go to Ulrike Gehring, Gerard Hoek, and Bert Brunekreef for chairing this year’s conference. Their leadership, along with a hardworking Technical Organizing Committee, numerous reviewers and organizers of symposia and the generosity of sponsors, are making this conference possible. A record high number of participants registering early this year attests to the commitment of our members to these annual meetings and their eagerness to discuss research and policy work that moves us towards healthier societies and environments. Let us use this meeting to meet old and make new friends, strengthen our networks and built alliances across continents, and inspire our young professionals to commit to research that contributes to a truly sustainable future on a livable planet.

Welcome to this year’s ISEE Conference.

Beate Ritz, ISEE President

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 7 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

GREENNESS AND SUSTAINABILITYTo minimize the environmental impact of the ISEE 2019 Annual Meeting, we endeavored to promote environmentally friendly choices throughout conference planning. In addition to choosing an eco-friendly venue, we reduced the environmental impact of ISEE 2019 by using an electronic App to host the conference program; offering reusable water bottles as our giveaway items; and emphasizing local and sustainable menu items for all conference events, including the Conference Dinner Event. The host city for ISEE 2019 Utrecht is highly walkable, with most tourist attractions within a 20-minute walk from the conference center and downtown hotels. Utrecht is also very bicycle friendly, being designated by CNN the most cyclable city in the world in 2018.Utrecht also has an extensive public transportation system with a dense network of bus routes with high frequency schedules well into the late evening or night.

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DETAILED PROGRAMPlenary sessionsLocation: Beatrix theater

Monday, August 26, 2019 – 8:30 AM -10:00 AMOpening CeremonyKeynote by Majid Ezzati, Cities as unequal opportunities for good healthKeynote by Adetoun Mustapha, Challenges and Prospects of Environmental Epidemiology in Africa

Tuesday, August 27, 2019 – 8:30 AM -10:00 AMGoldsmith Award Lecture by Annette Peters Keynote by Benoit Nemery, Low-tech mining of materials critically needed for high-tech applications: impacts on air, water, places and … peopleKeynote by Kristie Ebi, Protecting and promoting health in the Anthropocene

Wednesday, August 28, 2019 – 8:30 AM -10:00 AMAward CeremonyKeynote by Marc Weisskopf, Mind over matter: air pollution and the brainKeynote by Kalpana Balakrishnan, Creating seamless breathing spaces: air pollution in India

4:30 PM – 5:30 PMSNRN Awards and Closing Ceremony

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 9 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

SUNDAY – AUGUST 25, 2019WHEN WHAT WHERE

Pre-conference workshops (morning)

10:00 AM -1:30 PM PCW 01 Health Impact Assessment for Environmental Epidemiologists

212

10:00 AM -1:30 PM PCW 02 Modelling desert dust exposure events for epidemiological short-term health effects studies

214

10:00 AM -1:30 PM PCW 03 Peer review for authors of scientific manuscripts 218

10:00 AM -1:30 PM PCW 05 Advanced modelling techniques for time series analysis using R

210

Pre-conference workshops (full day)

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM PCW 10 Argumentation on causal relations in environment health issues. How do environmental epidemiologists differ in their reasoning from other professionals?

211

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM PCW 11 Climate Change in the Arctic: Impact on the Health of Indigenous and Worker Communities

219

12:00 PM - 8:00 PM Registration Central Hall

Pre-conference workshops (afternoon)

2:30 PM - 6:00 PM PCW 04 Projecting health impacts under climate change scenarios

115

2:30 PM - 6:00 PM PCW 06 Improve Environmental Health Competence for Research and Actions: Sentinel Physicians for the Environment (SPE)

218

2:30 PM - 6:00 PM PCW 07 Introduction to the analysis of air pollution health impacts using AirQ+

214

2:30 PM - 6:00 PM PCW 08 A Journal Editor’s Guide to Successful Systematic Reviews: Common Challenges Faced by Submitting Authors, and How to Overcome Them

210

2:30 PM - 6:00 PM PCW 09 Mixtures Analysis with Weighted Quantile Sum (WQS) Regression and its Extensions

212

4:15 PM - 5:15 PM ISEE Asia Chapter Leadership Meeting 312

6:00 PM - 8:00 PM WELCOME RECEPTION Exhibition Hall

7:00 PM Welcome by Bert Brunekreef Exhibition Hall

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 10 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

MONDAY – AUGUST 26, 2019WHEN WHAT WHERE

7:30 AM - 8:30 AM ISEE New and Prospective Members coffee hour 110

8:00 AM - 6:00 PM Registration Central Hall

8:30 AM - 9:00 AM Opening ceremony

Beatrix theater9:00 AM - 9:30 AM Keynote by Majid Ezzati, Cities as unequal opportunities for good

health

9:30 AM - 10:00 AM Keynote by Adetoun Mustapha, Challenges and Prospects of Environmental Epidemiology in Africa

10:00 AM -10:30 AM Coffee break Exhibition Hall

Symposia

10:30 AM -12:00 PM S01 Mapping the Air Pollution Metabolome: Applications, Limitations, and the Path Forward

217

10:30 AM -12:00 PM S03 One Health: On animals, humans and the environment 417

10:30 AM -12:00 PM S05 PFAS Research Reaches its Adolescence: What Have We Learned and Where Are We Going?

Beatrix theater

10:30 AM -12:00 PM S20 A world less dependent on fossil fuels – scientific evidence and corporate influence. An ISEE Policy Committee Symposium

315

Oral sessions

10:30 AM - 12:00 PM OPS 01 Understudied environmental health issues 412

10:30 AM - 12:00 PM OPS 10 Wildfires 210

10:30 AM - 12:00 PM OPS 15 Chemicals and pregnancy 114

10:30 AM - 12:00 PM OPS 25 Drinking water contamination and adult health 411

10:30 AM - 12:00 PM OPS 45 Cardiometabolic effects of air pollution 117

10:30 AM - 12:00 PM OPS 57 Black carbon exposure and health effects 110

Poster discussion sessions

10:30 AM - 12:00 PM PDS 68 Outdoor air pollution mortality and morbidity Exhibition Hall

10:30 AM - 12:00 PM PDS 73 Neurological effects Johan Friso Foyer

12:00 PM - 1:30 PM Lunch Exhibition Hall

Lunch meetings

12:15 PM - 1:15 PM ISEE Africa Chapter Meeting 110

12:15 PM - 1:15 PM ISEE Asia Chapter Meeting 114

12:15 PM - 1:15 PM ISEE Eastern Mediterranean Chapter Meeting 117

12:15 PM - 1:15 PM ISEE Europe Chapter Meeting 210

12:15 PM - 1:15 PM ISEE Latin America and Caribbean Chapter Meeting 315

12:15 PM - 1:15 PM ISEE North America Chapter Meeting 411

12:15 PM - 1:15 PM Multi-City Multi Country Collaborative Network Meeting 412

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 11 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

Symposia

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM S04 Expanding the Role of the Environment in the Global Burden of Disease

Beatrix theater

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM S08 Setting the European Environment and Health Research Agenda, 2020-2030: the HERA project

217

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM S09 Assessing health co-benefits of climate change mitigation in the Asia-Pacific region

417

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM S21 When the Answer is “Big(ger) Data” in Environmental Epidemiology: What are the Questions?

315

Oral sessions

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM OPS 09 Cookstoves and children 114

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM OPS 13 Heat, cold and mortality 117

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM OPS 18 Cardiometabolic effects of chemical exposures 110

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM OPS 37 Industrially contaminated sites and health 210

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM OPS 39 Metals and biomarkers 411

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM OPS 55 Pesticides and neurological outcomes 412

Poster discussion sessions

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM PDS 64 Health impact assessment and environmental justice Johan Friso Foyer

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM PDS 74 Pregnancy outcomes Exhibition Hall

3:00 PM - 3:30 PM Tea break Exhibition Hall

Thematic poster sessions – see APP for details

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 621 Exposure to metals Johan Friso Foyer

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 622 Exposure to flame retardants and plasticizers Johan Friso Foyer

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 623 Exposures to pesticides Johan Friso Foyer

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 624 Exposures to pops, voc and other chemicals Johan Friso Foyer

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 642 Environmental justice and impacts Exhibition Hall

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 661 Climate change: temperature effects 1 Exhibition Hall

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 671 Cardiometabolic effects of long-term air pollution exposure

Exhibition Hall

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 681 Short-term health effects of air pollutants 1 Exhibition Hall

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 684 Long-term health effects of air pollutants 1 Exhibition Hall

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 711 The exposome Exhibition Hall

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 723 Low and middle income countries: sanitation, infections and other health effects

Exhibition Hall

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 731 Neurological effects in children Exhibition Hall

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 743 Health effects in pregnancy Exhibition Hall

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 751 Farms, antibiotics, infections Exhibition Hall

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 771 Diet and lifestyle Exhibition Hall

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 791 Occupational health 1 Exhibition Hall

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 911 Air pollution, epigenetics, biomarkers Exhibition Hall

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 12 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

Oral sessions

4:30 PM - 5:30 PM OPS 03 Machine learning in environmental epidemiology 315

4:30 PM - 5:30 PM OPS 08 Biological contaminants and respiratory health 117

4:30 PM - 5:30 PM OPS 14 Temperature variation associated with suicide and violence

412

4:30 PM - 5:30 PM OPS 17 Chemical exposures and respiratory outcomes 110

4:30 PM - 5:30 PM OPS 21 Methodological progress in chemicals health effects research

210

4:30 PM - 5:45PM OPS 26 Radiation, EMF cancer and mortality 114

4:30 PM - 5:30 PM OPS 41 Metals and birth outcomes 411

4:30 PM - 5:30 PM OPS 42 Cardiometabolic effects of noise exposure 217

4:30 PM - 5:30 PM OPS 48 Air pollution and epigenetics 417

4:30 PM - 5:30 PM OPS 51 Air pollution and mortality: what’s new? Beatrix theater

Poster discussion sessions

4:30 PM - 5:30 PM PDS 69 Methods and statistics Johan Friso Foyer

4:30 PM - 5:30 PM PDS 76 Source specific outdoor air pollution studies Exhibition Hall

Other events

5:30 PM - 6:30 PM ISEE General Membership Meeting 117

6:30 PM - 8:30 PM IRAS Alumni Drinks Molen “De Ster”

7:00 PM -9:30 PM SNRN Social Soccer event – see Social Program for more details

Nearby soccer field

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 13 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

TUESDAY – AUGUST 27, 2019WHEN WHAT WHERE

Early morning sessions

7:30 AM - 8:30 AM EMS 01 Conflicts of Interest and Publication Policy, With A Special Focus on Litigation: A Roundtable Discussion

110

7:30 AM - 8:30 AM EMS 03 Drinking water battles won and lost 114

7:30 AM - 8:30 AM EMS 04 Using REDCap Mobile Application for Data Collection in Remote Areas in Multi- National Environmental HealthTrial

117

7:30 AM - 8:30 AM EMS 05 Applications of spatiotemporal modeling in environmental epidemiology: Successes and challenges

210

7:30 AM - 8:30 AM EMS 06 History and Future of the Environmental Epidemiology of Water, Exposure to Chemical Substances and Reflexes on Human Health

315

7:30 AM - 8:30 AM EMS 07 Transitioning to the next step – SNRN breakfast session 411

7:30 AM - 8:30 AM EMS 08 Collaborating with the Frenemy: Developing Credible Research Partnerships with Industry

412

7:30 AM - 8:30 AM EMS 12 Google Air View 417

8:00 AM - 6:00 PM Registration Central Hall

8:30 AM - 9:00 AM Goldsmith Award Ceremony and Lecture by Annette Peters

Beatrix theater

9:00 AM -9:30 AM Keynote by Benoit Nemery, Low-tech mining of materials critically needed for high-tech applications: impacts on air, water, places and … people

9:30 AM -10:00 AM Keynote by Kristie Ebi, Protecting and promoting health in the Anthropocene

10:00 AM - 10:30 AM Coffee break Exhibition Hall

Symposia

10:30 AM - 12:00 PM S02 Harmonizing insights from intervention studies, contextual information and resource availability to develop policy advocacy for clean cooking and domestic fuel adoption in Africa

417

10:30 AM - 12:00 PM S06 Lead’s long-term legacy: what past exposures can tell us about future disease

315

10:30 AM - 12:00 PM S07 Of moderators and mediators: Complex relationships between greenness, air pollution, noise, and health behaviors in driving health outcomes

Beatrix theater

10:30 AM - 12:00 PM GREEN, AIR, LMIC: PEChAKUChA COMES TO ISEE! Johan Friso Foyer

Oral sessions

10:30 AM - 12:00 PM OPS 06 Health effects of source-specific outdoor air pollution 117

10:30 AM -12:00 PM OPS 07 Farm animals, antibiotics, infections and the microbiome

110

10:30 AM -12:00 PM OPS 11 Health effects of climate change in low- and middle-income countries

114

10:30 AM - 12:00 PM OPS 24 Drinking water contamination and children’s health 411

10:30 AM - 12:00 PM OPS 27 Radiation, EMF and morbidity 210

10:30 AM - 12:00 PM OPS 49 Air pollution exposure methods 412

10:30 AM - 12:00 PM OPS 53 Air pollution and neurological outcomes 217

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 14 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

Poster discussion sessions

10:30 AM - 12:00 PM PDS 63 Chemicals and metals: health effects Exhibition Hall

12:00 PM - 1:30 PM Lunch & Committees Fair Exhibition Hall

Lunch meetings

12:15 PM - 1:15 PM Environmental Epidemiology Editorial Board Meeting 110

12:15 PM - 1:15 PM ISEE 2020 Scientific Committee Meeting 411

Symposia

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM S10 Quasi-Experimental Designs in Environmental Epidemiology: Applications to the Health Impacts of Energy Policy Changes

417

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM S14 Use of Exposomic Methods Incorporating Sensors in Environmental Epidemiology

217

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM S18 Landmarks of Air Pollution Epidemiology: Legacy of Douglas Dockery

Beatrix theater

Oral sessions

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM OPS 04 Environmental justice 117

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM OPS 05 Statistical methods to analyze mixtures 114

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM OPS 30 Green space and morbidity 110

1:30 PM -3:00 PM OPS 31 Health effects of multiple environmental stressors 412

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM OPS 32 Health impact of interventions 1 315

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM OPS 35 Health effects of indoor air pollution in LMIC countries 411

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM OPS 60 Social factors and environmental health across the world

210

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM Utrecht City Walk – City of Healthy Urban Living (max. 20 people)

Poster discussion sessions

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM PDS 65 Exposure assessment: implications for epidemiology Exhibition Hall

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM PDS 75 Microbiome, infections and respiratory effects Johan Friso Foyer

3:00 PM - 3:30 PM Tea break Exhibition Hall

Thematic poster sessions – see APP for details

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 631 Metals and health 1 Johan Friso Foyer

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 632 Health effects of flame retardants and plasticizers Johan Friso Foyer

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 633 Health effects of pesticides Johan Friso Foyer

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM PS 634 Health effects of pops, voc and other chemicals Johan Friso Foyer

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 651 Air pollution exposure modeling 1 Exhibition Hall

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 664 Climate change: temperature effects 2 Exhibition Hall

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 682 Long-term health effects of air pollutants 2 Exhibition Hall

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 701 Spatial determinants of population health Exhibition Hall

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 721 Low and middle income countries: e-waste, occupational health

Exhibition Hall

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 732 Neurological effects in adults Exhibition Hall

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 15 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 742 Adverse birth outcomes 1 Exhibition Hall

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 752 Respiratory effects and allergies Exhibition Hall

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 781 Health effects of noise Exhibition Hall

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 792 Occupational health 2 Exhibition Hall

Oral sessions

4:30 PM - 5:30 PM OPS 20 Chemicals, biomarkers, omics 110

4:30 PM - 5:30 PM OPS 22 Behavioral effects of chemical exposures 117

4:30 PM - 5:30 PM OPS 28 Green space and biomarkers 417

4:30 PM - 5:30 PM OPS 36 Health effects of dietary exposures 210

4:30 PM - 5:30 PM OPS 38 Effects of metals on child health 114

4:30 PM - 5:30 PM OPS 43 Noise, stress and mental health 217

4:30 PM - 5:30 PM OPS 44 Occupational health studies with environmental implications

411

4:30 PM - 5:30 PM OPS 46 Exposure assessment to air pollution in Asia and Africa 315

4:30 PM - 5:30 PM OPS 47 Increasing spatiotemporal resolution in assessment of exposure to outdoor air pollutants

412

4:30 PM - 5:30 PM OPS 56 Ultrafine particles exposure and health effects Beatrix theater

Poster discussion sessions

4:30 PM - 5:30 PM PDS 67 Outdoor air pollution cardiometabolic effects Exhibition Hall

4:30 PM - 5:30 PM PDS 71 Exposome Johan Friso Foyer

Other Events

5:30 PM - 6:30 PM ISEE Annual Conference Committee Meeting 320

5:30 PM - 6:30 PM ISEE Ethics & Philosophy Committee Meeting 321

5:30 PM - 6:30 PM ISEE Membership Committee Meeting 411

5:30 PM - 7:00 PM ECRhS-Air pollution WG meeting 316

7:30 PM - 11:00 PM Conference dinner & party Railroad Museum

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 16 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

WEDNESDAY – AUGUST 28, 2019WHEN WHAT WHERE

Early morning sessions

7:30 AM - 8:30 AM EMS 02 Differences in Causal Inference from Epidemiological and Non-Epidemiological Evidence

110

7:30 AM - 8:30 AM EMS 09 Lead in Tap Water: North American Mistakes & Lessons Learned

210

7:30 AM - 8:30 AM EMS 10 Novel Approaches for Addressing Exposures within the Environmental Influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) Cohorts: Opportunity for Infrastructure Fund (OIF) Research

315

7:30 AM - 8:30 AM EMS 11 Round-table Discussion with an Environmental Epidemiologist – SNRN breakfast session

411

7:30 AM - 8:30 AM EMS 13 The importance of engaging in public policy in the age of anti-science

412

8:00 AM - 6:00 PM Registration Central Hall

8:30 AM - 9:00 AM Awards ceremony

Beatrix theater9:00 AM - 9:30 AM Keynote by Marc Weisskopf, Mind over matter: air pollution

and the brain

9:30 AM - 10:00 AM Keynote by Kalpana Balakrishnan, Creating seamless breathing spaces: air pollution in India

10:00 AM -10:30 AM Coffee break Exhibition Hall

Symposia

10:30 AM -12:00 PM S12 Estimating the Global Risk and Burden of Particulate Air Pollution Exposure: Issues and Challenges

Beatrix theater

10:30 AM - 12:00 PM S15 Interaction between environmental chemicals and toxicants and the human microbiome

217

10:30 AM - 12:00 PM S19 Climate Change and Child Health: Current Research, Future Opportunities, and Gaps in Knowledge

417

Oral sessions

10:30 AM - 12:00 PM OPS 12 Morbidity effects of high and low temperatures 315

10:30 AM - 12:00 PM OPS 16 Chemical exposures and birth outcomes 114

10:30 AM - 12:00 PM OPS 33 Health impact of interventions 2 411

10:30 AM - 12:00 PM OPS 40 Metals: neurological effects 412

10:30 AM - 12:00 PM OPS 50 Air pollution and health care utilization 117

10:30 AM - 12:00 PM OPS 52 Air pollution and respiratory health 110

10:30 AM - 12:00 PM OPS 58 Predictors and impact of active travel 210

Poster discussion sessions

10:30 AM - 12:00 PM PDS 62 Chemicals and metals: exposure and biomarkers Johan Friso Foyer

10:30 AM - 12:00 PM PDS 72 Environmental health issues in LMIC Exhibition Hall

12:00 PM - 1:30 PM Lunch Exhibition Hall

Lunch meetings

12:15 PM - 1:15 PM ISEE Africa Chapter Meeting 110

12:15 PM - 1:15 PM ISEE Latin America and Caribbean Chapter Meeting 315

12:15 PM - 1:15 PM ISEE Communications Committee Meeting 114

12:15 PM - 1:15 PM ISEE Ethics & Philosophy Committee Meeting 117

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 17 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

12:15 PM - 1:15 PM EhP Associate Editors Meeting 210

12:15 PM - 1:15 PM Meeting for NIEhS pooled study of phthalates and preterm birth (closed meeting)

412

12:15 PM - 1:15 PM ISEE Policy Committee Meeting 411

Symposia

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM S13 How Low Should We Go? New Health Research on Low-level Ambient Air Pollution

Beatrix theater

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM S16 Emerging PFAS in drinking water is a global public health issue

417

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM S17 Residential exposure to pesticides and health effects; What we know and what we should know

217

Oral sessions

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM OPS 02 Environmental epidemiology and policy 315

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM OPS 19 Chemicals: exposure assessment challenges 110

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM OPS 23 Chemicals and cognitive function 114

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM OPS 29 Green space and neurological effects 411

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM OPS 34 Health impact assessments of policies 210

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM OPS 54 Air pollution and pregnancy outcomes 117

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM OPS 59 The Exposome: progress in methods and applications 412

Poster discussion sessions

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM PDS 66 Climate change Exhibition Hall

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM PDS 70 Green space Johan Friso Foyer

3:00 PM - 3:30 PM Tea break Exhibition Hall

Thematic poster sessions – see APP for details

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 636 Metals and health 2 Johan Friso Foyer

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 761 Health effects of pollution sources and components Johan Friso Foyer

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 782 Health effects of emf, radiation and light Johan Friso Foyer

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 641 Policies, interventions, communication Exhibition Hall

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 652 Air pollution exposure modeling 2 Exhibition Hall

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 662 Climate change effects on labour, migration and infections

Exhibition Hall

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 683 Short-term health effects of air pollutants 2 Exhibition Hall

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 691 Methods of measurement, design and data analysis Exhibition Hall

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 702 Green space and population health Exhibition Hall

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 722 Low and middle income countries: indoor air pollutants

Exhibition Hall

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 741 Adverse birth outcomes 2 Exhibition Hall

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 901 Indoor air pollution Exhibition Hall

3:00 PM - 4:30 PM TPS 931 Water and foodborne chemicals Exhibition Hall

Other events

4:30 PM - 5:30 PM SNRN Awards and Closing ceremony Beatrix theater

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 18 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ISEE ORGANIZATIONAbout ISEEThis meeting marks the 31st scientific annual conference of the ISEE (International Society for Environmental Epidemiology). ISEE is among the largest international professional associations in environmental health. Our Vision is to improve human health globally through ethically sound environmental epidemiology research, education and practice. ISEE fosters epidemiological studies on the effects of environmental exposures in people, facilitates communication between health professionals, promotes methodological advances, and strengthens environmental health policy. ISEE supports the involvement of scientists from around the world at all stages of their careers and subsidizes membership costs for scientists in developing countries to encourage their participation. ISEE has regional chapters in Africa, Asia, Eastern Mediterranean, Europe, Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) and North America.

Active ISEE members receive many benefits including: • DiscountedregistrationfortheannualmeetingandISEE-affiliatedworkshopsandconferences;• ProfessionaldevelopmentopportunitiesincludingeligibilityforISEECareerAwards;• FreeonlinesubscriptiontoEpidemiologyandreducedcostforprintversion;• OpportunitytocontributesolicitedcommentariestoEpidemiologyandEnvironmental

Epidemiology with no publication charges; • 20%discountforpublishinginEpidemiologyandEnvironmentalEpidemiology;• 20%discountonbookspublishedbyWoltersKluwerwhenorderingonline;• ProfessionalopportunitiestoengageinourSocietyincludingparticipatingintheexecutive

council, committees, chapters, the ISEE AuthorAid mentoring program, annual meeting organization and development, and networking events.

ISEE Officers PRESIDENT Beate Ritz, MD, PhD, Los Angeles, United States of America SECRETARY-TREASURER Michelle Turner, PhD, Barcelona, SpainPRESIDENT ELECT Mark Nieuwenhuijsen, PhD, Barcelona, Spain

CouncilorsAna Maria Mora, MD, PhD, Heredia, Costa Rica Jonathan Chevrier, PhD, Montreal, Canada Alistair Woodward, PhD, MBBS, Auckland, New Zealand Eunhee Ha, MD, PhD, Seoul, Republic of Korea Danielle Vienneau, PhD, Basel, SwitzerlandJoel Kaufman, MD, PhD, Washington, United States of America

Committes• AnnualConferenceCommittee• AwardsCommittee• CapacityBuildingandEducationCommittee• CommunicationsCommittee• EthicsandPhilosophyCommittee• MembershipCommittee• NominationsCommittee• PolicyCommittee• Students&NewResearchersNetwork

Visit the Committees Fair on Tuesday at lunch time, meet engaged colleagues and join an ISEE committee!

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 19 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

CONFERENCE ORGANIZERSLocal Organizing CommitteeBert Brunekreef, Ingrid Dahmen, Ulrike Gehring and Gerard HoekInstitute for Risk Assessment Sciences, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands

International Program CommitteeKeynotes and overall program committee• ZoranaAndersen,Denmark• HannaBoogaard,UnitedStatesofAmerica• DickHeederik,TheNetherlands• FrancescoForastiere,Italy• BinJalaludin,Australia• AnaMariaMora,CostaRica• BeateRitz,UnitedStatesofAmerica• PetervandenHazel,TheNetherlands• VerónicaVieira,UnitedStatesofAmerica• ManolisKogevinas,Spain• MarcWeisskopf,UnitedStatesofAmerica

Symposia• ZoranaAndersen,Denmark• NelsonGouveia,Brazil• PhilippeGrandjean,Denmark• AdetounMustapha,Nigeria(onbehalfoftheISEEPolicyCommittee)• EviSamoli,Greece• AtanuSarkar,Canada(onbehalfoftheISEEEthicsandPhilosophyCommittee)• DavidA.Savitz,UnitedStatesofAmerica• RémySlama,France• RoelVermeulen,TheNetherlands• DanielleVienneau,Switzerland• EllenWells,UnitedStatesofAmerica(onbehalfoftheISEEEthicsandPhilosophyCommittee)

Parallel oral presentations• KalpanaBalakrishnan,India• MikeBrauer,Canada• WeiHuang,China• AnkeHuss,TheNetherlands• FrancineLaden,UnitedStatesofAmerica• ErikLebret,TheNetherlands• AdetounMustapha,Nigeria(onbehalfoftheISEEPolicyCommittee)• MariePedersen,Denmark• LucasNeas,UnitedStatesofAmerica• AtanuSarkar,Canada(onbehalfoftheISEEEthicsandPhilosophyCommittee)• AudreySmargiassi,Canada• GeorgeThurston,UnitedStatesofAmerica• EllenWells,UnitedStatesofAmerica(onbehalfoftheISEEEthicsandPhilosophyCommittee)

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 20 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

Poster Discussion Sessions• AudreydeNazelle,UnitedKingdom• BarbaraHoffmann,Germany• PerryHystad,UnitedStatesofAmerica• ErikMelén,Sweden• AdetounMustapha,Nigeria(onbehalfoftheISEEPolicyCommittee)• AtanuSarkar,Canada(onbehalfoftheISEEEthicsandPhilosophyCommittee)• MireilleToledano,UnitedKingdom• JelleVlaanderen,TheNetherlands• GregoryA.Wellenius,UnitedStatesofAmerica• EllenWells,UnitedStatesofAmerica(onbehalfoftheISEEEthicsandPhilosophyCommittee)• MoniekZuurbier,TheNetherlands• PaulScheepers,TheNetherlands

Thematic Poster Sessions• GuéladioCissé,Switzerland• NicoleJanssen,TheNetherlands• AdetounMustapha,Nigeria• TimNawrot,Belgium• TamaraSchikowski,Germany• AlexandraSchneider,Germany• LidwienSmit,TheNetherlands• CristinaVillanueva,Spain

Travel awards committee• GuéladioCissé,Switzerland• OlenaGruzieva,Sweden• TomLuben,UnitedStatesofAmerica• HaidongKan,China• NargesKhanjani,Iran• Pi-ILin,UnitedStatesofAmerica• JasonSacks,UnitedStatesofAmerica• CathrynTonne,Spain• BernavanWendeldeJoode,CostaRica

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 21 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

Abstract Peer Reviewers• SaraAdar• AlhajiAliyu• ZoranaAndersen• IsabellaAnnesi-Maesano• JohnArko-Mensah• AndreaBaccarelli• KalpanaBalakrishnan• ThomasBateson• MariskaBauwelinck• TomBellander• HannaBoogaard• MikeBrauer• JosephBraun• JosephBukalasa• LexBurdorf• GiuliaCesaroni• MarcChadeau-Hyam• JonathanChevrier• GuéladioCissé• AaronCohen• BiancaCox• PayamDadvand• KeesdeHoogh• AudreydeNazelle• MariekeDijkema• JeroenDouwes• GeorgeDownward• MarloesEeftens• BrendaEskenazi• SamuelEtajak• AnnunziataFaustini• PaulFischer• TonyFletcher• FrancescoForastiere• ElaineFuertes• AntonioGasparrini• PhilippeGrandjean• OlenaGruzieva• AnnaHansell• JamieHart• DickHeederik• BarbaraHoffmann• DannyHouthuijs• WeiHuang• AnkeHuss• PerryHystad• BénédicteJacquemin• BinJalaludin• NicoleJanssen• HaidongKan• KleaKatsouyanni

• JoelKaufman• MollyKile• PatKinney• ManolisKogevinas• MichalKrzyzanowski• NinoKunzli• FrancineLaden• ErikLebret• VirissaLenters• StephanieLondon• MarcoMartuzzi• GertjanMedema• ErikMelén• AnaMariaMora• AdetounMustapha• RajenNaidoo• TimNawrot• LucasNeas• MarkNieuwenhuijsen• YinkaOsuolale• MariePedersen• GöranPershagen• AnnettePeters• SusanPeters• ReginaPickford• RaananRaz• JoacimRocklöv• AnnaRosofsky• EviSamoli• PaulScheepers• TamaraSchikowski• AlexandraSchneider• RémySlama• AudreySmargiassi• JetSmit• LidwienSmit• KirkSmith• MassimoStafoggia• EvaSuarthana• BenmarhniaTarik• PeterThorne• GeorgeThurston• ErikTielemans• MireilleToledano• MartinTondel• IloncaVaartjes• PetervandenHazel• SaskiavanderZee• BernavanWendeldeJoode• VéronicaVieira• DanielleVienneau

• CristinaVillanueva• JelleVlaanderen• JudithVonk• DonnaVorhees• KatyWalker• MengWang• ScottWeichenthal• MarcWeisskopf• SaskiaWillers• GayleWindham• KathiWolf• AlistairWoodward• IngeWouters• AileenYang• TakashiYorifuji• MoniekZuurbier

Travel awards reviewers• LizanBloemsma,TheNetherlands• MaribelCasas,Spain• GuéladioCissé,Switzerland• GeorgeDownward,TheNetherlands• ElaineFuertes,UnitedKingdom• LaisFajersztajn,Brazil• OlenaGruzieva,Sweden• JuliaHeck,UnitedStatesofAmerica• NinaIszatt,Norway• TomLuben,UnitedStatesofAmerica• HaidongKan,China• NargesKhanjani,Iran• JochemKlompmaker,TheNetherlands• Pi-ILin,UnitedStatesofAmerica• EdithMilanzi,TheNetherlands• DavidRojas-Rueda,Spain• JasonSacks,UnitedStatesofAmerica• HindSbihi,Canada• CathrynTonne,Spain• MichelleTurner,Spain• DanielleVienneau,Switzerland• GudrunWeinmayr,Germany

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 22 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

GENERAL INFORMATIONRegistration Desk HoursSunday, August 25 9:00 AM – 7:00 PMMonday, August 26 8:00 AM – 6:00 PMTuesday, August 27 8:00 AM – 6:00 PMWednesday, August 28 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM

Speaker Service Center HoursSunday, August 25 2:00 PM – 7:00 PMMonday, August 26 8:00 AM – 6:00 PMTuesday, August 27 8:00 AM – 6:00 PMWednesday, August 28 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM

Coat Room HoursSunday, August 25 9:00 AM – 9:30 PM Monday, August 26 7:00 AM – 6:00 PMTuesday, August 27 7:00 AM – 6:00 PMWednesday, August 28 7:00 AM – 5:00 PM

Exhibition HoursSunday, August 25 6:00 PM – 8:00 PM Monday, August 26 10:00 AM – 6:00 PMTuesday, August 27 10:00 AM – 6:00 PMWednesday, August 28 10:00 AM – 5:00 PM

Registration Materials, Badges & On-Site StaffAt check-in, each attendee will receive a name badge, program flyer, and other materials. No printed program books are available. The detailed program can be found in the conference app and on the conference website. Each participant must wear her/his own badge during the entire meeting. The badge is the admission pass to all meeting areas including the plenary and poster halls, meeting rooms, and the exhibition area. If you signed up for the SNRN soccer event, and/or the conference dinner, and/or the train ride to the dinner, you will receive the appropriate tickets with your badge. Feel free to ask the meeting staff and volunteers for information at any time. The registration desk will always be staffed by at least one person during hours of operation. Conference volunteers will be wearing t-shirts with the conference logo on the front and “How Can I Help You?” on the back.

WiFi AccessComplimentary WiFi is available for all participants in the meeting venue.

Login: ISEE2019Password: Utrecht19

Official LanguageThe official language of the 31st annual conference of the International Society for Environmental Epidemiology (ISEE 2019) is English. No simultaneous translation will be offered.

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 23 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

About the ISEE 2019 Annual MeetingScope of the MeetingThe 31st Annual Meeting of International Society for Environmental Epidemiology (ISEE 2019) brings together not only academic or government scientists, but also public health professionals, consultants, and industry representatives, and representatives of major international stakeholders such as the World Health Organization, the European Union, the US Environmental Protection Agency and the US based Health Effects Institute.

Meeting ThemeThe meeting theme is ‘”On Airs, Waters, Places” ’ in recognition of what was probably the first surviving text on environmental health, written by Hippocrates of Kos some 400 years B.C.E. Convening in a city which was founded by the Romans about 2,000 years ago, we thought it would be a good idea to discuss the history and the future of Environmental Epidemiology at our meeting.

The ISEE 2019 Annual Meeting features about 1,500 abstracts. There are 20 symposia, 60 general oral presentation sessions, 15 poster discussion sessions, and almost 1,000 thematic posters grouped into 47 different sessions. ISEE 2019 is excited about having 1 Pechakucha session with 12 presentations.

Never heard about Pechakucha and curious about what a Pechakucha session looks like? Come to the session on Tuesday at 10:30 AM! ISEE 2019 is also proud to offer 11 Pre-Conference Workshops from global experts on novel tools and methods relevant to the theory and practice of environmental epidemiology. Finally, plenary speakers will deliver diverse keynote addresses to stimulate ideas and discussion under the conference themes.

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 24 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ABOUT UTREChTThe City of Utrecht, with its stimulating combination of rich past and dynamic present, is a truly unique place. This 2000-year-old city teems with a wide range of interesting museums and cultural events with programs full of theater, dance, art and more. Stroll down the quaint streets and along the canals in the Utrecht Museum Quarter and sample the pleasant, intimate atmosphere for which Utrecht is famous. 70,000 students represent the character of this lively city of creative young people. Welcome to Utrecht!

Utrecht is home to the Utrecht University Institute for Risk Assessment Sciences (IRAS), one of Europe’s leading academic centers in environmental epidemiology.

Utrecht has developed from a medium-sized provincial city into a regional capital of European importance. The city’s current expansion, more rapid than any in the city’s long history, combines physical expansion with environmentally friendly innovation, major economic opportunities and a new urban dynamism. As a medieval treasure and a leading academic, technological and cultural center, Utrecht is now a pro-active player in the international community.

If you want to explore more of Utrecht, click here to see what Utrecht has to offer.

Top sights in UtrechtCheck out the ISEE 2019 website for a list of the top sight in Utrecht.

West Noordwest Overvecht Noordoost Oost Binnenstad Zuid Zuidwest Leidsche Rijn Vleuten-De Meern

Een brief van God voor jou!

Beste Dynamics 365 partner?Wij kennen Microsoft Dynamics 365 en helpen u de juiste Dynamics-partner te vinden! QBS

OPENEN

Kaart / Plattegrond Utrecht centrum

Beste Dynamics 365 partner?

QBS

Wij kennen Microsoft Dynamics 365 en helpen u de juiste Dynamics-partner te vinden!

OPENEN

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Lea�et | © OpenStreetMap contributors

Hotels1. Hotel Mitland Utrecht2. Malie Hotel Utrecht3. Hotel NH Center Utrecht4. Inntel Hotels Utrecht Center5. Park Plaza Utrecht6. Hotel NH Utrecht 7. Hotel Ibis Utrecht

LocationsA. Railway Museum - Dinner locationB. Jaarbeurs - Conference venue (main entrance: Croeselaan)C. Utrecht Central StationD. Dom tower & Dom squareE. Soccer field - SNRN Social Soccer event. Address: Grebbeberglaan 4 in Utrecht.F. Molen de Ster

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 25 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

MEETING VENUE AND APPISEE 2019 will be held at the Beatrix Conference Center, in Utrecht, The Netherlands. The Beatrix Center is connected to the Utrecht main railway station and within easy walking distance of most of the major landmarks and tourist attractions in Utrecht including the Dom Tower and Cathedral, the many museums and shopping mall “Hoog Catharijne”.

Meeting venueJaarbeurs UtrechtBeatrix BuildingJaarbeursplein 6A3521 AL Utrecht, The Netherlands

Website

Mobile Conference AppThe ISEE 2019 Conference App is available for all registered delegates to download.

DownloadSearch for “The Event App” by EventsAIR in your app store and install the app.

Login Once downloaded, enter the Event Code “isee2019” (case sensitive) and click the submit-button. Please login with the e-mail address and password that you used for your conference registration. Alternatively, you can also use your PIN code to gain access to the app. You can find your personal PIN code in the “Know Before You Go” email that you should have received the week prior to the conference

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 26 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

MEETING VENUE FLOORPLANOVERVIEW

4th �oor

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2nd �oor

3rd �oor

3rd �oor

Entrance Railway station

Entrance

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217

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314 312

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210211

Registration desk

412417 411

Beatrix Theater

315

Cloak room

Exhibition Hall

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 27 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

CENTRAL hALL – GROUND FLOOR

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staircase

staircase

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Mies BouwmanFoyer

Co�eecorner

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Beatrix theater

Exhibition Hall

Entrance Beatrix Theater

Entrance Exhibition Hall

MAIN ENTRANCE CROESELAAN

Registration(Badge pick-up)

New (onsite)registration

Help &Information desk

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 28 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

LEVEL 1

registration

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 29 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

LEVEL 2

elevators

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217

[FLOORPLAN 2e ETAGE ZALEN]

Svp de volgende ruimtes een kleurtje geven en voorzien van alleen het nummer zonder “zaal”:- - - - - 217 (zalen 211, 212 214 bij elkaar)

- -

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 30 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

LEVEL 3

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 31 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

LEVEL 4

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 32 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

hOW TO GET TO UTREChTAirFrom Amsterdam Schiphol Airport it is a mere 30 minutes by train or car to Utrecht city center. Utrecht is also very easily accessible by train from surrounding countries.

TrainThe Beatrix conference center of the Jaarbeurs Utrecht is situated right next to Utrecht central station and is therefore easily accessible by train. From the station, follow the signs ‘Jaarbeursplein’; the Beatrix center is only a few minutes on foot. Plan your journey by public transport. On the website of the Dutch railways, NS, you can easily buy e-tickets for your train journey.

BusThe bus station is situated next to the central train station. Buses to and from all directions arrive and depart throughout the day. From the bus station, the Beatrix center is only a few minutes on foot. Click here for detailed information about travelling by public transportation.

By carIf you come by car, from the Ring Utrecht, follow the blue traffic signs for ‘Jaarbeurs’.For parking at P1, use the address: Graadt van Roggenweg 400 – Utrecht.

Please note: the municipality of Utrecht is carrying out major roadworks in the Jaarbeurs area. Check out the traffic advice to find out more about the accessibility and below current area map with routes.

Another good parking tip is Park & Ride: These are easy-to-find and inexpensive parking facilities on the outskirts of the city with a shuttle service into town. Park & Ride facilities can also be found at various train stations close to Utrecht.

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 33 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

hOW TO GET AROUND UTREChTPublic transportUtrecht has a dense network of high frequency buses. For details and ticket purchases, click here. Please take note that you can’t get tickets on the bus paying cash; credit cards are accepted.

CyclingUtrecht is a bustling, bicycle-friendly city. Every day, between 7 AM and 7 PM, over 125,000 cyclists ride to their work, school, university, railway station, shops or home through the city center.

Cycling facts and figures 2019• 12mannedandmonitoredbicycleparkingsand5PopUpParkingsthroughoutthecity• 60%ofthecitycentrevisitorsgotothecitycentrebybicycle• 33.000cyclistsalongthebusiestbicyclerouteinthecitycentreeveryday• 43%ofalljourneysshorterthan7.5kmisbybicycle• Largestbicycleparkingintheworld(12.500bicycles)atcentralstation,opensAugust2019• 245kmbicyclepath;90kmbicyclestrip;18kmbicyclestreetinUtrecht

There are several places where you can rent a bike, for example at Laag Catharijne. More information on cycling in Utrecht and on cycling routes (‘fietsroutes’) in the Province of Utrecht.

WalkingThe old town of Utrecht, the part within the city moat is small and eminently walkable. Find some ideas here and here (in Dutch).

Page 34: Program - iseepi.org files/PROGRAM-ISEE-A4_F… · Pechakucha and curious about what a Pechakucha session looks like? Come to the session on Tuesday at 10.30! ... Keynote by Kristie

Jaarbeurs Jaarbeursplein | 3521 AL Utrechtjaarbeurs.nl

Navigation adress Van Zijstweg 21 | 3521 AB Utrecht030 295 59 11see on map

Congres halls complexHall 5 Congres halls Juliana I + IIUpstairs hall 7/8 CroesehallUpstairs hall 8 SupernovaUpstairs hall 9 Media Plaza

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Exitnumber 17 from this point 3 km (7 min) to P3 Jaarbeurs / Beatrixbuilding

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Jaarbeurs Jaarbeursplein | 3521 AL Utrechtjaarbeurs.nl

Navigation adress Van Zijstweg 21 | 3521 AB Utrecht030 295 59 11see on map

Congres halls complexHall 5 Congres halls Juliana I + IIUpstairs hall 7/8 CroesehallUpstairs hall 8 SupernovaUpstairs hall 9 Media Plaza

BeatrixbuildingJaarbeurs MeetUpBeatrix TheatreExpohallJIMTrade MartZeynOffices Jaarbeurs

Taxi

Bus

(fast) Tram

Information

Bicycle storage

Charging point

Parking for the disabled

Walking route Central Station

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towardsAmsterdam /Schiphol

towardsDen Haag /Rotterdam

towardsBreda / Maastricht

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towardsHilversum

Exitnumber 8 from this point 3,1 km (7 min) to P3 Jaarbeurs / Beatrixbuilding

Exitnumber 17 from this point 3 km (7 min) to P3 Jaarbeurs / Beatrixbuilding

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Page 35: Program - iseepi.org files/PROGRAM-ISEE-A4_F… · Pechakucha and curious about what a Pechakucha session looks like? Come to the session on Tuesday at 10.30! ... Keynote by Kristie

ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 35 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ISEE 2019 DAILY MEETINGSA variety of meetings are scheduled during the ISEE 2019 Annual Meeting.

Sunday, August 25, 2019 Time Room

ISEE Asia Chapter Leadership Meeting 4:15 PM - 5:15 PM 312

Monday, August 26, 2019 Time Room

ISEE New and Prospective Members coffee hour 7:30 AM - 8:30 AM 110

ISEE Africa Chapter Meeting 12:15 PM - 1:15 PM 110

ISEE Asia Chapter Meeting 12:15 PM - 1:15 PM 114

ISEE Eastern Mediterranean Chapter Meeting 12:15 PM - 1:15 PM 117

ISEE Europe Chapter Meeting 12:15 PM - 1:15 PM 210

ISEE Latin America and Caribbean Chapter Meeting 12:15 PM - 1:15 PM 315

ISEE North America Chapter Meeting 12:15 PM - 1:15 PM 411

Multi-City Multi Country Collaborative Network Meeting 12:15 PM - 1:15 PM 412

ISEE General Membership Meeting 5:30 PM - 6:30 PM 117

IRAS Alumni Drinks 6:30 PM - 8:30 PM Molen “De Ster”

Tuesday, August 27, 2019 Time Room

Environmental Epidemiology Editorial Board Meeting 12:15 PM - 1:15 PM 110

ISEE Scientific Committee Meeting 12:15 PM - 1:15 PM 411

ISEE 2020 Annual Conference Committee Meeting 5:30 PM - 6:30 PM 320

ISEE Ethics & Philosophy Committee Meeting 5:30 PM - 6:30 PM 321

ISEE Membership Committee Meeting 5:30 PM - 6:30 PM 411

ECRHS-Air pollution WG meeting 5:30 PM - 6:30 PM 316

Wednesday, August 28, 2019 Time Room

ISEE Africa Chapter Meeting 12:15 PM - 1:15 PM 110

ISEE Latin America and Caribbean Chapter Meeting 12:15 PM - 1:15 PM 315

ISEE Communications Committee Meeting 12:15 PM - 1:15 PM 114

ISEE Ethics & Philosophy Committee Meeting 12:15 PM - 1:15 PM 117

EHP Associate Editors Meeting 12:15 PM - 1:15 PM 210

Meeting for NIEHS pooled study of phthalates and preterm birth (closed meeting)

12:15 PM - 1:15 PM 412

ISEE Policy Committee Meeting 12:15 PM - 1:15 PM 411

Page 36: Program - iseepi.org files/PROGRAM-ISEE-A4_F… · Pechakucha and curious about what a Pechakucha session looks like? Come to the session on Tuesday at 10.30! ... Keynote by Kristie

ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 36 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

PRESENTER GUIDELINES

Speaker GuidelinesOral presentations Before ISEE 2019 1. Each presentation should be 12 minutes

with 3 minutes for questions, for a maximum presentation length of 15 minutes. If your presentation is part of symposium, please check with your chair to confirm the duration of your presentation.

2. Oral session will be either 60 or 90 minutes and will feature 4 or 6 presentations, respectively. Each session will have two chairs to manage time and moderate discussion.

3. In order to maintain consistency and allow attendees to move easily between sessions, chairs have been instructed to strictly keep presentation timing and will interrupt if the presenter exceeds the allotted time (15 minutes per presentation, including questions and discussion).

4. Prepare your slides in PowerPoint using landscape orientation and either standard 4:3 or widescreen 16:9 format ratio. You can find out here how to change the format of your presentation. As a guideline, use no more than one slide per minute. Avoid slides with too much information. Focus on results and interpretation.

5. Standard laptops and audio-visual equipment provided by the venue will be used in the lecture room. You will be able to operate your slides by means of a remote control. You cannot use your own laptop.

During ISEE 2019 6. Upon arrival at the ISEE Conference venue,

please check in at the Registration Desk and review the final program for possible scheduling changes in your session.

7. All presentations should be pre-loaded on the equipment in the Speaker Service Center (Room 116) the day prior to your presentation. You should be prepared to bring your final presentation on a USB memory stick to the conference venue.

8. Introduce yourself to your session chairs 15 minutes before the session starts in the presentation room.

9. Staff will be available in the central corridors on each floor to assist you.

While Presenting 10. When speaking, make sure to face the

microphone for good sound quality. 11. Make sure your presentation does not exceed

the allotted time (15 minutes per presentation, including questions and discussion). Session chairs have been instructed to strictly maintain presentation times and will interrupt if the presenter exceeds the maximum length for each presentation.

12. All presentations that take place in the Theater will be video recorded. If you are presenting in the Theater, you will be contacted by the Meeting Organizers after the meeting for consent of publication of the video recording of your presentation on the ISEE Global Education Channel. No video will be published without consent of the presenter.

Some Advice for Mac Users Never use the Copy/Paste or Drag/Drop functions when inserting images in your presentation.

In PowerPoint, choose Insert:o Image o Image from file o then select your image • ImageformatsshouldbeJPEGorGIF • Videoinsertedinyourpresentation should be in AVI or MPEG format. In PowerPoint, choose Insert:o Film & sound o Film from a file

Fonts may be different in the Mac and PC environment. We suggest that you use common fonts like ARIAL, HELVETICA, TAHOMA, VERDANA, and for symbols WINGDINGS, WEBDINGS, SYMBOL fonts.

https:/ / www. youtube. com/ channel/ UCzW7ZAgwM-h0wWFEESbLlWA?view_as=subscriber

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 37 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

Pechakucha presentations

Before ISEE 2019 1. Pechakucha is a qualitative, oral presentation

format based on 15 slides which are automatically changed after exactly 20 seconds – so, 5 minutes presentation time! You can find out here how to specify the time to advance to the next slide. Don’t forget to click Apply To All.

2. The ISEE 2019 Pechakucha session will be 90 minutes and will feature 12 presentations. The session will have two chairs to manage time and moderate discussion.

3. In order to maintain consistency, chairs have been instructed to strictly keep presentation timing and will interrupt if the presenter exceeds the allotted time (7.5 minutes per presentation, including questions and discussion).

4. Prepare your slides in PowerPoint using landscape orientation and either standard 4:3 or widescreen 16:9 format ratio. You can find the guidelines here on how to change the format of your presentation.

5. It is recommended to use images rather than text on your slides. Successful Pechakucha presentations usually have images that complement what the speaker is saying and not a bunch of bullets and text on the slide. The use of animations is discouraged, but if you want to use animations, make sure that the start time and speed of the animation is set so that it fits into the 20 seconds that you have per slide. You can find instructions on how to do this here.

6. Standard laptops and audio-visual equipment provided by the venue will be used in the lecture room. Remember slides in a Pechakucha presentation are automatically changed after 20 seconds so you must be well prepared to make sure your presentation is harmonized with the slides!

7. All presentations should be pre-loaded on the equipment in the Speaker Service Center (Room 116) the day prior to your presentation. You should be prepared to bring your final presentation on a USB memory stick to the conference venue.

During ISEE 2019 8. Upon arrival at the ISEE Conference venue,

please check in at the Registration Desk and review the final program for possible scheduling changes in your session.

9. All presentations should be pre-loaded on the equipment in the Speaker Service Center (Room 116) the day prior to your presentation.

10. Introduce yourself to your session chairs 15 minutes before the session starts in the presen-tation room.

11. Staff will be available in the central corridors on each floor to assist you.

While Presenting 12. When speaking, make sure to face the micro-

phone for good sound quality.

Some Advice for Mac Users Never use the Copy/Paste or Drag/Drop functions when inserting images in your presentation.

In PowerPoint, choose Insert:o Image o Image from file o then select your image • ImageformatsshouldbeJPEGorGIF • Videoinsertedinyourpresentationshould

be in AVI or MPEG format.

In PowerPoint, choose Insert:o Film & sound o Film from a file

Fonts may be different in the Mac and PC environment. We suggest that you use common fonts like ARIAL, HELVETICA, TAHOMA, VERDANA, and for symbols WINGDINGS, WEBDINGS, SYMBOL fonts.

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 38 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

Before ISEE 2019 1. For proper display at the conference, your

poster size should stay within the following maximum dimensions A0 (Portrait):

Width: 841 mm Height: 1189 mm You can find the guidelines here on how to

change the size of your slides. 2. When preparing your poster, use adequate

letter type and font size to ensure good readability. Well-designed figures, graphs and tables will enhance the readability and impact of your poster. We recommend a minimum font size of 48 pt for body text. Do NOT reproduce your submitted abstract on the poster. We prefer you do not include an abstract at all, see point 3 below.

3. Put authors’ names and affiliations right under the title. We recommend 72pt for names and 48 pt for affiliations.

4. Put the conclusion of your poster right under the title, in BOLD CAPITALS 95pt. As a guideline, use no more than 25 words.

5. We encourage use of QR codes to refer the poster viewer to the digital version of your poster to more detailed materials you would like to make available.

6. An example poster can be downloaded here.7. Print your poster and bring it with you to the

ISEE Conference venue. Please note that there won’t be a printing service provided.

8. Poster boards in the poster area will be numbered. Each poster will be assigned a unique abstract code (beginning with TPS) and a poster board number. Abstract code and poster board number will appear in the final program on the ISEE2019 website and in the Meeting App. We anticipate this to be available in final form IN THE WEEK BEFORE THE CONFERENCE, so make sure to check the conference program from time to time to find your poster board number.

9. Posters should show the names and affiliations of all contributing authors.

During ISEE 2019 10. Upon arrival at the ISEE Conference venue,

please check in at the Registration Desk and review the final program for possible scheduling changes in your session.

11. Please check the conference program for your poster board number. If you have any questions, please come to the Registration Desk.

12. Presenters will be allowed to begin mounting their poster on the designated poster board 1 hour before the start of the session. Mounting materials (e.g., push pins) will be available in the poster area. All posters must be removed immediately at the end of each session, so that the boards may be prepared for the next session.

13. Introduce yourself to your session chairs 15 minutes before the session starts in the presentation room.

14. The poster discussion sessions are intended to provide a forum for presentation of original research findings and their discussion. Poster discussion sessions will be either 60 or 90 minutes and feature 9-12 and 15-20 posters, respectively on a specific scientific topic area.

15. The posters will be viewed for the first 30 and 45 minutes, respectively, of the session. The remaining 30 and 45 minutes, respectively, will be reserved for the group discussion of the posters and the topic of the session in which the individual poster presenters will be expected to participate. It is important to adhere to this schedule because meeting attendees may otherwise miss the discussion.

16. The session chairs will be organizing the session by topic areas and may inform you prior to the conference about issues that will be used to stimulate discussion in the session. Poster presenters should be prepared to address these issues as they relate to their poster.

17. At the start of the discussion session, the presenters of posters assigned to a specific topic area will be asked to join the session chairs at the front of the room. The session chairs will initiate the discussion by briefly introducing the issues and posters that relate to these issues, and may ask poster authors to briefly address the identified issues related to their poster. The discussion will then be opened up to the audience and poster presenters.

Poster discussion presentations and sessions

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 39 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

Thematic Poster presentations

Before ISEE 2019 1. For proper display at the conference, your

poster size should stay within the following maximum dimensions A0 (Portrait):

Width: 841 mm Height: 1189 mm You can find the guidelines here on how to

change the size of your slides. 2. When preparing your poster, use adequate

letter type and font size to ensure good readability. Well-designed figures, graphs and tables will enhance the readability and impact of your poster. We recommend a minimum font size of 48 pt for body text. Do NOT reproduce your submitted abstract on the poster. We prefer you do not include an abstract at all, see point 3 below.

3. Put authors’ names and affiliations right under the title. We recommend 72pt for names and 48 pt for affiliations.

4. Put the conclusion of your poster right under the title, in BOLD CAPITALS 95pt. As a guideline, use no more than 25 words.

5. We encourage use of QR codes to refer the poster viewer to the digital version of your poster to more detailed materials you would like to make available.

6. An example poster can be downloaded here. 7. Print your poster and bring it with you to the

ISEE Conference venue. Please note that there won’t be a printing service provided.

8. Poster boards in the poster area will be numbered. Each poster will be assigned a unique abstract code (beginning with TPS) and a poster board number. Abstract code and poster board number will appear in the final program on the ISEE2019 website and in the Meeting App. We anticipate this to be available in final form ONE WEEK BEFORE THE CONFERENCE, so make sure to check the conference program at that time to find your poster board number.

9. Posters should show the names and affiliations of all contributing authors.

During ISEE 2019 10. Upon arrival at the ISEE Conference venue,

please check in at the Registration Desk and review the final program for possible scheduling changes in your session.

11. Please check the conference program for your poster board number. If you have any questions, please come to the Registration Desk.

12. On the day of your poster session (Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday), all posters should be mounted between 8:00 and 10:00 a.m. and can be taken down after the last session, i.e. after 5:30 p.m. on Monday and Tuesday and after 4:30 p.m. on Wednesday, but no later than 6:00 p.m.

13. Posters not removed by the presenters will be removed by the organizers at 6 p.m. on the day of presentation and will be destroyed.

14. Mounting materials (e.g., push pins) will be available in the poster area.

15. If you are presenting a poster you must be at the poster from 3:15 p.m. - 4:15 p.m. on your assigned day. All poster presenters are also encouraged to be at their posters during the morning and afternoon breaks Monday-Wednesday, but this is not required.

Page 40: Program - iseepi.org files/PROGRAM-ISEE-A4_F… · Pechakucha and curious about what a Pechakucha session looks like? Come to the session on Tuesday at 10.30! ... Keynote by Kristie

ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 40 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

TRAVEL AWARDSThe ISEE 2019 Annual Meeting awarded 90,000 EUR in travel funds to 64 students, new researchers, and senior researchers from 49 countries. The winners were selected from among 342 applicants. Award criteria included commitment and enthusiasm for the field of environmental epidemiology, financial need, inclusion in an under-represented group, and abstract quality. We would like to acknowledge the hard work of the ISEE Travel Awards Committee and all the volunteers who reviewed applications. Also, many thanks to the conference attendees who donated to the travel awards as part of their registration. Travel award recipients should check in at the registration desk for additional award information. On behalf of ISEE 2019, we congratulate all travel award recipients and welcome you to Utrecht!

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 41 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

STUDENTS AND NEW RESEARChERS PROGRAMStudent and New Researcher (SNR) events during the annual meeting provide opportunities for students and new researchers to network and socialize. A list of SNR activities at the ISEE 2019 Annual Meeting is provided below.

SNRN Social Soccer EventMonday, August 26, 2019 at 7:00 PM - 9:30 PMThe SNRN will host a soccer tournament and social event on Monday, August 26. Participation in the tournament is not required and we hope all SNRN members will feel welcome to come and socialize with their peers! We will provide light food and 1-2 drinks per SNRN attendee. Details: The fields are at Grebberglaan 4 in Utrecht, a 15 minutes’ walk from the conference venue. The event starts at 7 pm and lasts until 9:30 pm. The basic tournament layout will include 1) five on five matches 2) match participation given on a first-come, first served basis and 3) co-ed or all gender teams with unlimited substitutions. We will supply t-shirts to the players. For more info, please contact the SNRN chair Barrett Welch or Toyib Olaniyan.

SNRN Early Morning Breakfast Session Tuesday, August 27, 2019 at 7:30 AM - 8:30 AM

Topic: Transitioning to the next stepCome and meet with a panel of environmental epidemiologists working in diverse professional settings (government, private industry, non-profit, academia) to learn what you need to know about transitioning out of student- or trainee-hood. Hear about their personal experiences and get suggestions about how to prepare and keep yourself competitive for the job market.

Committees FairTuesday, August 27, 2019 at 12:15 PM - 1:15 PMPlease come meet the SNRN Steering Committee and other SNRN members at our table! This is a great opportunity to learn how you can get involved with the SNRN and provide feedback on what you hope the SNRN should be accomplishing.

SNRN Early Morning Breakfast Session Wednesday, August 28, 2019 at 7:30 AM - 8:30 AMTopic: Round-table Discussion with an Environmental EpidemiologistCome join us for breakfast and connect with experienced researchers in an informal setting to discuss topics ranging from career inspiration to work/life balance. This is a unique opportunity to ask your own questions and network with well-established and upcoming researchers!

SNRN Awards Ceremony Wednesday, August 28, 2019 at 4:30 PM - 4:45 PM Best early career abstracts and best student posters will be awarded.

Page 42: Program - iseepi.org files/PROGRAM-ISEE-A4_F… · Pechakucha and curious about what a Pechakucha session looks like? Come to the session on Tuesday at 10.30! ... Keynote by Kristie

ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 42 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

PRE-CONFERENCE WORKShOPSSunday, August 25, 2019

WHEN WHAT WHERE

Pre-conference workshops (morning)

10:00 AM - 1:30 PM PCW 01 Health Impact Assessment for Environmental Epidemiologist 212

10:00 AM - 1:30 PM PCW 02 Modelling desert dust exposure events for epidemiological short-term health effects studies

214

10:00 AM - 1:30 PM PCW 03 Peer review for authors of scientific manuscripts 218

10:00 AM - 1:30 PM PCW 05 Advanced modelling techniques for time series analysis using R 210

Pre-conference workshops (full day)

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM PCW 10 Argumentation on causal relations in environment health issues. How do environmental epidemiologists differ in their reasoning from other professionals?

211

10:00 AM - 6:00 PM PCW 11 Climate Change in the Arctic: Impact on the Health of Indigenous and Worker Communities

219

Pre-conference workshops (afternoon)

2:30 PM - 6:00 PM PCW 04 Projecting health impacts under climate change scenarios 115

2:30 PM - 6:00 PM PCW 06 Improve Environmental Health Competence for Research and Actions: Sentinel Physicians for the Environment (SPE)

218

2:30 PM - 6:00 PM PCW 07 Introduction to the analysis of air pollution health impacts using AirQ+

214

2:30 PM - 6:00 PM PCW 08 A Journal Editor’s Guide to Successful Systematic Reviews: Common Challenges Faced by Submitting Authors, and How to Overcome Them

210

2:30 PM - 6:00 PM PCW 09 Mixtures Analysis with Weighted Quantile Sum (WQS) Regression and its Extensions

212

PCW 01 health Impact Assessment for Environmental Epidemiologist10:00 AM -1:30 PM – Room 212

Dr. David Rojas-Rueda, Fort Collins Colorado, United Statesojas-Rueda Background: Health Impact Assessment has been proposed by the World Health Organization, National and Regional authorities as a key tool for health in all policies and has been widely used in the environmental health context.

Significance: The course will describe the methods and utility of Health Impact Assessment (HIA) for environmental health. The students will learn the HIA types and steps and will identify how HIA could be used as a tool for policy translation in environmental health.

Content:- Introduction to HIA- HIA history, types and steps- HIA examples for Environmental Health- Participatory HIA, Quantitative HIA, and Monetary evaluations- HIA tools and resources- Conclusions / Q&A

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 43 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

PCW 02 Modelling desert dust exposure events for epidemiological short-term health effects studies 10:00 AM -1:30 PM – Room 214

Dr. Massimo Stafoggia, Lazio Region Health Service - Asl Roma 1, Italy Background: Evidence on the health effects of desert dust remains unclear. Recently, a systematic review commissioned by the World Health Organization (WHO) reported inconsistent results across different studies and geographical areas, the main sources of heterogeneity being the study settings, the exposure assessment methods and the epidemiological study designs. The report concluded that there is an urgent need to develop a standardized protocol to quantify dust exposure and to conduct epidemiological studies, in and near hot spots. Research question: The (apparently simple) question “does desert dust impact human health?” requires a careful definition of: a) what is the relevant exposure of interest, b) what kind of health effects are plausible, c) how such effects can be quantified, and d) which study design is the more appropriate to answer the question. All these aspects will be described, and then discussed through thematic working groups. Methodology proposed: Effects of desert dust on human health will be investigated with a time series approach. Four alternative exposure definitions will be explored and discussed: 1) dust events as binary exposure (with and without adjustment for PM concentrations; 2) PM10 as continuous exposure, and effect modification by dust days; 3) Independent effect of desert and anthropogenic sources of PM, via two-pollutant models; 4) Independent effect of desert and anthropogenic PM, plus effect modification of anthropogenic sources by dust events. Significance: Each approach will be illustrated in practice with real time series data from Rome and Athens using the statistical software R. The discussion will focus on: different patterns of dust advections across geographic locations, alternative dust exposure definition, ways to quantify desert and anthropogenic sources, relative toxicity of different PM sources, exportability of the methodology in other areas, effects of dust near hot spots. A standardized protocol to be applied for future studies will be discussed.

PCW 03 Peer review for authors of scientific manuscripts10:00 AM -1:30 PM – Room 218

Dr. Joan Casey, Berkeley, California United States Background and Significance: SurveysbytheNaturePublishingGroupindicatethat90%ofscientistsfeel peer review improves their work. However, few researchers receive formal training on how to efficiently conduct and respond to reviews. We aim to provide participants with skills and strategies to maximize the quality and utility of their reviews. Learning to provide better reviews can also help authors improve their own manuscripts. The Workshop: We will familiarize participants with the overall peer review process: the purpose and ethics of peer review, when to accept or decline a review invitation, the review itself, and responding to reviews. Participants will learn key elements of a reviewer report and when to send private comments to the editor. An excellent review includes an evaluation of scientific soundness and whether the authors appropriately summarize and discuss the current literature, whether the authors’ conclusions match their results, and whether the main findings are important, interesting, and relevant to the reviewing journal. Reviewers should also focus on tables and figures. Techniques to convey comments politely and constructively will be discussed. A brief discussion of journal decisions and appeals will provide context for the editorial process. The session will also feature “live edits” of manuscript abstracts and responses to reviewer reports to enhance learning. The Capacity Building and Education Committee has agreed to sponsor this session, possibly providing scholarships for early career or LMIC researchers.

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 44 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

PCW 04 Projecting health impacts under climate change scenarios 2:30 PM - 6:00 PM – Room 210

Dr. Ana M. Vicedo-Cabrera, London, United KingdomMr Francesco Sera, London, United Kingdom Dr Antonio Gasparrini, London, United Kingdom Climate change is considered one of the most important environmental challenges of the current and future decades. Reliable evidence on health impacts due to global warming is critical for the design and implementation of effective adaptation and mitigation strategies. However, projecting health burdens associated to specific environmental stressors can be a difficult task, due to the potentially complex risk patterns and inherent uncertainty of future climate scenarios. These issues can be properly addressed by applying advanced study designs and statistical techniques recently developed in time-series analysis. This course will provide a practical overview on a novel methodological framework for health impact projections under climate change scenarios. It includes the latest methodological advances in epidemiological studies, applied in recent publications (Gasparrini et al. 2017 Lancet PH, VicedoCabrera et al. 2018. Clim Change). The framework will be illustrated through a hands-on tutorial consisting of a brief theoretical introduction and a practical example of a projections study using real data and implemented R code. The session will be structured in sub-sections covering the different analytical steps of the framework. In each of them, participants will be introduced to the specific methodological approach, and will be able to apply it using the provided R code/data. It is open to environmental epidemiologist interested in climate change research and health impact projections. We assume participants have basic experience on time-series methods and on the use of R for this type of epidemiological analysis, as this part will not be covered in the session. In case the participant does not have experience in time-series analysis in R, we would recommend him/her attending the pre-conference workshop on “Advanced modelling techniques for time series analysis using R” taught in the morning. However, participants will be given fully executable R scripts and data to replicate the examples in future study.

PCW 05 Advanced modelling techniques for time series analysis using R10:00 AM -1:30 PM – Room 115

Dr. Ana M. Vicedo-Cabrera, London, United KingdomMr Francesco Sera, London, United Kingdom Dr Antonio Gasparrini, London, United Kingdom

Time series analysis has become a key tool for investigating short-term effects of environmental risk factors. In the last two decades, there has been an intense activity to develop more sophisticated study designs and statistical models for using time series data in this context. This workshop will offer an overview of recent methodological advancements, focusing on their application through the statistical software R. Participants will be provided with a theoretical introduction, as well as practical experience with a hands-on session using real-data examples. R scripts and specific functions will be provided to all participants. The session will involve a mix of mini-lectures and mini-practicals on the various topics covered in the in workshop, including illustrative examples and real-data analyses.

The session will cover:• IntroductiontotimeseriesanalysiswithR• Studydesignsandstatisticalmodelsfortimeseriesanalysis:anoverviewofpackagesandfunctions

in R• Modellingnon-linearanddelayedeffects:anintroductiontodistributedlaglinearandnon-linear

models and the R package dlnm• Pooling results in two-stage multi-location analyses: extended mixed-effects metaanalysis and

meta-regression using the new R package mixmeta (replacing mvmeta)• Fromaggregated to individual-level time seriesanalysis: an introduction to thenovel case time

series design

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 45 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

This workshop is open to every environmental epidemiologist interested in the analysis of time series data. While no previous knowledge on time series analysis is expected, we assume that participants have basic experience on the use of R for epidemiological analysis and on the application of R regression functions, as these topics will not be covered in the session.

PCW 06 Improve Environmental health Competence for Research and Actions: Sentinel Physicians for the Environment (SPE)2:30 PM - 6:00 PM – Room 218

Dr. Paolo Lauriola, Modena, Modena Italy Background and significance: In 400 B.C. Hyppocrates stated that in Medicine any investigation should take into account the environment where the patient lives. Probably the first modern environmental epidemiology study was the “natural experiment” carried out in London in 1854 by an anesthesiologist named John Snow. Environmental-Health (EH) surveillance is getting more and more essential for EH prevention across the world (Behbod,2016). Indeed knowledge and recognition of EH issues are not a common practice amongst physicians. Nevertheless some very significant (but rare) experiences have shown they can help detect critical situationsandtheyinfluencedeffectiveactionsandattitudes.90–95%ofpatientsareinitiallycaredfor by Family Doctors(FDs) and 80% of health problems are managed within primary care (WorldOrganization of Family Doctors-WONCA9 (E Hummers-Pradier, 2009). FDs could also be a very valuable source of a huge amount of useful data, helping inform decisions leading up to effective environmental-health understandings and actions either at local or at global level, as well as to support public health authorities in implementing Environmental-and-Public-Health-Tracking (EPHT) and Health-Impact-Assessment(HIA) based on early detection of selected health outcomes collected at local community level. Aim: To strengthen networks of physicians interested in contributing to environmental health surveillance in collaboration with environmental epidemiologists Content: Starting from some experiences some key messages will be shared:- Why and How SPE (Lauriola, 2018) can effectively cope with global and local threats with

policymakers, polluters and citizens (NEJM,2019).- short and comprehensive description of methods and results of some significant in the field

experience.

It will be arranged as a time breakdown of presentations given by• clinicianscontributingdata/education• organizationswithaccesstoFDdata;• epidemiologistsestimatingincidenceofhealthendpointsattributabletoenvironmentalexposuresThe balance of input between education, representative organizations with data access, and epidemiology work needs to be considered.

PCW 07 Introduction to the analysis of air pollution health impacts using AirQ+2:30 PM - 6:00 PM – Room 214

Dr. Pierpaolo Mudu, Bonn, Germany

The assessment of the health impacts of air pollution is fundamental in discussing and implementing interventions and monitoring their impacts. Various software packages to assess the impacts of air pollution on mortality and morbidity have been developed over the last twenty years. Through the development of the AirQ software in the years 2001-2005, World Health Organization Regional Office for Europe (WHO) provided a functional tool useful not only for estimates of the impacts of air pollution but also to support the discussion on methodologies and the need to develop monitoring station networks. In 2016 the AirQ software was updated and expanded and WHO put AirQ+, a user-friendly software, available for download.

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The general aim of this workshop is to introduce participants to the general principles of health impact assessment (HIA) and air pollution, to support the understanding of modelling air pollution health effects, and to using tools to assess impacts of air pollution, specifically the new version of AirQ+ used for hands-on exercises.

The assessment of the health impacts of air pollution is fundamental in discussing and implementing interventions and monitoring their impacts. Participants will benefit from learning the use AirQ+ including impacts on various health outcomes, use of life table analysis and production of burden estimates. Participants are invited to bring their laptops and possibly have installed AirQ+ in their computer.

PCW 08 A Journal Editor’s Guide to Successful Systematic Reviews: Common Challenges Faced by Submitting Authors, and how to Overcome Them2:30 PM - 6:00 PM – Room 210

Dr. Paul Whaley, Lancaster University, Lancaster, United Kingdom

Systematic reviews (SR) are an increasingly important research tool for making sense of complex evidence around how environmental exposures affect people’s health. However, developed as they were for clinical evidence, adaptation of SR methods to the environmental health context has not been straightforward. Many methodological issues remain unresolved. In spite of the controversies, environmental health journals have started introducing new editorial policies which require that standards for environmental health SRs reflect those of the clinical field. This is presenting a challenge to many authors, as SRs conducted according to previously-acceptable standards are increasingly being rejected. Environment International (IF 7.3) was the first environmental health journal to appoint a specialist SR editor and is known for its high standards for submitted manuscripts. The purpose of this workshop is to explain the reasons for these standards, present new data showing which stages of the SR process pose particular challenges for authors, and to provide specific, practical advice in overcoming these challenges. An international panel of speakers will address the following topics: • WhyweneedhighstandardsforSRs,andhowthisischallengingsubmittingauthors• AframeworkforsuccessfulSRquestions• Apracticalexerciseintranslatingreviewquestionsintoeffectivesearchstrategies• Whichtoolsauthorsshouldusetoassessthequalityofincludedstudies• BestpracticeinappraisalofcertaintyinresultsofaSR• Howprotocolpublicationisanear-guaranteeofacceptanceoffinalsubmissions Finally, there will be a moderated Q&A session with the panel, where audience members can get advice on any SRs they might be conducting. Workshop participants will gain insight into the importance and fundamental accessibility of new, emerging standards for conduct of SRs. They will also have acquired a clear and readily-implemented strategy for meeting them.

PCW 09 Mixtures Analysis with Weighted Quantile Sum (WQS) Regression and its Extensions2:30 PM - 6:00 PM – Room 212

Dr Elena Colicino, New York, United States Dr Chris Gennings, New York, United States Dr Paul Curtin, New York, United States Dr Eva Tanner, New York, United States Stefano Renzetti, Milan, Italy

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 47 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

Background: Biomonitoring studies clearly demonstrate that humans are exposed to complex patterns of environmental chemicals – some of which may act through related pathways (e.g., the endocrine system), thereby increasing the likelihood of a “mixture effect” from multiple chemicals. Statistical methods and study designs for analyzing the complex, often high-dimensional data that arise in environmental health research are relatively new and require knowledge of advanced statistical techniques. Content: Weighted Quantile Sum (WQS) Regression has been extensively applied in environmental health studies to assess both the mixture effect and the driving factors, “bad actors”, in mixtures. An advantage of WQS regression is the simplicity of interpretation of the empirically constructed weighted index of environmental components. In recent years, more sophisticated versions of WQS have been developed to accommodate different study designs (cross-sectional and longitudinal), outcomes (binary, categorical and continuous) and dimension of environmental mixtures (low and high number of chemicals). This workshop will offer an overview of recent methodological advancements, with a specific focus on their applications in international (US, Mexican and Italian) studies, using R (www.r-project.org). Significance: The workshop brings together experts in the fields of environmental health and epidemiology, with experience in developing statistical approaches to assess the human health effects of chemical mixtures. Speakers will include new and experienced researchers working on a diversity of environmental chemical exposures (i.e. phthalates, metabolomics, and metals). The workshop will consist of a short introduction, four applied talks with hands-on sessions in R, followed by a lengthy Q&A session during which the speakers will answer questions on the use of environmental chemical mixtures in both real and synthetic scenarios.

PCW 10 Argumentation on causal relations in environment health issues. how do environmental epidemiologists differ in their reasoning from other professionals?10:00 AM - 6:00 PM – Room 211

Prof. Dr. Erik Lebret, Bilthoven, The Netherlands and Prof. Raymond Neutra, Berkeley, USA

There is clear evidence that causal inference about environmental health problems in the general population is quite different and also varies across disciplines. Toxicologists, epidemiologists, lawyers and lay people apply different sets of argumentation and base their inferences on different information sets and apply different mental models. To explore these issues in more detail, this workshop will bring together professionals from different fields and background.

The workshops starts with expert presentations from renowned epidemiologist, toxicologist, psychologist and law and policy scientists. Also, we will present new results from a series of interviews of experts about their causal reasoning with respect to population health risks of PFOA. Then, we will have structured discussions (plenary or in subgroups, depending on attendance) with the workshop participants about their personal experience in causal reasoning in multi-disciplinary expert settings, explore the driving forces in their personal reasoning (e.g. their views on the role of experts) and try to identify hidden beliefs, allergies and deal breakers in argumentation by experts from other disciplines.

Based on the discussions, recommendation will be drafted for further development of argumentation in causal inference in environmental health issues. Conveners will explore engagement of EFSA-representatives of relevant expert committees, e.g. on PFOA, also they will explore possible NGO involvement.

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 48 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

PCW 11 Climate Change in the Arctic: Impact on the health of Indigenous and Worker Communities10:00 AM - 6:00 PM – Room 219

Dr. David F. Goldsmith, Georgetown University, Silver Spring, United States

Background: Research on climate change in the Arctic is crucial for developing effective public health policies, especially for native communities and for workers in the polar region. Because there has been a dramatic rise in sea levels in the Arctic in the recent past, our intent is to share the state of the art epidemiology on this issue.Our pre-conference workshop is aimed at sharing with colleagues, students, and health policy leaders concerned with environmental management some of the health and safety risks from climate change among the nations of Canada, US, Norway, Sweden, Russia, Denmark, Iceland, and Greenland focusing on rising water issues.

Significance: The workshop will examine several examples from the Fulbright Arctic Initiative research and from other studies. We will also discuss how to successfully share epidemiology methods and findings with local communities and with governmental decision-makers.

Content: The workshop will structured to highlight the scientific skills needed for health determination, including an emphasis on exposure sciences, epidemiology, and medicine, with a focus on pediatric and adult health as well as psychological impacts.

Specific examples will be presented on adolescent suicide risks among indigenous communities; the perceptions of increasing hazard from rising ocean levels and workplace air hazards with attention on oil and gas extraction and mining; snowmobile injury prevention; how environmental leadership of the native villages have grappled with needing to relocate their whole settlements; and discussion about effective corporations and their workers have coped when presented with the severity of threats to health.

We will emphasize effective communication with communities, governments and with responsible corporations leading to effective responses that produced improved public health. We hope the workshop will encourage the development of new curricula for international Arctic health and safety, tailored to the needs of indigenous communities and of professionals in environmental

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 49 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

TUESDAY – AUGUST 27, 2019WHEN WHAT WHERE

Early morning sessions

7:30 AM - 8:30 AM EMS 01 Conflicts of Interest and Publication Policy, With A Special Focus on Litigation: A Roundtable Discussion

110

7:30 AM - 8:30 AM EMS 03 Drinking water battles won and lost 114

7:30 AM - 8:30 AM EMS 04 Using REDCap Mobile Application for Data Collection in Remote Areas in Multi- National Environmental HealthTrial

117

7:30 AM - 8:30 AM EMS 05 Applications of spatiotemporal modeling in environmental epidemiology: Successes and challenges

210

7:30 AM - 8:30 AM EMS 06 History and Future of the Environmental Epidemiology of Water, Exposure to Chemical Substances and Reflexes on Human Health

315

7:30 AM - 8:30 AM EMS 07 Transitioning to the next step – SNRN breakfast session 411

7:30 AM - 8:30 AM EMS 08 Collaborating with the Frenemy: Developing Credible Research Partnerships with Industry

412

7:30 AM - 8:30 AM EMS 12 Google Air View 417

WEDNESDAY – AUGUST 28, 2019WHEN WHAT WHERE

Early morning sessions

7:30 AM - 8:30 AM EMS 02 Differences in Causal Inference from Epidemiological and Non-Epidemiological Evidence

110

7:30 AM - 8:30 AM EMS 09 Lead in Tap Water: North American Mistakes & Lessons Learned

210

7:30 AM - 8:30 AM EMS 10 Novel Approaches for Addressing Exposures within the Environmental Influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) Cohorts: Opportunity for Infrastructure Fund (OIF) Research

315

7:30 AM - 8:30 AM EMS 11 Round-table Discussion with an Environmental Epidemiologist – SNRN breakfast session

411

7:30 AM - 8:30 AM EMS 13 The importance of engaging in public policy in the age of anti-science

412

EMS 01 Conflicts of Interest and Publication Policy, With A Special Focus on Litigation: A Roundtable DiscussionTuesday August 27 – 7:30 AM - 8:30 AMRoom 110

Dr. Shira KramerDr. Raymond Neutra

Studies have shown that funding source may impact research methodology, conclusions drawn, and positioning relating to policy, thereby threatening the validity of research data, and the body of published research upon which the scientific community relies in order to draw conclusions as to causation. Conflicts of interest may arise as a result of consulting relationships, direct industry funding

EARLY MORNING SESSIONS

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 50 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

for research, or funding by law firms for expert witness testimony and opinions. In the context of litigation, an expert witness hired to testify on behalf of either the Plaintiff or the Defendant must take a position either favoring or refuting the matter to be adjudicated. Therefore, disclosure of funding sources and expert relationships is of critical importance. However, failure on the part of researchers to disclose financial support in publications is widespread, and many journals are quite lax in enforcing disclosure requirements.

The Ethics & Philosophy Committee is proposing a symposium in a new, Roundtable format. A Roundtable is a discussion forum of panelists, with each panelist giving a 5–6 minute introduction, followed by time for a discussion that includes active audience participation.

The symposium will focus on the ethical requirements and policies relating to publications, with a special emphasis on publications in the context of legal proceedings.

Questions and issues to be discussed include:1. What policies should journals enforce in ensuring disclosures on the part of authors, and what

should be the ramifications for failure to disclose? 2. What are the ethical duties of authors and journals in publishing reviews, opinions, or research

articles relating to subject matters in litigation? 3. Are there advantages and disadvantages of publishing litigation-related material, including reviews

and research studies?4. Should journals give opposing experts an opportunity to refute opinions or conclusions as a matter

of policy?

EMS 02 Differences in Causal Inference from Epidemiological and Non-Epidemiological EvidenceWednesday August 28 – 7:30 AM - 8:30 AMRoom 110

Dr. Raymond Neutra

The speakers will examine the arguments justifying a hazard identification and risk assessment based on epidemiology and toxicology of PFOA. The PFOA example is used to discover differences in reasoning that will apply also to arguments concerning other toxic agents. Philosophers Toulmin and van Eemeren suggested that arguments could be better understood if broken into their constituent parts.

The “claim” of hazard and risk is partly based on the “factual findings” but requires a general premise (“warranting generalization”) to justify that these particular findings warrant this claim. But does the warranting generalization fully apply in this case? “Ancillary evidence” may validate its applicability or may weaken it. When analyzed in this way differences between epidemiological and experimental science become clearer and help answer the question about the evidentiary weight that should be accorded these different types of evidence. Some of the presentations at the symposium will be based on results from telephone interviews that researchers at RIVM are conducting with three expert toxicologists and three expert epidemiologists. Speakers will report on what they learned when they explored the how these scientists use factual findings, warranting generalizations and ancillary evidence to arrive at their claims.

The proposed symposium consists of 1) Introduction of the issue of causal inference in environmental health problems2) Introduction to Toulmin’s and van Eemeren’s Argumentation Models3) Consistent differences between Epidemiological and Toxicological Arguments4) The influence of Normative World Views on Scientific Arguments

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EMS 03 Drinking water battles won and lostTuesday August 27 – 7:30 AM - 8:30 AMRoom 114

Dr. Ronnie LevinDr. Anne NigraMarc EdwardsLaurel Schaider

Regulating drinking water is more difficult and more contentious than regulating air pollution. Both the contamination sources and the remediation occur at the local level, and land use decisions are often involved. This introduces competing needs and resources. Consequently, regulations occur slowly.

The US EPA has experienced some successes recently, such as regulating arsenic in public drinking water, where a national health survey detected a reduction in arsenic exposures among consumers of public drinking water in over just a decade. Other contaminants, for instance, lead and turbidity, have been harder to manage, despite demonstrated health effects and repeated regulatory efforts. Finally, new products have introduced new drinking-water contaminants presenting yet another frontier for public decision makers. The entire developed world shares these public health challenges, facing both large and wealthy countries as well as small and poor. By bringing these battles into the foreground, public health researchers and decision makers can examine which issues have been most tractable and which have resisted easy solutions. In this symposium, we will present 1 recent drinking water success, 2 ongoing challenges and 1 new frontier.

EMS 04 Using REDCap Mobile Application for Data Collection in Remote Areas in Multi- National Environmental healthTrial Selection process, Implementation, Strengths, and LimitationsTuesday August 27 – 7:30 AM - 8:30 AMRoom 117

Dr. Shirin Jabbarzadeh

Environmental data collection in remote areas is always challenging, especially in large multi-location longitudinal studies. The Data Management Team of Household Air Pollution Intervention Network (HAPIN) Trial, evaluated different available electronic data collection tools and selected REDCap, a free and secure widely used data capture system by academic institutions, for this trial. HAPIN is a randomized controlled trial of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) stove and fuel distribution in 3,200 households in four countries; India, Rwanda, Guatemala, and Peru. We collect 2500+ variables using 60+ Case Report Forms (CRF) on study households over the course of the study. To enhance data integrity across sites, we implemented identical REDCap projects using the same variable names and timelines in four different languages English, Kinyarwanda, Spanish (both Guatemalan and Peruvian). These projects uploaded on tablets via the REDCap Mobile Application, which provides offline electronic data collection functionality in rural areas. Field staff collect data using tablets and import the data from tablets to the REDCap server when an internet connection is available. This allows the data management team at Emory to access the data, create reports, compare different sites data, and perform regular QA/QC.

The REDCap data collection system not only makes the offline electronic data collection possible across study sites and times but also allows data managers to have near real-time access to a multi-national study data. We also benefit from other REDCap functionalities such as scheduling module, photo and video attachments, real-time data validation and calculation, barcode scanning, etc. However, we experience some challenges such as difficulty with special characters and intermittent data upload difficulties with unclear/unrelated error messages.

In this session, we provide an overview of tool selection, implementation process, advantages and challenges of the REDCap mobile application for global environmental health study data in rural areas.

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EMS 05 Applications of spatiotemporal modeling in environmental epidemiology: Successes and challengesTuesday August 27 – 7:30 AM - 8:30 AMRoom 210

Prof. Shilu Tong

BackgroundOver recent years, there have been rapid developments in spatio-temporal methodology with epidemiological applications, particularly in the field of environmental epidemiology. In this Early Morning Session, we will address the interface between spatio-temporal modeling and environmental epidemiology.

SignificanceSpatio-temporal methodology is often required in assessing the health risks associated with environmental hazards, and it is vitally important to understand advances in spatio-temporal modeling and to enable the implementation of the methodology in environmental epidemiological practice.Designed for researchers and graduate students in both epidemiology and statistics, the session covers a wide range of topics, from an introduction to principles of spatio-temporal modeling to new research directions. It describes traditional and Bayesian approaches and presents their applications in environmental epidemiology.

Presenters: 1. Prof. Shilu Tong , Shanghai Children’s Medical Center, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine.Spatiotemporal modeling: research development and future challenges (15 min)2. A/Prof. Yuming Guo, School of Preventive Medicine and Public Health, Monash UniversityAnalysing spatiotemporal data using R (15 min)3. Prof. Wenbiao hu, School of Public Health and Social Work, Queensland University of TechnologyApplications of Bayesian spatiotemporal model in environmental epidemiological practice (15 min)

EMS 06 history and Future of the Environmental Epidemiology of Water, Exposure to Chemical Substances and Reflexes on human healthTuesday August 27 – 7:30 AM - 8:30 AMRoom 315

Prof. Dr. Carmen AsmusDr. Telma NeryMr. Edson SantosMs. Sandra ArancibiaMs. Leslie FieldsMr. Joao TorresDr. Marcelo NovaesProf. Marc DugoMr. Ivan CardosoDr. Ana Leticia Melquiades

Water is currently a cause of great impacts on the entire planet especially in vulnerable populations. The debate involves environmental contaminants in large centers as well as in rural areas. It is fundamental at that moment the debate and development of studies on substances to discuss and discuss issues related to water and environmental health impacts. Prioritize epidemiological studies that address characteristics of contamination with chemicals, access, rights, socio-environmental conflicts. Rescue Hippocratic historians, current risk situations and finalize with prospects of studies or joint activities with varied countries.We hope to discuss chemical substances - pesticides, trihalomethanes, lead; accidents that impact on access, water crises, existing social crises, activities by humanitarian institutions, finalizing with debate the Millennium Goals. The objective is to discuss studies and development of actions by institutions that work on these issues, with Doctors without frontiers and other civil society, but to rescue the great debates that took place in the Alternative World Forum of Water - FAMA in 2017.

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We hope to have an open space of reports of studies, of situations and suggestions of referrals. Structured groups of records / reports will be used, and records methodologies will be used for the preparation of reports afterwards. A writer / translator will be part of the organization.

EMS 07 Transitioning to the next step – SNRN breakfast sessionTuesday August 27 – 7:30 AM - 8:30 AMRoom 411

Mr. Barrett Welch

Come and meet with a panel of environmental epidemiologists working in diverse professional settings (government, private industry, non-profit, academia) to learn what you need to know about transitioning out of student- or trainee-hood. Hear about their personal experiences and get suggestions about how to prepare and keep yourself competitive for the job market.

EMS 08 Collaborating with the Frenemy: Developing Credible Research Partnerships with IndustryTuesday August 27 – 7:30 AM - 8:30 AM

Dr. David SavitzProf. Dr. Manolis KogevinasMr. Robert O’KeefeDr. Katryn GuytonMs. Kristie Ebi

The scientific and public health goals of environmental epidemiology frequently intersect with the interests of private industry in multiple ways, both complementary and contentious. Most obviously, the etiologic questions that researchers are asking simultaneously have implications for science, public health, government regulation, and industry strategy and profitability. But in addition to the ultimate implications of the research, there are other important, often unexplored points of intersection. In many instances, industry brings unique understanding of the emissions and discharges of concern, potentially exposed populations, and changes over time that would not be otherwise available. The private sector makes internal policy decisions that benefit from accurate information, including insights regarding environmental health. In practice, environmental epidemiology research can be conducted by employees of the company or research teams that integrate employees and outside investigators, or through direct support to outside investigators with varying degrees of industry oversight. Can such research be considered to be independent? What factors and models contribute the conduct and provision of credible research? We will examine the issues that arise from engagement of industry in environmental epidemiology: the compatibility of the industry’s research agenda with public health goals; degree of autonomy of researchers under industrial sponsorship; reputational and credibility issues facing industry and researchers with whom they work; the role of funding in objective research and how these relationships have evolved over time. There are pitfalls that fail to optimally serve scientific, public health, or industry goals, What are they? By examining these challenges and opportunities in a constructive manner, they can be overcome and move us towards more high quality research that simultaneously serve all those interests.

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EMS 09 Lead in Tap Water: North American Mistakes & Lessons LearnedWednesday August 28 – 7:30 AM - 8:30 AMRoom 210

Dr. Ronnie LevinMr. Siddhartha RoyMr. Marc EdwardsMr. Erik Olson

Thirty years after US EPA finalized its regulation of lead in US drinking water, stories still regularly splash across local and national US newspapers about lead-contaminated drinking water. The public and elected officials are outraged, speeches are made, and … then the furor dies down. Only to reemerge elsewhere. Canada has not been immune to this ferment and recently published a draft drinking water guideline for lead that resulted from testimony by hundreds of scientists, health and water professionals, and citizens. Decades ago, Scotland faced high population exposures to lead in drinking water, and began remediating the danger although risks of elevated exposures remain in many Scottish cities. The World Health Organization recently revised its Guideline for Lead in Drinking Water,butwithout resolvingsomecritical issues.Currently,possibly40%of thewaterpipes in theNetherlands, France and the UK are leaded, indicating the risk that at least sporadically elevated lead levels will recur. Why is lead contamination of drinking water still so pervasive and still such a hot topic? The speakers in this symposium have all been involved with the contentious US regulation of lead in drinking water for decades and in developing Canadian guidelines to address the problems. Each will highlight a different facet of this problem, providing insights about potential improvements and exploring scientific, policy/political and implementation issues.

EMS 10 Novel Approaches for Addressing Exposures within the Environmental Influences on Child health Outcomes (EChO) Cohorts: Opportunity for Infrastructure Fund (OIF) ResearchWednesday August 28 – 7:30 AM - 8:30 AMRoom 315

Dr. John PearceDr. Allan Just

Understanding the effects of environmental exposures on child health and development is a global priority. To advance knowledge in this area, a seven-year initiative called the Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) program has been launched by the US National Institutes of Health (NIH). Within ECHO, an Opportunities and Infrastructure Fund (OIF) has been developed in order to support junior investigators and projects for the introduction of new research, tools, and technologies in the ECHO program. OIF projects aim to provide benefit to the ECHO program as a whole and the child health community at large. This symposium will highlight ongoing studies funded within this program focused on enhancing exposure assessments for environmental epidemiologic research. Each speaker will describe their project and provide updates on progress for a broad environmental health audience. Given the global significance for children’s health, this session will be of high interest to ISEE members seeking to learn and apply advanced exposure approaches relevant to epidemiologic study of maternal and child health.

EMS 11 Round-table Discussion with an Environmentaol Epidemiologist – SNRN breakfast sessionWednesday August 28 – 7:30 AM - 8:30 AMRoom 411

Mr. Barrett Welch

Come join us for breakfast and connect with experienced researchers in an informal setting to discuss topics ranging from career inspiration to work/life balance. This is a unique opportunity to ask your own questions and network with well-established and upcoming researchers!

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EMS 12 Google Air ViewTuesday August 27 – 7:30 AM - 8:30 AMRoom 417

Prof. Dr. Roel VermeulenMs. Karin Tuxen-BettmanMr. Joshua Apte

For over five years, Google has partnered with nonprofit, academic, and government partners in an effort to measure air quality at the street level. This effort, known as Project Air View, uses Google Street View vehicles equipped with scientific instruments to measure air quality on every public street across several cities. This has created dataset of hyperlocal, block-by-block emissions and air pollution. Maps, measurements and insights are shared with scientists, the city councils, and ultimately, the public via interactive maps, all in an effort to tackle this well-known—and harmful—problem in big cities. In this session, we will present Project Air View, show insights from its application in the USA and Europe and discuss the potentials for the scientific community.

Participants: Karin Tuxen-Bettman (Google), Joshua Apte (University of Texas), and Roel Vermeulen (Utrecht University).

EMS 13 The importance of engaging in public policy in the age of anti-scienceTuesday August 28 – 7:30 AM - 8:30 AMRoom 412

Dr. Marianthi-Anna KioumourtzoglouDr. Tracey WoodruffDr. Joan Casey

The newly formed North American Chapter invites all annual ISEE meeting attendees in Utrecht to join the early morning session called “The importance of engaging in public policy in the age of anti-science” on Wednesday, August 28, at 7:30 am. Drs. Michelle Bell, Francine Laden, C. Arden Pope, and George Thurston will make short presentations followed by a Q&A period. Michelle L. Bell: “Science and policy in action: The policy unit in the US EPA’s SEARCH Center” (7:30 - 7:40 am)Francine Laden: “Engaging in Policy through ISEE” (7:40 - 7:50 am)C. Arden Pope III: “Forced Engagement: Geneva Steel, Replication of Time-Series and Cohort Studies, Junk-Secret Science, Global Burden of Proof” (7:50 - 8:00 am)George D. Thurston: “Civic Engagement by Scientists: Why and How to Make a Difference” (8:00 - 8:10 am)Panel Discussion and Q&A (8:10 - 8:30 am)

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 56 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

SOCIAL PROGRAMWelcome ReceptionSunday August 25, 6:00 PM - 8:00 PMJaarbeurs Utrecht, Beatrix Building (meeting venue)Exhibition HallIncluded in the registration fee

Join us as we kick off ISEE 2019. The reception will provide an opportunity to catch up with colleagues and socialize while enjoying appetizers and drinks. All conference participants are invited to attend the Welcome Reception.

Soccer Tournament for Students and New researchers Monday, August 26, time 7:00 PM - 9:30 PM

Location: The fields are at Grebberglaan 4 in Utrecht, a 15-minute walk from the conference venue.

The basic tournament layout will include 1) five on five matches 2) match participation given on a first-come, first served basis and 3) co-ed or all gender teams with unlimited

substitutions. We will supply t-shirts to the players.

Participation in the tournament is not required and we hope all SNRN members will feel welcome to come and socialize with their peers! We will provide light food and 1-2 drinks per

SNRN attendee. The event is organized by the SNRN. For more info, please contact the SNRN:

Chair Barrett Welch or Toyib Olaniyan

Conference DinnerTuesday August 27, 7:30 PM – 11:00 PM

Dutch Railway MuseumIncluded in the registration fee, except for those who opted out.

We are happy to announce that the Conference Dinner will take place at the Dutch Railway Museum.

The Railway Museum in Utrecht, Het Spoorwegmuseum, established in 1927 is dedicated to preserving historical equipment from the Dutch national railway. In 1954 the museum was permanently housed in the Maliebaan Station in Utrecht. A major renovation occurred in the late 1900’s, with the addition of new and modernized facilities. In 2002 the building was completely remodeled with a more public friendly appeal featuring interactive exhibits, drawing hundreds of thousands of delighted visitors.

The Railway Museum is located a 2 km, pleasant walk or bike ride from the conference center straight through the historic center of Utrecht.

For those who prefer to travel by public transportation, we will provide a special ISEE train that will take you from Utrecht Central Station to The Dutch Railway Museum. A round trip ticket costs 5 euro and can be purchased during your online registration or at the registration desk.

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 57 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ISEE 2019 AWARDSISEE 2019 recognizes outstanding scientists with the following awards:

John Goldsmith Award Annette Peters, PhD, helmholtz Zentrum München, Neuherberg, Germany

Annette Peters directs the Institute of Epidemiology at the Helmholtz Zentrum München – German Research Center for Environmental Health and is full Professor of Epidemiology at the Ludwig Maximilians Universität München, Germany. She studied biology and mathematics in Germany and epidemiology at the Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, USA. She pioneered work identifying the link between ambient particulate matter and cardiovascular disease. Today, she heads the population based KORA cohort initiated in the mid-eighties in Augsburg, Germany and is a principal investigator of the German National Cohort, responsible for building its central biorepository. Since October 2018, she chairs the board of directors of the German National Cohort, which investigates prospectively 200,000 men and women. Her research interests are age-related and chronic diseases. Specifically, she

strives to improve the understanding of disease development by integrating lifestyle and environmental factors, molecular and imaging markers to assess their relative impact on health. She is a member of the ISEE policy committee and chairs the Tony McMichael award committee. From 2012 to 2013, she was president of the ISEE. She has served on numerous scientific panels including the group drafting the global guidelines on air pollution published in 2005 by the World Health Organization, a panel advising the International Olympic Committee during the Beijing Olympics in 2008, and she chaired a grant panel of the European Research Council.

John Goldsmith Award for Outstanding Contributions to Environmental EpidemiologyThis award was created to honor the legacy of Dr John Goldsmith (passed away 1999), one of the organizers, early leaders, and constant supporter of the International Society for Environmental Epidemiology. This award is given to investigators for “sustained and outstanding contributions to the knowledge and practice of environmental epidemiology.” Recipients have typically contributed in substantive and innovative fashion to the methods and practice of epidemiology over many years.

Tony McMichael Mid-Term Career Award: Gregory Wellenius, ScD, Brown University, Newton, USA

Dr. Gregory Wellenius is Associate Professor in the Department of Epidemiology at the Brown University School of Public Health and Director of Brown’s Center for Environmental Health and Technology. His research is focused on quantifying the health impacts of continued climate change and supporting the development of optimal strategies for local adaptation. For example, research by Dr. Wellenius and colleagues documenting the adverse health impacts of extreme heat lead the US National Weather Service changing the guideline criteria for issuing heat advisories across New England. Recognizing the

importance of translating research into action, Dr. Wellenius recently served as co-author of the 4th National Climate Assessment recently published by the US Global Change Research Program (USGCRP) and as a member of the Rhode Island Climate Change Coordinating Council (EC4) Advisory Board. He also developed and teaches a popular class at Brown on climate and health. Dr. Wellenius is a long-time and engaged member of ISEE, including serving as an elected Councilor, as chair of the ISEE Communications Committee, and as liaison between the Society and its affiliated journals.

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 58 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

Tony McMichael Mid-Term Career AwardThis award was created in Dr Tony McMichael’s memory to recognize mid-career scientists. Tony, who passed away in 2014, was a world renowned epidemiologist known not only for his scientific work, but also for his compassionate mentoring of junior colleagues. He was President of ISEE from 2008-2009.

Rebecca James Baker Award Kyi Mar Wai, PhD hirosaki University, hirosaki, Japan

Dr. Kyi Mar Wai is a promising young researcher in the field of environmental health. She obtained her PhD in health science from the University of Tokyo with full scholarship (TODAI fellowship) in 2018. Before her postgraduate studies in Japan, she got her MBBS degree in Myanmar. Her research interest is on the effects of exposure to environmental contaminants on human health and its ongoing health risks. Her doctoral dissertation project is about the impact of prenatal heavy metal exposure on birth outcomes and newborn leucocytes telomere length among a Myanmar population, which was a collaborative work between Myanmar and Japan. She conducted the field work in Myanmar and performed the experimental analysis at the University of Tokyo, Japan. She was previously affiliated as a post-doctoral

project researcher at the Department of Human Ecology, Graduate School of Medicine, the University of Tokyo. At present, she is working as an assistant professor at the Department of Social Medicine, Graduate School of Medicine, Hirosaki University. She is also in charge of the Mibyo Science Department which was established in December 2018 at Graduate School of Medicine, Hirosaki University. She is currently engaging in the health promotion projects under Mibyo Science Department in collaboration with Hirosaki Center of Innovation (COI), and her focus is on the role of environmental contaminants in telomere length maintenance in association with noncommunicable disease risks.

Rebecca James Baker AwardThis award was created in memory of Dr. Rebecca Baker, a young investigator with a commitment to environmental epidemiology as a tool for improving public health and quality of life. She worked on many international studies with people from different cultures and backgrounds, and was an active member in the Society. She passed away in 2004. The award is given to new investigators who embody her approach to epidemiological research.

Best Environmental Epidemiology Paper Award - 2019 Award Winner “Empirical evidence of mental health risks posed by climate change” by Nick Obradovich, Robyn Migliorini, Martin P. Paulus, Iyad Rahwan Published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 2018; 115(43): 10953-10958.

About the first authorNick Obradovich is a research scientist at the MIT Media Lab in the Scalable Cooperation group, an interdisciplinary lab of social, natural, and computer scientists focused on addressing large-scale cooperation challenges.He holds a PhD from the University of California, San Diego and completed his postdoctoral training at Harvard University’s Belfer Center. He is an Associate Senior Research Scientist at the Max Plank

Society’s Center for Humans and Machines, is the Human-Environmental Systems Fellow at Scripps Institution of Oceanography and is a research affiliate at MIT’s Environmental Solutions Initiative.Nick’s climate research explores the human impacts of warming. He has uncovered climatic effects on mental health, mood, physical activity, and sleep as well as democratic turnover and daily governance. He has also studied climate-related political behaviors, attitudes, and adaptation of expectations to climatic changes.

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 59 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

Best Environmental Epidemiology Paper AwardThis ISEE annual award for the best environmental epidemiology paper published in a peer-reviewed journal aims to recognize excellence in the field of environmental epidemiology and encourage the publication of outstanding papers.

Research Integrity Award Ruth Etzel, MD, PhD, George Washington University, Washington DC, USA

Ruth A. Etzel is an environmental epidemiologist, pediatrician, and preventive medicine specialist. She received her MD from the University of Wisconsin and her PhD in epidemiology from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She performed the first epidemiologic study to document that children with secondhand exposure to tobacco smoke had measurable exposure to nicotine and cotinine. Her pioneering work led to US efforts to reduce indoor exposure to tobacco, including the ban on smoking in US airliners. She also produced the first research to show that exposure to toxigenic molds in the home was associated with pulmonary hemorrhage in very young babies; her work led to warnings that

infants should not live in moldy homes. She received the 1997 Children’s Environmental Health Champion Award from the US Environmental Protection Agency for outstanding leadership in protecting children from environmental health risks. From 2009-2012 she led the World Health Organization’s activities to protect children from environmental hazards. She is the editor of Pediatric Environmental Health an influential book that has helped to train thousands of doctors about how to recognize, diagnose, treat and prevent adverse outcomes from environmental exposures; a 4th edition was published in 2019.

Kurt Straif, MD, PhD, MPh, International Agency for Research on Cancer, WhO, Lyon, France, retired

Kurt Straif was Head of the Section of Evidence Synthesis and Classification at the International Agency for Research on Cancer, WHO, Lyon, France, where he directed the programs of the IARC Monographs, the IARC Handbooks of Cancer Prevention and the WHO Classification of Tumors. Major achievements with global impact include the series of IARC Monographs on tobacco which prepared the way for the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control and the IARC Monographs on air pollution. He has co-initiated several large international pooling projects (including AGRICOH with US NCI; SYNERGY, with IRAS and DGUV) to investigate environmental risk factors of cancer. He serves on many national and international committees on primary and secondary prevention of cancer. He has a long record of teaching medicine and epidemiology and served as the Scientific Director of the IARC International Summer School on Cancer Epidemiology since 2010. He received the Champion of Environmental Health Research Award of the US NIEHS (2016) and the Distinguished Lecture in Occupational and Environmental Cancer of the U.S. NCI (2018). Since 2007

he is a Fellow of the Collegium Ramazzini. He has co-authored more than 200 scientific papers and was Editor and Associate editor of several books (including The World Cancer Report; Air pollution and Cancer; Social Inequalities in Cancer).He studied Medicine and Philosophy (Theory of science) at the Universities of Liège (Belgium), Heidelberg and Bonn (Germany). He is Board-certified in Internal Medicine (University of Bonn) and in Occupational, Environmental and Social Medicine (University of Giessen). He received his MPH and PhD in Epidemiology from the School of Public Health, University of California, Los Angeles (USA).

Research Integrity AwardThe ISEE Research Integrity Award honors those in environmental epidemiology who have demonstrated exceptional integrity in the face of pressure from special interests. This award is made periodically at the discretion of the ISEE Council and with the acceptance of the awardee.

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 60 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ISEE 2019 NEW RESEARChERS ABSTRACT AWARDSAbstracts will be judged before the meeting, and awards handed out during the closing ceremony.

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SYMPOSIA MONDAY – 26 August 2019

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMS01: Mapping the Air Pollution Metabolome: Applications, Limitations, and the Path Forward

S01.01 Metabolic perturbations following exposures to traffic-related air pollution in a panel of commuters with and without asthma

Donghai Liang

S01.02 The Maternal Serum Metabolome and Ambient Air Pollution Exposure during Pregnancy Beate Ritz

S01.03 Traffic-Related Air Pollution Exposure and Altered Fatty Acid Oxidation Among Adolescents and Young Adults – the Interplay with Obesity

Zhanghua Chen

S01.04 High-resolution metabolomics in human clinical studies of traffic-related pollutants Douglas Walker

S01.05 Changes in the blood metabolome in relation to air pollution exposure: results from the EXPOsOMICS project

Jelle Vlaanderen

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMS03: One Health: On animals, humans and the environment

S03.01 The One Health Approach: Perspectives for Environmental Epidemiology Dick Heederik

S03.02 On Waters: water-health-ecosystem interlinkages Gertjan Geerling

S03.03 Field evaluation of air sampling methods using a one-health approach to assess pathogen contamination in animal operation environments

Ana Rule

S03.04 On Places-I: Emerging exposures and health effects in the farm environment Grethe Elholm

S03.05 On Places-II: Emerging Exposures and Health Effects in the Hospital Environment Kathryn Dalton

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMS05: PFAS Research Reaches its Adolescence: What Have We Learned and Where Are We Going?

S05.01 Perils of biomarkers of exposure vs. external exposure estimates: Lessons from the mid-Ohio Valley on potential for reverse causality and other biases

Marc Weisskopf

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SYMPOSIA

S05.02 Approaches to Integrating the Toxicology and Epidemiology Evidence on PFAS Helle Katrine Knutsen

S05.03 PFAS Dose Response Relationships and New Research Strategies Tony Fletcher

S05.04 Evolution of Research on Health Effects of PFAS and Current Unmet Needs to Inform Public Policy

David Savitz

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMS20: A world less dependent on fossil fuels – scientific evidence and corporate influence. An ISEE Policy Committee Symposium

S20.01 Introduction to the symposium Manolis Kogevinas

S20.02 The Impact of Fossil Fuel Combustion on Global Health Joel Schwartz

S20.03 Health impact of China Coal Consumption Cap Project: an analysis of PM2.5 monitoring and morbidity/mortality data in typical cities in China

Xiaochuan Pan

S20.04 The world is unequal: The energy dilemma in LMICs Adetoun Mustapha

S20.05 Policies for accelerating progress towards a fossil fuel free economy and improving health Andrew Haines

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMS04: Expanding the Role of the Environment in the Global Burden of Disease

S04.01 Putting data to work: Environmental risk factors and the global burden of disease Michael Brauer

S04.02 Assessing the Global Burden of Disease from Air Pollution Kate Causey

S04.03 Climate Change and the Global Burden of Disease Katrin Burkart

S04.04 Framework for Adding Environmental Exposure-Outcome Pairs to the Global Burden of Disease

Howard Hu 1:30 PM – 3:00 PMS08: Setting the European Environment and Health Research Agenda, 2020-2030: the HERA project

S08.01 The HERA project. An overall introduction of the rationale and organisation Robert Barouki

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SYMPOSIA

S08.02 Identify Research Gaps for Future Research on Environment, Climate Change and Health Annette Peters

S08.03 Stakeholder approach for identification of research needs of policy and practice in environment, climate and health

Brigit Staatsen

S08.04 The European Commission’s approach to supporting environmental health research Tuomo Karjalainen

S08.05 Global environmental change and health. The need for collaborative, transdisciplinary research and action

Andrew Haines

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMS09: Assessing health co-benefits of climate change mitigation in the Asia-Pacific region

S09.01 Spatial-temporal Analysis for the Interactive Effects between Ambient PM2.5 and Meteorological Factors on Population Mortality in Beijing, China

Xiaochuan Pan

S09.02 Reduction of air pollution-related deaths associated with climate change mitigation in Sydney, Australia

Bin Jalaludin

S09.03 Structure of urban green space and its associations with heat and air pollution related deaths Ho Kim

S09.04 Assessing health co-benefits of climate change mitigation in the Asia-Pacific region: Challenges and solutions

Shilu Tong 1:30 PM – 3:00 PMS21: When the Answer is “Big(ger) Data” in Environmental Epidemiology: What are the Questions?

S21.01 Meta-analysis vs pooling: Tradeoffs in precision, confounder control, mixtures, and nonlinear dose-response

Adam Szpiro

S21.02 Approaches to outcome and covariate harmonization--the perfect as the “enemy of the good” Sabah Quraishi

S21.03 Big Electronic Health Records Data in Environmental Epidemiology: Opportunities, Pitfalls, and Variation

Stephen van den Eeden

S21.04 Indirect Versus Direct Adjustment; Limitation of Administrative Cohorts Anders Erickson

S21.05 Modelling multi-level survival data in multi-center epidemiological studies: applications from the ELAPSE project

Evangelia Samoli

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SYMPOSIA TUESDAY – 27 August 2019

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMS02: Harmonizing insights from intervention studies, contextual information and resource availability to develop policy advocacy for clean cooking and domestic fuel adoption in Africa

S02.01 Adoption of Clean Cook stoves in Rural Ghana Kenneth Ayuurebobi Ae-Ngibise

S02.02 Can transition to a cleaner fuel from Kerosene or firewood be beneficial in pregnant Nigerian women?

Christopher Olopade

S02.03 Evaluating sustainable cooking fuels for refugee populations in Ethiopia Megan Benka-Coker

S02.04 Clean Energy Access for the Prevention of Non-Communicable Disease in Africa: the NIHR CLEAN-Air (Africa) Global Health Research Group

Elisa Puzzolo

S02.05 Prioritizing population health and cultural sensitivities in energy development programs in Nigeria

Adetoun Mustapha

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMS06: Lead’s long-term legacy: what past exposures can tell us about future disease

S06.01 Present, Past and Future of Lead Pollution Through the World’s Highest-Resolution Atmospheric Record from the European Alps and Historical Testimonies

Alexander More

S06.02 The long-term implications of childhood lead exposure: Evidence from midlife follow-ups in the New Zealand Dunedin Cohort.

Bruce Lanphear

S06.03 Toxic Chemicals and the Mysterious Decline in Coronary Heart Disease Bruce Lanphear

S06.04 Exposure to lead causes dementia – or does it? Jennifer Weuve

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SYMPOSIA

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMS07: Of moderators and mediators: Complex relationships between greenness, air pollution, noise, and health behaviors in driving health outcomes

S07.01 Evidence from the Canadian Census Health and Environment Cohort. On greenness moderating the association between exposure to air pollution and risk of mortality

Dan Crouse

S07.02 Physical Activity, Air Pollution, and Social Integration as mediators of Exposure to Greenness and Cognitive Decline

Peter James

S07.03 Greenness, Obesity and Incident Breast Cancer: Evidence from the Canadian National Breast Screening Study

Paul Villeneuve

S07.04 Green space exposure and childhood health – a question of moderation or mediation? Ingrid Jarvis

S07.05 On traffic-related air pollution and noise, mediating associations between urban design (including greenness) and mental health. Evidence from the Barcelona Health Survey

Wilma Zijlema

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMS10: Quasi-Experimental Designs in Environmental Epidemiology: Applications to the Health Impacts of Energy Policy Changes

S10.01 A multi-level analysis of the impact of changes in coal-fired power plant emissions on asthma-related healthcare utilization and symptoms in Louisville, Kentucky

Joan Casey

S10.02 The Causal Impact of Fracking on Indoor Radon Levels: A Difference-in-Difference Approach Katie Jo Black

S10.03 Impact of Oil and Gas Drilling Activities on Small-for-Gestational-Age Infants in Texas: A Difference-in-Differences Analysis

Mary Willis

S10.04 Impact of Shale Gas Development on Drinking Water Quality and Infant Health: A Difference-in-Differences Design

Elaine Hill

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMS14: Use of Exposomic Methods Incorporating Sensors in Environmental Epidemiology

S14.01 Use of Exposomic Methods Incorporating Sensors in Environmental Epidemiology Mark Nieuwenhuijsen

S14.02 The Fresh Air Wristband: A Wearable Air Pollutant Monitor Krystal Pollitt

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 66 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

SYMPOSIA

S14.03 Environmental Pollutants and Plasma Metabolomics in a Pregnancy Cohort Brett Doherty

S14.05 Environmental sensing: sense and sensibility Roel Vermeulen

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMS18: Landmarks of Air Pollution Epidemiology: Legacy of Douglas Dockery

S18.01 Steubenville, Steel and Standards: ambient PM episodes and respiratory health of children Bert Brunekreef

S18.02 When Air Pollution Strikes Out of the Blue Annette Peters

S18.03 A Tale of Six Cities: The Landmark Harvard Six Cities Study Francine Laden

S18.04 Achilles’ Heel: Exposure Assessment Advances in Environmental Epidemiology Lucas Neas

S18.05 Lines that Connect: Informing and Evaluating Public Policy C. Arden Pope

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SYMPOSIA WEDNESDAY – 28 August 2019

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMS12: Estimating the Global Risk and Burden of Particulate Air Pollution Exposure: Issues and Challenges

S12.01 Application of the IER to the estimation of the global burden: history and evolution Jeffrey Stanaway

S12.02 The IER assumptions revisited: can exposures to PM from different sources really be integrated?

C. Arden Pope

S12.03 Household air pollution and the integrated exposure-response function for the global burden of disease estimates: have we filled the gap?

Jennifer Peel

S12.04 Why are air pollution mortality relative risks so large? A critical perspective Zhengming Chen

S12.05 What we Know Now That We Did Not Know Then and the Way Forward for Burden Estimation

Rick Burnett

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMS15: Interaction between environmental chemicals and toxicants and the human microbiome

S15.01 The effect of toxic metals in drinking water on the human microbiome Margaret Karagas

S15.02 Environmental Exposure and the Airway Microbiome Chris Carlsten

S15.03 Infants under double attack. The role of toxicants, and the gut microbiome, and their potential interactions, in development of overweight in children

Merete Eggesboe

S15.04 Cigarette smoking and microbiome composition; lessons from both epidemiology and experimental models

Susanne Krauss-Etschmann

S15.05 Antibacterial chemicals and changes in the oral microbiome Randi J. Bertelsen

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 68 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

SYMPOSIA

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMS19: Climate Change and Child Health: Current Research, Future Opportunities, and Gaps in Knowledge

S19.01 Benefits and Co-benefits to Children’s Health of Mitigating Climate Change Frederica Perera

S19.02 Protecting child health in a changing climate Kristie Ebi

S19.03 Perils from pollen – a multi-site, multi-outcome pediatric health analysis Ambarish Vaidyanathan

S19.04 Increasing Ambient Temperature and Child Health: New Research Directions on Burden of Disease and Interventions

Perry Sheffield

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMS13: How Low Should We Go? New Health Research on Low-level Ambient Air Pollution

S13.01 Why Study the Health Effects of Low Levels of Air Pollution Hanna Boogaard

S13.02 Air Pollution and Mortality in the US using Medicare and Medicaid Populations Joel Schwartz S13.03 MAPLE: Mortality–Air Pollution Associations in Low Exposure Environments Michael Brauer

S13.04 Effects of Low-Level Air Pollution: A Study in Europe Maciej Strak

S13.05 New Health Research on Low-level Ambient Air Pollution: Implications for Future Risk and Benefits Assessments and Regulations

Dan Greenbaum

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMS16: Emerging PFAS in drinking water is a global public health issue

S16.01 An overview of emerging PFAS in drinking water worldwide Jane Hoppin

S16.02 Population Exposure to Emerging Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS) through Drinking Water in North Carolina

Nadine Kotlarz

S16.03 GenX in the environment and waste streams in the Netherlands 2013-2018 Thijs de Kort

S16.04 Exposure to per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances and cross-sectional associations with serum lipids in a highly exposed Colorado (US) population

Anne Starling

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SYMPOSIA

S16.05 Serum levels of a range of perfluorinated substances (PFAS) after drinking water exposure in three populations living around military and civil airfields in Sweden

Kristina Jakobsson

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMS17: Residential exposure to pesticides and health effects; What we know and what we should know

S17.01 Methods for Quantifying Residential Pesticide Exposure Nicole Deziel S17.02 Exposure to pesticides in adults and children living near agricultural land in the UK Martie van Tongeren

S17.03 Residential exposure to pesticides and health effects in Central California: lessons learned in two decades of research

Beate Ritz

S17.04 Residential exposure to pesticides and health effects in the Netherlands Roel Vermeulen

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ORAL PRESENTATIONS MONDAY – 26 August 2019

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMOPS 01: Understudied environmental health issues

OPS01.01 Association of urinary metabolites of organophosphate flame retardants with chronic kidney function markers in the US general population

Habyeong Kang

OPS01.02 Biomarker-Based Assessment of the Influence of Chemical Exposures on Chronic Kidney Disease

Sarah Brabec

OPS01.03 Prenatal exposure to perfluoroalkyl substances and child liver injury Lida Chatzi

OPS01.04 Tampon use, environmental chemicals and oxidative stress Marianthi-Anna Kioumourtzoglou

OPS01.05 Accounting for intercourse in the relationship of ambient temperature with fecundability Carrie Nobles

OPS01.06 Health impact of attending school close to the abandoned copper mine of Musoshi, DR Congo

Paul Musa Obadia

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMOPS 10: Wildfires

OPS10.01 Mortality in US In-Center Hemodialysis Patients Following Exposure to Wildfire Smoke PM2.5

Yuzhi Xi

OPS10.02 Extreme heat episodes, wildfires, and risk of preterm delivery in California, 2005-2013 Sindana Ilango

OPS10.03 Characterizing Impacts of Wildfire Smoke Exposure on Medication Fills and Outpatient Visits for Asthma during the 2015 Wildfire Season in the Western United States

Ambarish Vaidyanathan

OPS10.04 Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrests and Fine Particulate Matter (PM2.5) during 2015-2017 California Wildfires

Ana Rappold

OPS10.05 Wildfire smoke may interfere with the use of black carbon as an indicator of traffic exposure

Sheena E. Martenies

OPS10.06 Development of Land-Use Regression Models for Particulate Matter due to residential wood burning in Temuco, Chile

Maria Elisa Quinteros Caceres

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 71 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ORAL PRESENTATIONS

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMOPS 15: Chemicals and pregnancy

OPS15.01 Risk of congenital anomalies near municipal waste incinerators in England and Scotland: retrospective population-based cohort study

Mireille Toledano

OPS15.02 Associations of prenatal urinary phthalates, gestational weight gain, and postpartum weight retention among pregnant women from Mexico City

Andrea Deierlein

OPS15.03 Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances in early pregnancy and risk for preeclampsia Lars Rylander

OPS15.04 Associations between urinary parabens exposure in early to mid-pregnancy and gestational diabetes mellitus

Monique Hedderson

OPS15.05 Parameters of ovarian reserve in relation to urinary concentrations of parabens Joanna Jurewicz

OPS15.06 No association between perfluorinated compounds and preeclampsia in the highly exposed population of Ronneby, Sweden

Matilda Martinsson

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMOPS 25: Drinking water contamination and adult health

OPS25.01 Assessment of drinking water safety in the Netherlands using nationwide exposure and mortality data

Danny Houthuijs

OPS25.02 Arsenic and disinfection by-products (DBPs) in drinking water in Canada: a population-based study to explore any association with relevant cancers.

Atanu Sarkar

OPS25.03 Long-term exposure to widespread drinking water chemicals, blood inflammation markers and colorectal cancer

Cristina Villanueva

OPS25.04 Ulcerative colitis, Crohn’s disease and other inflammatory bowel disease in a population with high exposure to per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances through drinking water

Yiyi Xu

OPS25.05 Half-lives of PFOA, PFPeS, PFHxS, PFHpS and PFOS after end of exposure to contaminated drinking water

Ying Li

OPS25.06 Chronic Kidney Disease of undetermined cause (CKDu), an emerging disease in developing nations: a Malawian geographical study with focus on potable water sources

Sophie Hamilton

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMOPS 45: Cardiometabolic effects of air pollution

OPS45.01 Fine Particulate Matter Exposure and Childhood Lipid Levels in the PROGRESS Cohort Laura McGuinn

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 72 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ORAL PRESENTATIONS

OPS45.02 Association between Ambient Air Pollution and Subclinical Atherosclerosis: Insight from a Chinese Imaging Cohort Study

Meng Wang

OPS45.03 Personal exposure to particulate air pollution and cardiovascular markers in peri-urban South India

Otavio Ranzani

OPS45.04 Acute effects of personal exposure to fine particulate matter on blood pressure: results from the AIRLESS Study

Li Yan

OPS45.05 Low-level air pollution and incidence of acute coronary events: pooled analysis of 6 European cohorts in the ELAPSE project

Kathrin Wolf

OPS45.06 Does type 2 diabetes mediate the effects of traffic-related air pollution (NOx) on cognitive decline?

Kimberly Paul

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMOPS 57: Black carbon exposure and health effects

OPS57.01 Ambient air pollution, PM components and mortality in a Danish cohort Ole Raaschou-Nielsen

OPS57.02 Particulate air pollution and blood glucose levels and diabetic status in peri-urban India Cathryn Tonne

OPS57.03 The Relationship Between Indoor Levels of Black Carbon and Blood Pressure Felicia Rabito

OPS57.04 Effect modification of the association of indoor black carbon exposures and oxidative stress in patients with COPD

Stephanie Grady

OPS57.05 The effect of complex traffic-related mixtures on blood pressure: interaction between particles and gases in a trial of vehicle filtration

Michael Young

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMOPS 09: Cookstoves and children

OPS09.01 Acute changes in heart rate variability and cardiac repolarization following controlled exposure to cookstove air pollution: the Subclinical Tests of Volunteers Exposed to Smoke (STOVES) study

Jennifer Peel

OPS09.02 Indoor urban environment and conventional risk factors for pediatric tuberculosis among 1-12 years old children in a megacity in Pakistan: a matched case control study.

Ambreen Sahito

OPS09.03 Prenatal exposure to indoor PM2.5 and infant neurodevelopment at 1.5 and 3.0 years in Sri Lanka

Rajitha Wickremasinghe

OPS09.04 The effect of a cluster-randomized cookstove intervention to reduce household air pollution exposures on child growth trajectories through age one year

Felix Boakye Oppong

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 73 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ORAL PRESENTATIONS

OPS09.05 Associations between Indoor Air Pollution and Acute Respiratory Infections among Under-Five Children in Afghanistan: Do socioeconomic status and sex matter?

Juwel Rana

OPS09.06 The detrimental effect of Cook Stove Exposure on Infant Neurodevelopment in Rural Bangladesh

Talat Islam

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMOPS 13: Heat, cold and mortality

OPS13.01 Heat-related mortality impacts attributed to climate change: a global study over historical period.

Ana M. Vicedo-Cabrera

OPS13.02 Geographical variability of the minimum mortality temperature: A multi-country analysis

Aurelio Tobias

OPS13.03 Temperature-mortality relationship in hot, hyper-arid regions: Results from a time-series analysis in Kuwait

Barrak Alahmad

OPS13.04 Modifiers of temperature variability-related mortality: A multi-country study Hayon Michelle Choi

OPS13.05 Attributable Risk of Mortality associated with Heat and Heat waves: A time-series study in Kerman, Iran during 2005-2017

Narges Khanjani

OPS13.06 District level spatial variability of heat-related mortality in Barcelona from 1992-2015: a case crossover study design

Vijendra Ingole

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMOPS 18: Cardiometabolic effects of chemical exposures

OPS18.01 Environmental contaminant body burdens and the relationship with blood pressure measures among Indigenous Canadians: Results from the Nituuchischaayihtitaau Aschii: Multi-Community Environment-and-Health Longitudinal Study in Eeyou Istchee, a cross-sectio

Aleksandra Zuk

OPS18.02 Exposure to Acrylamide and Reduced Heart Rate Variability in Chinese Adults: The Potential Mediating Role of Inflammatory Response

Weihong Chen

OPS18.03 Life-course exposure to perfluoroalkyl substances and clinical markers of type 2 diabetes in early adulthood

Youssef Oulhote

OPS18.04 Urinary concentrations of phthalate metabolites in relation to circulating fatty acid profile

Ming-Chieh Li

OPS18.05 Pregnancy per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) and maternal glucose intolerance Emma V. Preston

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 74 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ORAL PRESENTATIONS

OPS18.06 Maternal Urinary BPA level and Cardio-metabolic Risk Factors in Toddlers Fengxiu Ouyang

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMOPS 37: Industrially contaminated sites and health

OPS37.01 Fetal growth, stillbirth, infant mortality and other birth outcomes near UK municipal waste incinerators; retrospective population based cohort and case-control study

Anna Hansell

OPS37.02 Effects of exposure to flaring from unconventional oil wells on adverse birth outcomes Lara Cushing

OPS37.03 Mortality and cancer incidence in a retrospective cohort study of residents near tyre management facilities in Anagni, Sacco river valley (Italy)

Chiara Badaloni

OPS37.04 Residential proximity to major point sources and term low birth weight in Lanzhou, China

Michelle Bell

OPS37.05 Impact of an asbestos-cement factory on mesothelioma incidence in a community in Lombardy, Italy

Dario Consonni

OPS37.06 Incidence of congenital malformations and proximity to mining in Lubumbashi, DR Congo

Tony Kayembe-Kitenge

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMOPS 39: Metals and biomarkers

OPS39.01 Infant toenail metal concentrations associated with gut microbial diversity and specific taxa abundance

Hannah E. Laue

OPS39.02 Differential Transcript Usage in the Placenta is Associated with in utero Arsenic Exposure and Fetal Growth Restriction

Maya Deyssenroth

OPS39.03 Relationship between urinary levels of heavy metals and formation of serum microparticles in young population

Charlene Wu

OPS39.04 Association between prenatal exposure to multiple metals and maternal and child thyroid hormone levels

Katerina Margetaki

OPS39.05 Maternal blood trace metal concentrations and whole blood DNA methylation during pregnancy in the Early Autism Risk Longitudinal Investigation (EARLI)

Max Aung

OPS39.06 Loci-specific DNA methylation is associated with urinary arsenic: an epigenome-wide association study among adults with low-to-moderate arsenic exposure in the United States

Anne Bozack

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 75 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ORAL PRESENTATIONS

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMOPS 55: Pesticides and neurological outcomes

OPS55.01 Effect of Pyrethroid Insecticides Exposure in Relation to Pyrethroid Metabolite and GABA Concentration of Young Children, Bangkok Thailand

Jadsada Kunno

OPS55.02 Prenatal exposure to organophosphate pesticides and functional neuroimaging among adolescents living in proximity to agricultural pesticide application

Brenda Eskenazi

OPS55.03 Exposure of pregnant women to organophosphate insecticides and motor inhibition evaluated by functional MRI at the age of 10 to 12 years (PELAGIE mother-child cohort)

Anne-Claire Binter

OPS55.04 Organophosphate pesticide metabolite concentrations in urine during pregnancy and offspring brain structural alterations

Michiel van den Dries

OPS55.05 Organophosphate Exposures, Financial Hardship and Child Neurodevelopmental Outcomes in the CHARGE study

Tanya Khemet Taiwo

OPS55.06 Pyrethroid exposure, attention and executive function in 6-year old children from the Infants′ Environmental Health Study (ISA)

Jorge Ernesto Peñaloza Castañeda

4:30 PM – 5:30 PMOPS 03: Machine learning in environmental epidemiology

OPS03.01 Comparison of Machine Learning Techniques for Spatio-Temporal Air Temperature Modelling using Earth Observation Satellites

Rochelle Schneider dos Santos

OPS03.02 A Machine Learning Approach to Model Community-Level Ultrafine Particle Emissions from Arriving Aircraft

Matthew Simon

OPS03.03 Multi-media biomarkers: Improving the accuracy of metal exposure assessments Yuri Levin-Schwartz

OPS03.04 Assessing NO2 Exposures with High Spatiotemporal Resolution across the Contiguous United States Using Ensemble Model

Joel Schwartz

4:30 PM – 5:30 PMOPS 08: Biological contaminants and respiratory health

OPS08.01 Risk of respiratory hospital admission associated with modelled concentrations of Aspergillus fumigatus from composting facilities in England

Aina Roca Barcelo

OPS08.02 Respiratory health effects and atopic sensitization in non-farming residents associated with particulate matter and endotoxin emitted by livestock farms

Myrna M. T. de Rooij

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 76 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ORAL PRESENTATIONS

OPS08.03 Airborne pollen: trends in season onset, duration and intensity and the importance for environmental epidemiology

Marloes Eeftens

OPS08.04 Sensitization to Pets and Pet Ownership Modify the Association Endotoxin with Asthma and Wheeze

Peter S. Thorne

4:30 PM – 5:30 PMOPS 14: Temperature variation associated with suicide and violence

OPS14.01 Suicide risk associated with season and temperature in Japan, 1972-2015; the role of climate, demographic, and socioeconomic factors

Yeonseung Chung

OPS14.02 The association of ambient temperature and homicide in South Africa Noah Scovronick

OPS14.03 Acute air pollution exposure, temperature, and the risk of violent behavior in the United States

Jesse Berman

OPS14.04 Does heat trigger suicide in a temperate climate? A case-crossover analysis. Lidia Casas

4:30 PM – 5:30 PMOPS 17: Chemical exposures and respiratory outcomes

OPS17.01 Exposure to Acrylamide and Reduced Lung Function in Chinese Adults: The Mediating Role of Systemic Inflammation

Bin Wang

OPS17.02 Multiple Pollutant Exposure during Pregnancy on Atopic Dermatitis in infants at age of 12 month: the Mothers and Children’s Environmental Health (MOCEH) Study

Seulbi Lee

OPS17.03 Association between early life exposure to phthalates and the development of childhood asthma

Garthika Navaranjan

OPS17.04 Prenatal phthalate exposure and child asthma Catherine Karr

4:30 PM – 5:30 PMOPS 21: Methodological progress in chemicals health effects research

OPS21.01 A user-friendly tool to optimize urine sampling strategies to assess exposure to non-persistent chemicals in epidemiologic studies

Marc-André Verner

OPS21.02 Exposure to Polybrominated Diphenyl Ethers and Risk of Thyroid Cancer in Women: Single and Multi-Pollutant Approaches

Nicole Deziel

OPS21.03 Chemicals associated with spontaneous abortion in the Comparative Toxicogenomics Database (CTD): Implications for birth cohort research

Kelly Bakulski

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 77 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ORAL PRESENTATIONS

OPS21.04 An Overview of Methods to Address Distinct Research Questions on Environmental Mixtures: An Application to Persistent Organic Pollutants and Leukocyte Telomere Length

Yanelli Nunez

4:30 PM – 5:30 PMOPS 26: Radiation, EMF, cancer and mortality

OPS26.01 Risk of thyroid cancer among Chernobyl clean-up workers in Ukraine Elizabeth Cahoon

OPS26.02 Brain tumor risk after exposure to medical ionizing radiation: results from the MOBI-kids study

Gemma Castano Vinyals

OPS26.03 Residential radon exposure and all-cause mortality risk among Medicare beneficiaries Maayan Yitshak Sade

OPS26.04 Modelling the cumulative effective dose to a population after a nuclear power plant accident under different scenarios

Martin Tondel OPS26.05 EMF exposure and non-specific physical symptoms: a new approach of studying

‘electrosensitivity’ John Bolte

4:30 PM – 5:30 PMOPS 41: Metals and birth outcomes

OPS41.01 Early life exposure to inorganic arsenic and children atopic allergy in a birth cohort follow-up study

Shu-Li Julie Wang

OPS41.02 Early Pregnancy Metal(loid) Mixtures and Second Trimester Glucose Levels Yinnan Zheng

OPS41.03 Prenatal exposure to mercury and effects on birth outcomes of women from Suriname’s interior

Gaitree K. Baldewsingh

OPS41.04 Early-life exposure to selenium and metals and neuropsychological development at 2 years

Virissa Lenters

4:30 PM – 5:30 PMOPS 42: Cardiometabolic effects of noise exposure

OPS42.01 Long-Term Aircraft Noise Exposure and Incident Hypertension in the Women’s Health Initiative

Daniel Nguyen OPS42.02 Long-term Wind Turbine Noise Exposure and Risk of Incident Atrial Fibrillation and

Stroke in the Danish Nurse Cohort Jeanette Therming Jørgensen

OPS42.03 Road traffic noise, air pollution and diabetes prevalence in three European cohorts Wilma Zijlema

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 78 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ORAL PRESENTATIONS

OPS42.04 Long-term transportation noise exposure and incidence of ischaemic heart disease and stroke – a cohort study

Andrei Pyko

4:30 PM – 5:30 PMOPS 48: Air pollution and epigenetics

OPS48.01 Newborn histone modifications and gestational exposure to particulate matter air pollution: the ENVIRONAGE Cohort Study

Karen Vrijens

OPS48.02 Integration of whole blood genome-wide DNA methylation and gene expression identifies epigenetically controlled modules in relation to NO2 air pollution exposure

Simon Kebede Merid

OPS48.03 Effects of Prenatal Air Pollution on Family-Specific, Genome-Wide, Repetitive Element Methylation in Cord Blood

Allison Kupsco

OPS48.04 Air pollution and particulate matter composition in relation to epigenetic age Alexandra White

4:30 PM – 5:30 PMOPS 51: Air pollution and mortality: what’s new?

OPS51.01 Natural and cause-specific mortality and low-level air pollution in a pooled cohort of 392,826 participants in Europe: the ELAPSE project

Maciej Strak

OPS51.02 Nonlinear associations between low levels of fine particulate matter and mortality across three cycles of the Canadian Census Health and Environment Cohort

Dan Crouse

OPS51.03 Ambient PM2.5 in Latin American cities: population exposure, trends, associated urban factors, and effects on mortality

Nelson Gouveia

OPS51.04 Long-term exposure to ultrafine particles and cause-specific mortality in the Rome Longitudinal Study

Giulia Cesaroni

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 79 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ORAL PRESENTATIONS TUESDAY – 27 August 2019

PEChAKUChA

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMGREEN, AIR, LMIC: PECHAKUCHA COMES TO ISEE!

PEC61.01 Green spaces, land cover, street trees and cardiovascular health in a megacity Tiana Carla Lopes Moreira

PEC61.02 Woman at work and other untold stories from 35,000 wearable camera images taken on an informal electronic-waste recovery site

Zoey Laskaris

PEC61.03 Resilient public health in the context of large-scale, drought-related migration in East Africa: Knowledge status and knowledge needs

Barbara Schumann

PEC61.04 Acute respiratory effects of livestock related air pollution on a panel of COPD patients Warner van Kersen

PEC61.05 Development of compensation strategies for control participants in an environmental trial with an intervention of significant value: experience from the Household Air Pollution Intervention Network (HAPIN) multi-country trial

Ashlinn Quinn

PEC61.06 Health impact of Asian dust and protective effect of masks Kazunari Onishi

PEC61.07 Residential proximity to major roads and neighbourhood green space in relation to biological stress in the second trimester of pregnancy in the IPANEMA cohort

Veerle Verheyen

PEC61.08 Residential green space and mental health in a prospective cohort of tree pollen allergy patients

Raf Aerts

PEC61.09 Effects of a cleaner-burning biomass cookstove intervention on augmentation index and central pulse pressure during a randomized controlled trial in rural Honduras

Bonnie Young

PEC61.10 A nationwide study of particulate matter and daily hospitalizations for respiratory diseases in Italy.

Matteo Renzi

PEC61.11 Lung function up to adolescence and residential greenspace Elaine Fuertes

PEC61.12 Long-term effects of air pollution on metabolic control in children and adolescents with type 1 diabetes – a repeated measurements analysis

Stefanie Lanzinger

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 80 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ORAL PRESENTATIONS

ORAL PRESENTATIONS

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMOPS 06: Health effects of source-specific outdoor air pollution

OPS06.01 Source-apportionment of fine-particulate matter (PM < 2.5 ug/m3) and associations with local and regional cardio-pulmonary health risk.

Kristen Malecki

OPS06.02 The effect of river dust and chemical constituents of air pollution on respiratory function among schoolchildren in Mailiao, Taiwan.

Chi-Hsien Chen

OPS06.03 Long-term exposure to air pollution components (total and source-specific) and incidence of stroke and cardiac events in the Heinz Nixdorf Recall study

Vitalijs Rodins

OPS06.04 Ambient Ultra Fine Particulate Sources Associated Changes in Blood Pressure in Healthy Adults

Qiaochi Zhang

OPS06.05 Association between sources of ultrafine particles and mortality in four European Cities Ioar Rivas

OPS06.06 Outdoor PM2.5 Associations with Cardiovascular Disease Incidence in Dhaka, Bangladesh, and the Respective Roles of Fossil Fuels and Biomass Combustion

Md Mostafijur Rahman

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMOPS 07: Farm animals, antibiotics, infections and the microbiome

OPS07.01 Early-life antibiotic exposure, the gut microbiome, and the risk of childhood asthma Hind Sbihi

OPS07.02 Health Risk of Bacteriological Contamination of Food Utensils in Mass Catering Establishments

Wondwossen Birke Eshete

OPS07.03 Zoonotic diseases, livestock densities, social and environmental factors in New Zealand Leah Grout

OPS07.04 Prevalence of non-specific symptoms in livestock dense areas: Looking beyond respiratory conditions

Jenny Gerbecks

OPS07.05 Occurrence and Spatial diversity of airborne resistomes in the poultry and household environment in Bangladesh

Farzana Zaman

OPS07.06 Estimating time-varying exposures to air emissions from animal feeding operations to assess short-term exposure effects in children with asthma

Christine Loftus

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 81 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ORAL PRESENTATIONS

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMOPS 11: Health effects of climate change in low- and middle-income countries

OPS11.01 Impact of Meteorological Factors on Rotavirus Infection among Children below 5 Years of Age in Kathmandu, Nepal

Dinesh Bhandari

OPS11.02 The Impact of 2016 Severe Flood on Infectious Diarrhea in Anhui Province, China: An Interrupted Time-Series Study

Na Zhang

OPS11.03 Maternal Health in the Aftermath of Hurricanes Irma and Maria in Puerto Rico Héctor Torres Zayas

OPS11.04 The causal effects of flooding on infectious diarrheal diseases during and after flood and the related social modifiers in Anhui province, China

Wenmin Liao

OPS11.05 Temporal Analysis of Short and Long-Term Impact of Drought on Child Health; A Case Study of North Kordofan, Sudan

Asrar Fadulelsied

OPS11.06 Monsoon flooding and early childhood health in India Anna Dimitrova

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMOPS 24: Drinking water contamination and children’s health

OPS24.01 Public Drinking Water Contamination and Birth Outcomes: New Estimates from Community Water System Sampling Data

Elaine Hill

OPS24.02 Exposure to manganese in drinking water during childhood and association with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder: A nationwide cohort study.

Jörg Schullehner

OPS24.03 Associations between exposure to drinking water chlorination by-products and being born small or preterm - a nation-wide register-based prospective study including 500,000 singleton births

Melle Säve-Söderbergh

OPS24.04 Impact of rotavirus vaccination and piped water access on childhood diarrhea rates in Peru, 2005-2015

Miranda Delahoy

OPS24.05 PFOA exposure assessment in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, linking birth registry data with tap water concentrations

Arthur Kolbe

OPS24.06 Early life and adolescent arsenic exposure from drinking water and blood pressure in adolescence: evidence from rural Bangladesh

Yu Chen

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 82 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ORAL PRESENTATIONS

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMOPS 27: Radiation, EMF and morbidity

OPS27.01 Maternal Exposure to High Magnetic Field Non-Ionizing Radiation During Pregnancy and the Risk of Headaches and Migraines in Offspring: A prospective cohort study with up to 21 years of follow-up

De-Kun Li

OPS27.02 Radiofrequency electromagnetic fields exposure, screen time and cognitive function in children and adolescents at 9-18 years old

Alba Cabré-Riera

OPS27.03 Residential radon – next generation exposure models for Switzerland Danielle Vienneau

OPS27.04 Light exposure patterns and sleep in children Anke Huss

OPS27.05 Is uranium exposure associated with an increase in thyroid-related antibodies? Maaike van Gerwen

OPS27.06 Ambient particle radioactivity and risk for gestational diabetes among pregnant women in Massachusetts, USA

Stefania Papatheodorou

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMOPS 49: Air pollution exposure methods

OPS49.01 A New Method of Estimating Global PM2.5 Concentrations using Satellite Images Scott Weichenthal

OPS49.02 Short-term PM2.5 and cardiovascular admissions in NY State: assessing sensitivity of exposure model choice

Mike He

OPS49.03 Assessing spatial variation of PM2.5 and NO2 across Europe using Geographically Weighted Regression

Jie Chen

OPS49.04 Bayesian Nonparametric Ensemble for PM2.5 Prediction and Uncertainty Characterization

Marianthi-Anna Kioumourtzoglou

OPS49.05 Potential underestimation of ultrafine particle exposure when using proxy pollutants: Lessons from long-term measurements at fixed sites and mobile monitoring

Joshua Apte

OPS49.06 Spatiotemporal Land-Use Regression Modeling of Fine Particulate Matter in the Middle Eastern Megacity of Tehran Using Distributed Space-Time Expectation-Maximization

Heresh Amini

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMOPS 53: Air pollution and neurological outcomes

OPS53.01 A population-based study on the association of air pollution with risk of dementia Chung-Yi Li

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 83 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ORAL PRESENTATIONS

OPS53.02 Association between Prenatal and Early Childhood Exposure to Ambient Particulate Matters and Risks of Autism Spectrum Disorder: An Exposure-Response Meta-analysis

Yuan-Ting Chang

OPS53.03 Longitudinal Analyses of Fine Particulate Air Pollutants and Volumetric Changes in the Medial Temporal Lobe

Andrew Petkus

OPS53.04 Identification of windows of neurodevelopmental vulnerability to air pollution using white matter microstructure data

Gosia Lubczynska

OPS53.05 Ambient Air Pollution and Cognition in India Jennifer D’Souza

OPS53.06 Associations between exposure to ambient air pollutants and Parkinson’s disease: a cross-sectional study

Geoffrey Morgan

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMOPS 04: Environmental justice

OPS04.01 Socioeconomic Disparities in Incidents at Toxic Sites during Hurricane Harvey Wil Lieberman-Cribbin

OPS04.02 Air pollution spatial variability in relation to socioeconomic indicators in nine European metropolitan areas

Klea Katsouyanni

OPS04.03 Environmental justice implications of flaring from unconventional oil wells in Texas: racial/ethnic inequalities in exposure

Lara Cushing

OPS04.04 Birth cohort environmental context: Socio-economic and ethnic inequalities in greenspace accessibility

Mark Ferguson

OPS04.05 Global Patterns of Environmental Inequities within the Prospective Urban and Rural Epidemiology Study

Perry Hystad OPS04.06 Community-level Crime and Deprivation Role in Pollution Susceptibility in Pediatric

Asthma Perry Sheffield

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMOPS 05: Statistical methods to analyze mixtures

OPS05.01 What is the influence of exposure measurement error in the context of multi-pollutant models? A simulation study

Dimitris Evangelopoulos

OPS05.02 Using DNA methylation to characterize more efficiently associations between the exposome and child lung function

Solène Cadiou

OPS05.03 A Three-Phase Approach to Examining Multiple Environmental Exposures and Age at Menarche

Sabine Oskar

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 84 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ORAL PRESENTATIONS

OPS05.04 A quantile-based g-computation approach to addressing the effects of exposure mixtures

Jessie Buckley

OPS05.05 Causal inference and ensemble learning as new important tools for investigations of health effects of chemical mixtures.

Youssef Oulhote

OPS05.06 Performance of variable selection methods for estimating the non-linear health effects of correlated chemical mixtures: a simulation study

Nina Lazarevic

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMOPS 30: Green space and morbidity

OPS30.01 Greenspace and cardiovascular morbidity: a comparative study in two European cities. Mariska Bauwelinck

OPS30.02 Residential Surrounding Greenspace and Arterial Stiffening: A Whitehall II Longitudinal Study

Carmen de Keijzer

OPS30.03 Estimating increasing greenness on all-cause mortality across the 34 largest metropolitan areas in the United States

Paige Brochu

OPS30.04 Impacts of Forest Change on Mortality for Chinese Older Adults Anna Zhu

OPS30.05 Residential greenness and lung function in a prospective cohort of European adults: The ECRHS study

Elaine Fuertes

OPS30.06 Socioeconomic inequalities in the associations between green spaces and self-perceived health in the Brussels Capital Region: An intersectional approach

Lucia Rodriguez Loureiro

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMOPS 31: Health effects of multiple environmental stressors

OPS31.01 Multiple Urban Environmental Exposures and Antihypertensive Use in the Helsinki Capital Region

Enembe Okokon

OPS31.02 The Association of PM2.5 and Greenness with Term Low Birth Weight Pei Chen Lee

OPS31.03 The combined impact of environmental and built environment exposures on birthweight in an urban population in Massachusetts

Maayan Yitshak-Sade

OPS31.04 Air pollution, noise, green spaces and built environment and the risk of overweight and obesity during childhood

Jeroen de Bont

OPS31.05 Ocean health in Belgium: Living near the coast is associated with better health Alexander Hooyberg

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 85 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ORAL PRESENTATIONS

OPS31.06 The association of perceived neighborhood walkability and environmental pollution with frailty among community-dwelling older adults in rural areas: a cross-sectional study

Miji Kim

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMOPS 32: Health impact of interventions 1

OPS32.01 Reducing PM2.5 levels is associated with lower cancer incidence Benedicte Jacquemin

OPS32.02 Potential benefits of cool roofs in reducing heat-related mortality during heatwaves in a European city

Helen Macintyre

OPS32.03 Efficacy of Heat Wave Warning System in Reducing Mortality Risk of Heat Waves in South Korea, Utilizing Difference-in-Difference and Propensity Score Weighting approaches

Amruta Nori-Sarma

OPS32.04 The use of portable HEPA air cleaners to improve residential indoor air quality during biomass burning events.

Amanda Wheeler

OPS32.05 Towards a comprehensive heat-health warning system of Hong Kong: an evidence-based multi-stage approach

Xuyi Zhang

OPS32.06 Effects of a large-scale distribution of water filters and natural draft cookstoves on diarrhea, acute respiratory infection, water quality, and personal PM2.5: a cluster randomized trial in Western Province, Rwanda.

Thomas Clasen

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMOPS 35: Health effects of indoor air pollution in LMIC countries

OPS35.01 Methylated PAHs from household coal use and risk of lung cancer among never-smoking women in Xuanwei and Fuyuan, China

George Downward

OPS35.03 Prenatal Risk factors and environmental exposure associated with early childhood wheezing in the Mother and Child in the Environment (MACE) Birth Cohort

Kareshma Asharam

OPS35.04 The association of household particulate-bound metal concentrations and tuberculosis in women and children in Pune, India

Jessica Elf

OPS35.05 Associations of household solid fuel suspension with blood pressure and markers of arterial stiffness and atherosclerosis in a multi-provincial cohort of Chinese adults

Jill Baumgartner

OPS35.06 Indoor Gaseous Pollution as Determinants of Overweight/Obesity Jia-Kun Chen

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 86 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ORAL PRESENTATIONS

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMOPS 60: Social factors and environmental health across the world

OPS60.01 Outdoor NO2 Exposure Disparities at Public Schools in the Contiguous United States Matthew Bechle

OPS60.02 Trends in heat-attributable vulnerability and mortality in Europe: role of macroeconomic growth during the Great Recession

Joan Ballester

OPS60.03 Role of socio-economic status in the relationship between air pollution and health: an analysis on mortality in a large cohort in Italy

Andrea Ranzi

OPS60.04 Prenatal exposure to DDT and pyrethroids and humoral response to vaccines among South African children from an area sprayed for malaria control: The VHEMBE study

Jonathan Chevrier

OPS60.05 Effect of improved cook stove intervention on pulmonary function tests of rural women in Andhra Pradesh

Priscilla Johnson

OPS60.06 Social inequalities in environmental resources of green and blue spaces: a review of evidence in the WHO European Region

Steffen Schüle

4:30 PM – 5:30 PMOPS 20: Chemicals, biomarkers, omics

OPS20.01 Associations between PM2.5 and mid-pregnancy inflammation measured using a novel proteomics chip

Whitney Cowell

OPS20.02 Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substance concentrations during pregnancy and post-pregnancy biomarkers of cardiometabolic health in Project Viva

Susanna D. Mitro

OPS20.03 Distribution of polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) in Newfoundland seafood and associations with human serum thyroid hormone concentrations

Nicole Babichuk

OPS20.04 Prenatal phthalate exposure and cord blood methylation: an epigenome-wide association study in the Mexico City PROGRESS cohort

Jonathan Heiss

4:30 PM – 5:30 PMOPS 22: Behavioral effects of chemical exposures

OPS22.01 Prenatal phthalate exposure and behavior in the CHAMACOS cohort Carly Hyland

OPS22.02 Exposure to per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances in association with autism spectrum disorder: a case-control study

Hyeong-Moo Shin

OPS22.03 Role of genetic predisposition to neurobehavioural deficits from prenatal exposure to methylmercury

Philippe Grandjean

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 87 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ORAL PRESENTATIONS

OPS22.04 Prenatal and postnatal polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) exposure and behavioral development in early adolescence.

Agnieszka Pac

4:30 PM – 5:30 PMOPS 28: Green space and biomarkers

OPS28.01 Neighbourhood green space and allostatic load in school-aged children. Findings from the Generation XXI birth cohort.

Ana Isabel Ribeiro

OPS28.02 Exposure to Greenspace and Telomere Length in Preschool Children Paula de Prado Bert

OPS28.03 Greater residential tree-cover and time spent outdoors are associated with reduced allostatic load in residents of central North Carolina

Andrey Egorov

OPS28.04 Neighborhood characteristics may impact inflammation-related epigenetic loci in a concerted manner

Radhika Dhingra

4:30 PM – 5:30 PMOPS 36: Health effects of dietary exposures

OPS36.01 Fluoride Exposure from Infant Formula and Child IQ in a Canadian Birth Cohort Christine Till

OPS36.02 Maternal lean fish intake during pregnancy is associated with child growth in the Norwegian Mother and Child Cohort Study (MoBa)

Eleni Papadopoulou

OPS36.03 Fish consumption during pregnancy, exposure to mercury, and child metabolic syndrome Nikos Stratakis

OPS36.04 Ingested nitrate and nitrite and bladder cancer in Northern New England Mary H. Ward

4:30 PM – 5:30 PMOPS 38: Effects of metals on child health

OPS38.01 Prenatal Metal Mixture Concentrations and Reward Motivation in Children Erik de Water

OPS38.02 Blood Lead Level in Infants and Subsequent Risk of Malaria: A Prospective Cohort Study in Benin, Sub-Saharan Africa

Florence Bodeau-Livinec

OPS38.03 Exposure to metal mixtures and growth-related traits in Bangladeshi children aged 5-7 years

Yu-Hsuan Shih

OPS38.04 A Prospective Study of Methylmercury Exposure and Prepulse Inhibition Deficits in Children and Adolescents: The Early Life Exposures in Mexico to Environmental Toxicants Birth Cohort

Marc Weisskopf

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 88 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ORAL PRESENTATIONS

4:30 PM – 5:30 PMOPS 43: Noise, stress and mental health

OPS43.01 Association of exposure to road traffic noise with cognitive function in elderly women Claudia Wigmann

OPS43.02 Traffic noise and mental illness – a systematic review Andreas Seidler

OPS43.03 Green space, air pollution, traffic noise and saliva cortisol in children aged 12 years: the PIAMA birth cohort

Lizan Bloemsma

OPS43.04 Environmental factors affecting stress in children: interrelationships between traffic-related noise, air pollution, and the built environment

Meredith Franklin

4:30 PM – 5:30 PMOPS 44: Occupational health studies with environmental implications

OPS44.01 Occupational Heat Stress and DNA damage among steelworkers in Southern India Vidhya Venugopal

OPS44.02 Is CKDu an occupational or an environmental disease? Neil Pearce

OPS44.03 Factors associated with reduced eGFR in fishing and farming communities in Sri Lanka Eakanayake Mudiyanselage Dilini Vimarshani Ekanayake

OPS44.04 Genomic instability reflected by elevated Alu retroelement copy-number among workers exposed to diesel engine exhaust

Jason Wong

4:30 PM – 5:30 PMOPS 46: Exposure assessment to air pollution in Asia and Africa

OPS46.01 Air Quality Monitoring using Beta Attenuation Monitor 1022 and E-Samplers in Kampala Uganda: status of air quality Oct 2017-Sept 2019., Preliminary results from the Eastern Africa GEOHealth Hub

Samuel Etajak

OPS46.02 Exposure assessment of PM2.5 on elders in a cohort study Yu-Cheng Chen

OPS46.03 Land use Regression Model for Exposure Assessment in the Mace Birth Cohort Study in Ethekwini

Hasheel Tularam

OPS46.04 Mobile-monitoring of Black Carbon and PM2.5 Air Pollution - Data only approach from Bangalore, India

Meenakshi Kushwaha

4:30 PM – 5:30 PMOPS 47: Increasing spatiotemporal resolution in assessment of exposure to outdoor air pollutants

OPS47.01 Daily NO2 modelling using OMI satellite data over Switzerland for 2005 – 2016 Kees de Hoogh

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ORAL PRESENTATIONS

OPS47.02 Estimating daily PM2.5 and PM10 over Italy using an ensemble modeling approach Massimo Stafoggia

OPS47.03 High resolution spatiotemporal assessment of ambient air pollution using ensemble modeling and links with hypertension in a Delhi based cohort

Siddhartha Mandal

OPS47.04 Source-specific Fine Particulate Using Spatiotemporal Concentration Fields Developed using Chemical Transport Modelling and Data Assimilation: Application to North Carolina for Health Associations with Coronary Heart Disease

Armistead Russell

4:30 PM – 5:30 PMOPS 56: Ultrafine particles exposure and health effects

OPS56.01 Short-term Exposure to Ultrafine Particulates and Whole Blood Transcriptome Analysis: A Nested Case-control Panel Study

Yuan Yao

OPS56.02 Hourly Exposure to Ultrafine Particle Metrics and the Onset of Myocardial Infarction in Augsburg, Germany

Annette Peters

OPS56.03 Effects of ultrafine particles on respiratory health in adults David Donaire-Gonzalez

OPS56.04 Ambient ultrafine particles and congenital heart defects Eric Lavigne

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 90 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ORAL PRESENTATIONS WEDNESDAY – 28 August 2019

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMOPS 12: Morbidity effects of high and low temperatures

OPS12.01 A nation-wide study shows increasing hypotension hospital visits with higher ambient temperature

Changwoo Han

OPS12.02 Future attributable deaths of heatwaves in Italian cities using high resolution climate change scenarios

Matteo Scortichini

OPS12.03 Newborn telomere length and fetal exposure to high and low ambient temperature: a birth cohort study

Dries Martens

OPS12.04 Short-term associations of diarrheal hospital admissions and deaths with temperature and rainfall in the National Capital Region, Philippines

Paul Lester Chua

OPS12.05 Ambient temperature changes and hospital admissions for stroke: A time stratified case-crossover study in Taiwan.

Pei-chuan Hsu

OPS12.06 Tropical cyclone exposure and risk of emergency Medicare hospital admissions for cardiorespiratory diseases in 175 United States counties, 1999-2010

Meilin Yan

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMOPS 16: Chemical exposures and birth outcomes

OPS16.01 Grandmaternal pregnancy endocrine disruption, low birth weight, and premature birth Gyeyoon Yim

OPS16.02 Environmental phthalate exposure and preterm birth in the Puerto Rico Testsite for Exploring Contamination Threats (PROTECT) birth cohort

Kelly Ferguson

OPS16.03 Early-life exposure to multiple environmental contaminants and birth outcomes: pooled analysis in four Flemish birth cohorts

Eva Govarts

OPS16.04 Perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances and fetal thyroid hormone levels in umbilical cord blood among newborns by prelabor cesarean delivery

Jun Zhang

OPS16.05 Ratio of serum to adipose levels of persistent endocrine disrupting chemicals in relation to endometriosis

Anna Pollack

OPS16.06 Urinary phenols in early to mid-pregnancy and infant birthweight: A multi-racial/ethnic pregnancy cohort

Monique Hedderson

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 91 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ORAL PRESENTATIONS

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMOPS 33: Health impact of interventions 2

OPS33.01 Exposure-based assessment of potential health and economic impacts due to nitrate pollution of drinking water in the United States

Alexis Temkin

OPS33.02 Symptoms and Mask Use Reported in the B-SAFE Pregnancy Cohort to Examine Wildfire Exposure Health Impacts

Rebecca J. Schmidt

OPS33.03 Individual-level intervention assessing short-term effects of blue spaces: The Walking Office Workers (WOW) study

Cristina Vert Roca

OPS33.04 The Ghana Randomized Air Pollution and Health Study (GRAPHS): a cluster randomized trial of Liquified petroleum gas (LPG) and efficient biomass cookstoves delivered during pregnancy

Felix Boakye Oppong

OPS33.05 Effectiveness of portable air cleaners to reduce indoor PM2.5 and NH3 in an agricultural cohort of children with asthma

Anne M. Riederer

OPS33.06 Goods Movement Actions Improved Air Quality and Health Outcomes among California Medicaid Enrollees

Micheal Jerrett

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMOPS 40: Metals: neurological effects

OPS40.01 Sex-specific associations between exposure to multiple metals and visuospatial memory skills in adolescents

Elza Rechtman

OPS40.02 Lead Exposures and Psychological Symptoms: Modification by Uric Acid Vy T Nguyen

OPS40.03 Pre-symptomatic blood metal levels and the risk of ALS: a prospective cohort study Susan Peters

OPS40.04 Tooth matrix biomarkers to study systemic elemental dysregulation in autism spectrum disorder

Paul Curtin

OPS40.05 Manganese exposure and psychosocial behavior of preschool children: a nationwide survey

Ching-Chun Huang

OPS40.06 Hair mercury levels and prenatal depression among pregnant women in multi-ethnic Suriname: preliminary results from the CCREOH-MekiTamara study

Anisma R. Gokoel

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMOPS 50: Air pollution and health care utilization

OPS50.01 Ambient Air Pollution and Acute Sickle Cell Disease Exacerbation in Atlanta, Ga Jeremy Sarnat

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 92 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ORAL PRESENTATIONS

OPS50.02 Short-term association between daily PM2.5 and PM10 concentrations and cardiovascular admissions in Italy – a national approach

Massimo Stafoggia

OPS50.03 Using mobile phone big data to estimate the short-term effect of PM2.5 exposures on pharmacy visits

Qi Zhou

OPS50.04 Association between Asthma Emergency Department Visits and Satellite Modeled PM2.5 between 2010-2016 in Lima, Peru

Bryan N. Vu

OPS50.05 Spatio-temporal associations of air pollutants concentrations and GP consultations by cause and inhaler prescriptions in the Borough of Lambeth, London

Antonis Analitis

OPS50.06 Short-Term effects of fine particulate matter on respiratory disease in vulnerable population: meta-analysis of the 10 municipalities of the Aburra Valley region (Colombia), 2008-2015

Juan Gabriel Pineros Jimenez

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMOPS 52: Air pollution and respiratory health

OPS52.01 Air pollution exposure and allergic sensitization during childhood and adolescence in four European birth cohorts - the MeDALL project

Olena Gruzieva

OPS52.02 Prenatal and early life particulate air pollution exposure and respiratory symptoms in childhood

Maria Jose Rosa

OPS52.03 Long-term exposure to ambient fine particulate matter and lung function in children and adolescents: a longitudinal cohort study

Xiang Qian Lao OPS52.04 Is air pollution associated with adaptive immune responses, measured by polyclonal

elevation of serum free light chains?-Results from the prospective Heinz Nixdorf Recall Study

Barbara Hoffmann

OPS52.05 The effects of ambient NO2 and PM2.5 exposure on asthma-related outcomes in school children residing in informal settlements in South Africa.

Mohamed Dalvie

OPS52.06 Long-term exposure to low levels of outdoor air pollution and children’s respiratory health in Australia

Luke Knibbs

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMOPS 58: Predictors and impact of active travel

OPS58.01 Climate change and physical activity: Estimated impacts of ambient temperatures on bikeshare usage in New York City

Daniel Carrion

OPS58.02 How urban densification promotes walking for transportation in older community dwellers of an Asian metropolis

Ester Cerin

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 93 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ORAL PRESENTATIONS

OPS58.03 Environmental and health impacts of transportation and land use scenarios in 2061 Audrey Smargiassi

OPS58.04 Health economic assessment of a scenario to promote bicycling as active transport in Stockholm, Sweden

Hedi Katre Kriit

OPS58.05 Air Pollution and Health Benefits from Cleaner Vehicles and Increased Active Transport: A Health Impact Assessment Approach for Seattle, WA

Paola Filigrana-Villegas

OPS58.06 Spatial Predictions of Active Travel Based on Google Street View Imagery and Place of Interest Data

Steve Hankey

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMOPS 02: Environmental epidemiology and policy

OPS02.01 Implementation of scenarios for a low emission zone in Greater Paris: assessment of fine-scale reduction in exposures and of expected health benefits

Sabine Host OPS02.02 Impact of Regulatory Improvements to Traffic-related Air Pollution on Infant Health:

Has Policy Made a Difference? Mary Willis

OPS02.03 A typology of interventions for public health adaptation to climate change Kathryn Conlon

OPS02.04 Do improvements in air quality justify climate policy? Noah Scovronick

OPS02.05 Waste-to-Energy processes: what is the impact on air pollutants and health? A critical review of the literature

Geoffrey Morgan

OPS02.06 Air Quality, Home Heating, and Well-Being Under Beijing’s Ban on Household Coal Burning

Ellison Carter

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMOPS 19: Chemicals: exposure assessment challenges

OPS19.01 PFOA blood concentrations in the Arnsberg’ cohort, Germany - 11 years follow-up - Sarah Bacher

OPS19.02 Urinary Dialkylphosphate Metabolite Levels in US Adults - NHANES 1999 - 2008 Christina Gillezeau

OPS19.03 Relying on repeated biospecimens to reduce the effects of exposure measurement error in studies linking the exposome to health

Remy Slama

OPS19.04 Assessment of preschool children’s exposure to phthalates Ylva Sjöström

OPS19.05 Predictors of cord blood concentrations of perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances from a Chinese birth cohort

WenCheng Cao

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 94 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ORAL PRESENTATIONS

OPS19.06 Urinary polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon metabolites among preschool children from Poland in comparison to other pediatric populations.

Elżbieta Sochacka-Tatara

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMOPS 23: Chemicals and cognitive function

OPS23.01 Prenatal phthalate exposures and executive function in pre-school children Giehae Choi

OPS23.02 Prenatal Exposure to Polybrominated Diphenyl Ethers (PBDEs) and Intellectual Function in Young Children

Maryse Bouchard

OPS23.03 Associations of gestational and childhood urinary triclosan concentrations with academic achievement among 8-year-old children

Medina Jackson-Browne

OPS23.04 Perfluoroalkyl substances and cognitive function: Is the association non-monotonic in humans?

Sung Kyun Park

OPS23.05 Prenatal Bisphenol F exposure is associated with impaired cognitive function in children at 7 years of age in the SELMA study

Elin Engdahl

OPS23.06 Chemical Mixture Exposures During Pregnancy and Cognitive Abilities in School-Aged Children

Geetika Kalloo

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMOPS 29: Green space and neurological effects

OPS29.01 Exposure to the natural environment and rurality is protective of ADHD in a large birth cohort of New Zealand children

Geoffrey Donovan

OPS29.02 Greenness and cognitive development at age 7 years in a Rome birth cohort: the mediating role of nitrogen dioxide.

Federica Asta

OPS29.03 Residential Surrounding Greenspace and Mental Health in Three Spanish Areas Maria Torres

OPS29.04 Assessing the relationship between natural space exposures and cases of incident antidepressant and anxiolytic prescription dispensation across Vancouver, Canada

Emily Rugel

OPS29.05 The importance of the residential greenness on neurocognitive and neurobehavioral development in children living in urban vs rural environments

Esmée Bijnens

OPS29.06 An Evaluation of Greenspace Exposure as a Protective Factor in Dementia Progression among U.S. Adults 75 Years or Older

Erik Slawsky

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 95 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ORAL PRESENTATIONS

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMOPS 34: Health impact assessments of policies

OPS34.01 Change in Air Pollution Exposure and Related Health Impact under Climate Change in U.S. Counties

Chen Chen

OPS34.02 Benefits of improving air quality in the Brussels-Capital Region, Belgium. A prospective study on premature death and related economic cost using AirQ+

Jonathan Andrieux

OPS34.03 Projections of diurnal temperature range and diurnal temperature range-related excess mortality under climate change: A multi-country study

Whanhee Lee

OPS34.04 Health impact assessment of travel patterns in a small developing city of Africa Meelan Thondoo

OPS34.05 Strategies for combining results for NO2 and PM2.5 in health impact assessment

Heather Walton

OPS34.06 The economics of environment and health: costs of mortality and morbidity due to air pollution in Europe

Marco Martuzzi

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMOPS 54: Air pollution and pregnancy outcomes

OPS54.01 Association between pregnancy loss and ambient fine particles in Africa: findings from a longitudinal study, 1998–2016

Tao Xue

OPS54.02 Ambient Black Carbon Particles Reach the Fetal Side of Human Placenta Eva Bongaerts

OPS54.03 Air Pollution and Risk of Chronic Placental Abruption: A Study of Births in New York City, 2008-2014

Marianthi-Anna Kioumourtzoglou

OPS54.04 Trimester effects of source-specific PM10 on birthweight outcomes in the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC)

Yingxin Chen

OPS54.05 High peak PM2.5 exposure during pregnancy and preterm birth risk in Utah, USA Pauline Mendola

OPS54.06 Association Between PM2.5 Exposure and Reproductive Assisted Births Daphne M. Thampy

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMOPS 59: The Exposome: progress in methods and applications

OPS59.01 Prenatal exposure to environmental contaminants and child behaviour between 3 to 7 years, an exposome-based approach on 5 European cohorts

Paulina Jedynak

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 96 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ORAL PRESENTATIONS

OPS59.02 Untargeted high-resolution metabolomics to measure and describe the “perfluorome” Douglas Walker

OPS59.03 Exposome methods: Assessing cross-omics as mediators of multiple exposures and health/disease states.

Jessica Laine

OPS59.04 Early life exposome and allergy-related outcomes in children in the HELIX cohort Berit Granum

OPS59.05 Comparing associations found between unannotated and annotated metabolomics in a study of behavioral outcomes in children with cerebral malaria

Moira Bixby OPS59.06 Assessment of plasma metabolomic biomarkers in various pediatric diseases Sek Won Kong

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 97 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

POSTER DISCUSSIONS MONDAY – 26 August 2019

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMPDS 68: Outdoor air pollution, mortality and morbidity

PDS68.10 / EXP256 Associations of short-to-long-term air pollution exposure with mortality in seven major cities of Korea, 2007-2016 Garam Byun

PDS68.06 / EXP255 Short-term Exposure of Fine Particle Chemical Constituents Associated with Cause-specific Cardio- and Cerebrovascular Hospitalizations in Beijing, China Chen Chen

PDS68.18 / EXP524 Evaluation of health impact of PM10 forecasting & warning system in Seoul, Korea: Focusing on the change of dose-response function Yongsoo Choi

PDS68.04 / EXP253 The impact of low concentrations of PM air pollution on mortality in the Canadian Community Health Survey-Mortality Cohort Tanya Christidis

PDS68.15 / EXP252 Assessing the short-term effect of PM2.5 on cardiovascular hospitalizations in the Medicaid population: a case-crossover study Priyanka deSouza

PDS68.07 / EXP251 Benefits of Air Pollution Control on Life Expectancy in Mexico City 1990 to 2015 Douglas Dockery

PDS68.19 / EXP250 Acute effects of ambient particulate matter on daily emergency and outpatient visits for respiratory diseases among children aged 0-5 years in Beijing, China Jiakun Fang

PDS68.14 / EXP249 Prenatal air pollution and early childhood asthma Marnie Hazlehurst

PDS68.05 / EXP248 Genetic, Social and Environmental Determinants of Onset Asthma in Children Gitte Juel Holst

PDS68.21 / EXP247 Low-level ambient air pollution exposure and risk of lung cancer – a pooled analysis of 7 European cohorts Ulla Hvidtfeldt

PDS68.13 / EXP257 Environmental influences and predictors of children’s respiratory health in the Imperial Valley, California Jill Johnston

PDS68.11 / EXP258 Association between particulate matter and cause-specific mortality in five Italian Regions: results of the BEEP project Matteo Renzi

PDS68.03 / EXP259 Environmental and health inequalities in England (2000-2015) Aina Roca Barcelo

PDS68.16 / EXP260 The impact of air pollutants on ambulance dispatches: A systematic review and meta-analysis of acute effects Kamolrat Sangkharat

PDS68.20 / EXP261 Environmental exposures and aging phenotypes Tamara Schikowski

PDS68.02 / EXP262 Climate Penalty: Climate-driven increases in ozone and PM2.5 levels and mortality Liuhua Shi

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 98 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

POSTER DISCUSSIONS

PDS68.08 / EXP263 Long term air pollution and prevalent chronic kidney disease - a cross-sectional study of the Heinz Nixdorf Recall cohort Vanessa Jana Soppa

PDS68.01 / EXP264 Low-level air pollution and natural cause mortality in Europe: meta-analysis of 5 European large administrative cohorts in the ELAPSE project Massimo Stafoggia

PDS68.09 / EXP265 The long-term effects of outdoor air pollution on child, adolescent and adult lung function – a systematic review Rachel Tham

PDS68.17 / EXP266 Acute effects of air pollution on all-cause mortality: a natural experiment from haze control measures in Chiang Mai Province, Thailand Nitaya Vajanapoom

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMPDS 73: Neurological effects

PDS73.08 / JFF1 Radiofrequency electromagnetic fields exposure, screen time, brain morphology, and attention problems in school-age children Alba Cabré-Riera

PDS73.17 / JFF2 Does exposure to fine particulate matter modify the association of low neighborhood socioeconomic position with cognitive decline and dementia? Kristina Dang

PDS73.16 / JFF3 Air pollution exposure and cognitive and academic performance in children Juana Maria Delgado-Saborit

PDS73.03 / JFF4 Perfluoroalkyl Substances and Hearing Impairment in the General U.S. Population in NHANES 2003-2012 Ning Ding

PDS73.01 / JFF5 Periconceptional and prenatal exposure to metal mixtures in relation to behavioral development at three years of age in the New Hampshire Birth Cohort Study Brett Doherty

PDS73.09 / JFF6 How transport modes, the built and natural environment, and activities are associated with mood: A GPS smartphone app study Steve Hankey

PDS73.19 / JFF7 Prenatal and postnatal exposure to mobile phone use associated with behavior problems in children Hyunjoo Joo

PDS73.10 / JFF8 Outdoor artificial light at night exposure during pregnancy and child cognitive and psychomotor development. Ainhoa Jorcano Dominguez

PDS73.20 / JFF9 Effects of Neighborhood- and Individual-Level Economic and Mental Health Stressors as Susceptibility Factors for Environmental Exposures on Child ASD Tanya Khemet Taiwo

PDS73.04 / JFF12 Gestational and Childhood Phthalate Exposure and Children’s Behaviors at Age 8 Years Nan Li

PDS73.06 / JFF13 Residential environment is associated with anxiety and depression in a cohort of ageing men Jutta Lindert

PDS73.07 / JFF14 Effect of highway commuting on physiological stress: a randomized, cross-over intervention study Yisi Liu

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 99 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

POSTER DISCUSSIONS

PDS73.13 / JFF15 Air pollution exposure during fetal life and childhood, and brain morphological alterations in school-age children Gosia Lubczynska

PDS73.05 / JFF16 Fetal exposure to air pollution as a potential risk factor for autism and ADHD Ebba Malmqvist

PDS73.21 / JFF17 Pre-natal exposure to urban air pollution and pre- and post-natal brain development: Barcelona Life Study Cohort (BISC) Jordi Sunyer

PDS73.14 / JFF18 Phthalate and bisphenol metabolite concentrations in urine during pregnancy and offspring non-verbal IQ Michiel van den Dries

PDS73.15 / JFF19 Exposure to traffic related air pollution in pregnancy and infancy in relation to autism spectrum disorder in California Ondine Von Ehrenstein

PDS73.12 / JFF20 Heterogeneity of urban form in relation to cognitive impairment among a Chinese elderly cohort in Hong Kong: a high densely urbanized city Dan Wang

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMPDS 64: Health impact assessment and environmental justice

PDS64.01 / JFF1 Research ethics training programs in middle and low income countries: Why they matter Wael Al-Delaimy

PDS64.13 / JFF2 Social Susceptibility to Urban Air Pollution in Cardiovascular Disease Jane Clougherty

PDS64.20 / JFF3 Variation in Asthma Clinical Trial Results by Environmental and Socioeconomic Exposures Jane Clougherty

PDS64.07 / JFF4 Social inequalities in environmental noise exposure: A review of evidence in the WHO European Region Stefanie Dreger

PDS64.06 / JFF5 Human seasonal influenza and climate change: a systematic review of the methods used to examine the relationship between meteorological variables and influenza Laura Goodwins

PDS64.09 / JFF6 Continued firewood use after decades of access to low-cost LPG: Implications for clean cooking fuel policies and air pollution exposure in Ecuador Carlos Gould

PDS64.18 / JFF7 Development of behavioral message strategy for participants who get LPG stove in an environmental trial - experience from the Indian arm of Household Air Pollution Intervention Network (HAPIN) multi-country trial Thangavel Gurusamy

PDS64.14 / JFF8 Health benefits of reducing Australian coal-fired power stations emissions Mandana Mazaheri

PDS64.19 / JFF9 Educational intervention on the risk perception of pesticides exposure and organophosphate metabolites urinary concentrations in rural school children in the Maule Region, Chile Maria-Teresa Muñoz-Quezada

PDS64.05 / JFF12 A comprehensive analysis of racial disparities in chemical exposure biomarkers in US women Vy Nguyen

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 100 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

POSTER DISCUSSIONS

PDS64.03 / JFF13 Qualitative insights from evaluating the first micro-finance initiative in Cameroon to support households switching to liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) for cooking: the LPG Adoption in Cameroon and Evaluation Studies Sara Ronzi

PDS64.15 / JFF14 Potential Human Health Effects Associated with Unconventional Oil and Gas Development: Review of the Epidemiologic Literature and Identification of a Path Forward Anna Rosofsky

PDS64.11 / JFF15 Evaluating the effectiveness of labor protection policy on heat-related work-related injuries in a large subtropical city Guangzhou, China Yanan Su

PDS64.17 / JFF16 Small Cities, Big Needs: Citizen Participation in Urban and Transport Planning Meelan Thondoo

PDS64.22 / JFF17 Google Street View car measurements of traffic related air pollution within neighbor-hoods and asthma-related emergency department visits and hospitalizations Stephen van den Eeden

PDS64.21 / JFF18 Citizen science and literacy scientific: public engagement strategies in urban air pollution Nelzair Vianna

PDS64.02 / JFF19 Estimation of PM2.5-associated disease burden in China in 2020 and 2030 based on population and air quality scenarios Qing Wang

PDS64.10 / JFF20 National disparities of air pollution exposure level by socioeconomic status in China Yuzhou Wang

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMPDS 74: Pregnancy outcomes

PDS74.02 / EXP256 Maternal exposure to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) exposure and its impact on anthropometric measures of neonates Priyanka Agarwal

PDS74.09 / EXP255 Maternal Blood Metal levels in Association with Birth Outcomes in Northern Puerto Rico Pahriya Ashrap

PDS74.01 / EXP524 Revisiting unconventional natural gas development and adverse birth outcomes in Pennsylvania: the potential mediating role of antenatal anxiety and depression Joan Casey

PDS74.10 / EXP253 Elemental constituents of particulate matter and pregnancy outcomes Giulia Cesaroni

PDS74.12 / EXP252 Exposure to Atmospheric Metals Using Moss Bio-Indicators and Neonatal Health Outcomes in Portland, Oregon Saskia Comess

PDS74.17 / EXP251 Critical windows of telomere susceptibility to PM2.5 over gestation: modification by fetal sex and maternal antioxidant intake Whitney Cowell

PDS74.03 / EXP250 Ultra-fine, fine, and coarse particulate air pollution exposure during pregnancy in relation to birth outcomes in a Dutch population George Downward

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 101 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

POSTER DISCUSSIONS

PDS74.14 / EXP249 Exposure to traffic-related air pollution and thyroid function during pregnancy: a multi-cohort study Akhgar Ghassabian

PDS74.19 / EXP248 Maternal toenail manganese and pregnancy-induced hypertension in the New Hampshire Birth Cohort Study Caitlin Howe

PDS74.06 / EXP257 Persistent Organic Pollutants and the Association with Thyroid Hormone Homeostasis in Placenta Zhong-Min Li

PDS74.13 / EXP258 Trimester-specific urinary phenol, paraben, and phthalate metabolite concentrations in relation to singleton preterm birth Carmen Messerlian

PDS74.08 / EXP259 Environmental epidemiology of perinatal outcomes: pitfalls of conditioning on intermediates such as timing of birth. Andreas Neophytou

PDS74.11 / EXP260 Associations of Prenatal Paraben Exposure with Markers of Fetal Growth: Mediation by Gestation Duration Diana Pacyga

PDS74.07 / EXP261 Maternal exposure to indoor PM2.5 and associated adverse birth outcomes in low socio-economic households, Durban, South Africa Busisiwe Shezi

PDS74.05 / EXP262 Spatial analysis of birth defects and proximity to unconventional natural gas developments in Texas, USA Ian Tang

PDS74.15 / EXP263 Solid fuel use and adverse pregnancy outcomes in a Ghanaian Cohort Eartha Weber

PDS74.18 / EXP264 Meta-analysis of Small for Gestational Age Births and Disinfection By-product Exposures Michael Wright

PDS74.16 / EXP265 Associations of prenatal urinary phthalates and blood pressure during pregnancy Haotian Wu

4:30 PM – 5:30 PMPDS 69: Methods and statistics

PDS69.14 / JFF1 Overadjustment in time series regression studies, in particular of air pollution controlling for weather Benedict Armstrong

PDS69.16 / JFF2 Estimating short term impact of fine airborne particles on mortality using a semiparametric Generalized Propensity Score approach Michela Baccini

PDS69.09 / JFF3 Visualizing the effects of collinearity in the context of distributed lag models Xavier Basagaña

PDS69.08 / JFF4 Associations between environmental variables and health data from participatory apps: potential biases Xavier Basagaña

PDS69.02 / JFF5 New approaches for integrating sex/gender into environmental health research: the interdisciplinary research project INGER Gabriele Bolte

PDS69.10 / JFF6 Selecting external controls for internal cases using stratification score matching methods Stefanie Busgang

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 102 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

POSTER DISCUSSIONS

PDS69.15 / JFF7 Accounting for gestational age uncertainty in estimating associations between preterm birth and ambient air pollution Howard Chang

PDS69.03 / JFF8 Exposure error from using environmental concentrations as a surrogate and its bias correction Wenwei Che

PDS69.06 / JFF12 Bayesian Factor Analysis for Estimating Chemical Interactions Federico Ferrari

PDS69.17 / JFF13 Extended twosStage designs for environmental research Antonio Gasparrini

PDS69.11 / JFF14 Comparison between informative and random selection of geographic variables in national-scale air pollution prediction Sun-Young Kim

PDS69.12 / JFF15 An Interval for Unmeasured Residual Confounding Hylia Lee

PDS69.04 / JFF16 An interpretable approach to modeling the impact of an environmental risk factor on correlated neurobehavioral subscales Shelley Liu

PDS69.01 / JFF17 A Self-Controlled Approach to Survival Analysis, with application to PM2.5 and Mortality Joel Schwartz

PDS69.18 / JFF18 Issues of transportability in environmental epidemiological using continuous variables Eva Siegel

PDS69.05 / JFF19 Identifying sensitive windows of prenatal exposure to ambient air pollution with birthweight using a distributed lag model Ashley Song

4:30 PM – 5:30 PMPDS 76: Source specific outdoor air pollution studies

PDS76.02 / EXP256 Exposure Beyond Mass: High-spatial Resolution Exposure to Source-resolved Atmospheric Particle Number and Chemical Mixing State Joshua Apte

PDS76.05 / EXP255 Land use regression models for particle composition over Europe Jie Chen

PDS76.08 / EXP524 Exposure to atmospheric aerosols and Preterm births: a combined approach to analyze this association in a cohort in Northern Italy Annamaria Colacci

PDS76.03 / EXP253 Seasonal Relationships between Short-term Exposures to Ambient PM2.5 Sources and Hospital Admissions in California Keita Ebisu

PDS76.11 / EXP252 Chemical composition and sources of PM2.5 in six cities in China Jianlong Fang

PDS76.04 / EXP251 Long-term exposure to black carbon in outdoor air pollution is associated with cancer incidence Benedicte Jacquemin

PDS76.12 / EXP257 Associations of long-term exposure to fine particulate matter and its constituents with cardiovascular mortality in China Haidong Kan

PDS76.07 / EXP258 Total and source-specific air pollution exposure and 10-year incidence of diabetes in the Heinz Nixdorf Recall Study Sarah Lucht

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 103 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

POSTER DISCUSSIONS

PDS76.06 / EXP259 Source-specific impacts of PM2.5 on mortality in the Greater Metropolitan Region of Sydney, Australia Geoffrey Morgan

PDS76.09 / EXP260 A health impact assessment study of port-related air pollution for Barcelona, Spain Natalie Mueller

PDS76.01 / EXP261 Health effects of desert dust and sand storms: a systematic review and meta-analysis Aurelio Tobias

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 104 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

POSTER DISCUSSIONS

POSTER DISCUSSIONS TUESDAY – 27 August 2019

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMPDS 63: Chemicals and metals: health effects

PDS63.17 / EXP256 Cadmium exposure and risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes: A systematic review and dose-response meta-analysis of cohort studies A. Kofi Amegah

PDS63.16 / EXP255 Exposure to Particulate Matter and Respiratory Health among Electronic Waste Workers at Agbogbloshie, Accra, Ghana Afua Asabea Amoabeng Nti

PDS63.08 / EXP524 Risk Factors for Head and Neck Cancer among World Trade Center Health Program General Responders: Results from a Nested Case-Control Study Taylor Black

PDS63.10 / EXP253 Blood Lead Concentrations and Mortality in Korean Adults: Results from the Korea National Health and Nutritional Examination Survey 2008-2013 Garam Byun

PDS63.05 / EXP252 Prenatal exposure to nitrates in drinking water and low birthweight: A population-based cohort study from Denmark, 1991-2011 Vanessa Coffman

PDS63.14 / EXP251 Combined phthalates exposure in pregnancy and increased children’s blood pressure at age 4 to 6 years Elena Colicino

PDS63.13 / EXP250 Arsenic Exposure, DNA methylation and Cancer Mortality in the Strong Heart Study Arce Domingo

PDS63.03 / EXP249 Cardiovascular and cancer mortality in relation to dietary polychlorinated biphenyls and marine polyunsaturated fatty acids: nutritional-toxicological aspects of fish consumption Carolina Donat Vargas

PDS63.12 / EXP248 Cadmium exposure and breast cancer risk: a systematic review and dose-response meta-analysis of cohort studies Tommaso Filippini

PDS63.01 / EXP247 Serum Organochlorine pesticides residues and the risk of breast cancer: a case-control study Fatima Hamad

PDS63.02 / EXP246 Blood lead levels and risk of atherosclerosis in the carotid artery: Results from a Swedish cohort Florencia Harari Thuresson

PDS63.15 / EXP257 Prenatal Phthalate Exposure and Child Cognitive Performance in a Large, Well-Characterized Pregnancy Cohort Study Kaja LeWinn

PDS63.11 / EXP258 Life-shortening as an alternative measure of effect of an environmental hazard: the case study of a coal-fired thermal power plant in Italy Fabrizio Minichilli

PDS63.20 / EXP259 The association between perfluoroalkyl substances and lipids in cord blood Frederica Perera

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 105 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

POSTER DISCUSSIONS

PDS63.19 / EXP260 Association of blood mercury levels with non-melanoma skin cancer in the United States using NHANES data from 2003-2016 Ran Rotem

PDS63.09 / EXP261 Fluoride Exposure and Kidney and Liver Function among Adolescents in the United States Alison Sanders

PDS63.06 / EXP262 Systematic review and meta-analyses of putative human health effects of exposure to per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances in children and adults Kayla Smurthwaite

PDS63.07 / EXP263 Chlorinated persistent organic pollutants and type 2 diabetes - a population-based study with pre- and post- diagnostic plasma samples Andreas Tornevi

PDS63.18 / EXP264 Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis incidence following exposure to inorganic selenium in drinking water Marco Vinceti

PDS63.21 / EXP265 Use of Blood Metals to Improve the Prediction of Death from Cardiovascular Causes: An Environmental Risk Score Approach Xin Wang

PDS63.04 / EXP266 Blood lead levels and prevalent breast cancer among US women Yudan Wei

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMPDS 65: Exposure assessment: implications for epidemiology

PDS65.01 / EXP256 Systematic Review on the Health Effects of Long-term Exposure to Traffic-Related Air Pollution Hanna Boogaard

PDS65.08 / EXP255 Transport is associated with high air pollution peak exposures Evi Dons

PDS65.13 / EXP524 Low-level air pollution and natural cause mortality in Rome: comparison of results based on European wide and local land use regression models within the ELAPSE project Francesco Forastiere

PDS65.22 / EXP253 An environmental justice analysis of ultrafine particle exposure in Boston, MA, USA Christina Fuller

PDS65.15 / EXP252 Personal PM2.5 Air Pollution Exposure and Mobility Patterns in Pregnant, Low Income Hispanic Women in Madres Rima Habre

PDS65.20 / EXP251 Assessment of outdoor air pollution in Adama, Ethiopia Christina Isaxon

PDS65.09 / EXP250 Modelling of long-term average aviation-related ultrafine particle concentrations for use in epidemiological studies Nicole Janssen

PDS65.16 / EXP249 Land use regression models for ultrafine particles, fine particles, and black carbon in southern California Rena Jones

PDS65.10 / EXP248 Air pollution and mortality in the Netherlands: Comparison of results based on a European wide land use regression and national dispersion model Jochem Klompmaker

PDS65.11 / EXP247 Validation of the field survey related to air pollution in Abidjan district in Côte d’Ivoire Kouame Kouadio

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 106 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

POSTER DISCUSSIONS

PDS65.19 / EXP257 Validation of novel modelling method for identifying poultry operations and implications for geospatial analyses of infectious disease spread Grace Kuiper

PDS65.04 / EXP258 Adapting old methods for new trends: Derivation of time-activity patterns of workers at an informal electronic-waste recovery site using wearable cameras Zoey Laskaris

PDS65.07 / EXP259 External Validation of National Land Use Regression Models for PM2.5 Using a Low-cost Sensor Network Tianjun Lu

PDS65.21 / EXP260 Space/Time Trends of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbon Mixtures in Indoor and Outdoor Air Kyle Messier

PDS65.06 / EXP261 Measurement error from various modeled air pollution exposures and the impact on health effect estimation Sophia Rodopoulou

PDS65.17 / EXP262 Are there the regional differences in the association between long-term exposure to PM2.5 and all-cause natural mortality in Denmark? The Danish Nurse Cohort study Rina So

PDS65.14 / EXP263 Spatio-temporal air pollution models for national-scale health analysis Weiyi Wang

PDS65.04 / EXP264 Evaluating the Sensitivity of PM2.5-Mortality Associations to the Spatial and Temporal Scale of Exposure Assessment at Low Particle Mass Concentrations Scott Weichenthal

PDS65.18 / EXP265 Developing a predictive model for indoor black carbon for the Denver, CO metropolitan area Sherry WeMott

PDS65.02 / EXP266 Dispersion modelled endotoxin concentrations for residents near livestock farms: spatial distribution and characteristics. Inge Wouters

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMPDS 75: Microbiome, infections and respiratory effects

PDS75.05 / JFF1 Exposure to Ambient Air Pollutants is Associated with the Composition of the Gut Microbiome in Adolescents from Southern California Tanya Alderete

PDS75.06 / JFF2 Air pollution exposure and respiratory symptoms between 12 and 24 months: the Piccolipiù cohort. Federica Asta

PDS75.01 / JFF3 Phthalate exposures are associated with Staphylococcus aureus nasal colonization in the U.S. population Meghan Davis

PDS75.07 / JFF4 Heatwaves and dengue outbreaks in Hanoi, Vietnam: new evidence Wenbiao Hu

PDS75.03 / JFF5 High relative humidity triggers the occurrence of the second seasonal peak of dengue in the Philippines Wenbiao Hu

PDS75.04 / JFF6 Forecasting climate change impacts on locally-transmitted dengue fever Wenbiao Hu

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 107 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

POSTER DISCUSSIONS

PDS75.12 / JFF12 Relationships between Coxiella burnetii antibody serology and daily -GPS measured- active mobility in the Netherlands Gijs Klous

PDS75.02 / JFF13 Urban and Rural Differences in Gut Microbial Diversity: Implications for Environmental Health Kristen Malecki

PDS75.09 / JFF14 Different levels of hospitalisation due to asthma across the grass pollen season Nicholas Osborne

PDS75.08 / JFF15 Human microbiome and lifetime exposure to environmental chemicals in healthy young adults Youssef Oulhote

PDS75.11 / JFF16 Longitudinal association between common pediatric infections and exposure to PCB Ľubica Palkovičová Murínová

PDS75.10 / JFF17 Livestock and its related occupations in spatial clustering of Q fever in South Australia, 2007-2017 Rezanur Rahaman

4:30 PM – 5:30 PMPDS 67: Outdoor air pollution cardiometabolic effects

PDS67.05 / EXP261 Exposure to Particulate Matter of Different Fraction Sizes and Blood Glucose in Children and Adolescents Jie Chen

PDS67.13 / EXP262 Associations between short-term exposure to fine particles and systemic inflammation, coagulation, vasoconstriction and metabolism cytokines: A nested case-control panel study Wu Chen

PDS67.14 / EXP256 Long-term exposure to NO2 and PM2.5 on renal function in type 2 diabetes Weishan Chin

PDS67.10 / EXP255 Urban environment and body mass index trajectories during first 5 years of life Jeroen de Bont

PDS67.01 / EXP524 Ambient air pollution association with anaemia prevalence and hemoglobin levels in Chinese older adult; cross-sectional study from who wave 1 study on global aging and adult health (sage) Mona Elbarbary

PDS67.12 / EXP253 How Protective is China’s National Ambient Air Quality Standard on Short-term PM2.5? Findings from Blood Pressure Measurements of 1 Million Adults Tianjia Guan

PDS67.07 / EXP252 Dynamic changes in long-term exposure to ambient PM2.5 and incidence of diabetes in adults: A natural experiment Xiang Qian Lao

PDS67.02 / EXP251 The relationship between air pollution exposure and the risk of diabetic retinopathy Shih-Chun Pan

PDS67.11 / EXP250 Association between air pollution and venous thromboembolism: a 16 years time-series study in Rome Angelo Solimini

PDS67.09 / EXP257 Effects of different size fractions of ultrafine particles from short-term exposure to indoor sources on arterial stiffness using single and multipollutant modeling Vanessa Jana Soppa

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 108 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

PDS67.04 / EXP258 Long term exposure to air pollution and coronary artery calcification in the SCAPIS cohort Leo Stockfelt

PDS67.08 / EXP259 Long-term ambient air pollution exposure and measures of brachial arterial stiffness: results from COMPASS study Saira Tasmin

PDS67.06 / EXP260 Long-term Exposure to Air Pollution and Incidence of Stroke: A Danish Nurse Cohort Study Jeanette Therming Jørgensen

4:30 PM – 5:30 PMPDS 71: Exposome

PDS71.06 / JFF1 Prenatal Household Air Pollution Exposure and Cord Blood Mononuclear Cell Telomere Length: Sex-specific Associations Kenneth Ayuurebobi Ae-Ngibise

PDS71.07 / JFF2 Placental methylation signatures from maternal smoking during pregnancy and potential impacts on fetal growth: meta-analyses from 7 cohorts Todd Everson

PDS71.02 / JFF3 Latent classes for meaningful chemical mixtures analyses in epidemiology: An example using phthalate and phenol exposure biomarkers in pregnant women Kelly Ferguson

PDS71.08 / JFF4 The domains, methods, and tools used in human exposome studies: a systematic review Nadine Haddad

PDS71.03 / JFF5 Recent and chronic residential air pollution exposure and buccal telomere length in children Pauline Hautekiet

PDS71.04 / JFF6 The association of urinary phosphorous-containing flame retardant metabolites and oxidative stress among pregnant women in Puerto Rico Mary Ingle

PDS71.05 / JFF12 Linking mitochondrial and telomere damage in foetal tissue: TP53 and PPARGC1α as a central hub? Bram Janssen

PDS71.13 / JFF13 The urban exposome framework and a proof-of-concept study Konstantinos Makris

PDS71.01 / JFF14 Identifying novel metal biomarkers and biochemical networks in the Strong Heart Family Study: An integrative metallome-metabolomic analysis Tiffany Sanchez

PDS71.09 / JFF15 Childhood Type 1 Diabetes: an Environment Wide Association Study across England Annalisa Sheehan

PDS71.11 / JFF16 Prenatal exposures to mixtures of endocrine disrupting chemicals and children’s growth up to six years of age in the SELMA study Katherine Svensson

PDS71.12 / JFF17 Maternal Serum Metabolome and Ambient Air Pollution Exposure in Pregnancy Qi Yan

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 109 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

POSTER DISCUSSIONS

POSTER DISCUSSIONS WEDNESDAY – 28 August 2019

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMPDS 62: Chemicals and metals: exposure and biomarkers

PDS62.20 / JFF1 Prenatal exposure to lead in an urban area: A Birth Cohort Study in Rio de Janeiro-Brazil Monica Araujo

PDS62.03 / JFF2 Longitudinal Trends in Per- and Poly-fluoroalkyl Substances among Midlife Women from 1999 to 2011: The Study of Women’s Health Across the Nation Ning Ding

PDS62.01 / JFF3 Adult Exposures to Toxic Trace Elements in the Southern Peruvian Amazon Beth Feingold

PDS62.14 / JFF4 Urinary concentrations of phthalate biomarkers in relation to uterine leiomyomata risk Victoria Fruh

PDS62.05 / JFF5 Seasonal variation of more than 250 pesticides in water and air in three South African agricultural areas Samuel Fuhrimann

PDS62.11 / JFF6 Is Breastfeeding a Source of Non-Persistent Chemical Exposure in Infants? Noelle Henderson

PDS62.08 / JFF7 Exposure Characterization of Phthalates in Relation to Serum Thyroid and Growth Hormones in Children Exposed to Phthalate Tainted Products: A Longitudinal Study. Po-Chin Huang

PDS62.07 / JFF8 Lingering sources of lead exposure in Israel: lead in paint and in children’s jewelry Maya Negev

PDS62.12 / JFF12 Distributions and determinants of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in midlife women in the Study of Women’s Health Across the Nation: Evidence of racial and geographic differences in PFAS exposure Sung Kyun Park

PDS62.06 / JFF13 Organophosphate and novel brominated flame retardants exposure in childbearing women via house dust Zana Percy

PDS62.15 / JFF14 Bisphenol-A in the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition cohort in Spain: levels at recruitment and related dietary factors Miguel Rodríguez-Barranco

PDS62.19 / JFF15 Prenatal exposure to aluminium in South Africa: An emerging concern Halina Rollin

PDS62.10 / JFF16 Associations of perfluoroalkyl substances with proteomic biomarkers of inflammation Samira Salihovic

PDS62.09 / JFF17 Household cleanliness and urinary phthalate concentrations among toddlers in the HOME Study Clara Sears

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 110 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

POSTER DISCUSSIONS

PDS62.17 / JFF18 Inhalation and Dietary PCB Exposures in Urban and Rural Cohorts of U.S. School Children and their Mothers Peter Thorne

PDS62.02 / JFF19 Associations between Urinary Organophosphorus Flame Retardants (OPFRs) and Sex Hormone Levels in the US General Population Binnian Wei

PDS62.16 / JFF20 Mercury concentrations and sourcing mercury exposures in pregnant women from the Republic of Suriname, South America Jeffrey Wickliffe

10:30 AM – 12:00 PMPDS 72: Environmental health issues in LMIC

PDS72.07 / EXP256 Prevalence of work-related musculoskeletal disorders among e-waste workers at Agbogbloshie in Accra, Ghana Augustine Acquah

PDS72.02 / EXP255 Modeling the effect of climate variability on childhood diarrhea in Kathmandu, Nepal Dinesh Bhandari

PDS72.17 / EXP524 Hypospadias in boys born to mothers exposed to dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane and pyrethroid insecticides: The VHEMBE Birth Cohort Study, Limpopo, South Africa Maria (Riana) Bornman

PDS72.22 / EXP253 Systematic review of the association between temperature and mortality in South Asia Asya Dimitrova

PDS72.21 / EXP252 Characterisation of Indoor PM2.5 and CO concentrations in households using charcoal and wood biomass fuel in Kigali, Rwanda Telesphore Kabera

PDS72.19 / EXP251 Temporal and sex-specific associations of pre- and postnatal household air pollution exposures with pneumonia risk through age 1 year Patrick Kinney

PDS72.12 / EXP250 PM2.5 concentration and Health impact assessment in Abidjan hospital, Côte d’Ivoire Kouame Kouadio

PDS72.20 / EXP249 The impact of indoor solid fuel use on ethnic differences in child health in Nepal Dirga Kumar Lamichhane

PDS72.11 / EXP257 Effect modification of temperature on air pollution associated with hospital admission for respiratory diseases in Cape Town, South Africa Christian Lokotola

PDS72.10 / EXP258 Long-term exposure to fine particulate matter and incidence of disability in activities of daily living: a cohort study among Chinese oldest old from 2002 to 2014 Yuebin Lv

PDS72.09 / EXP259 Household energy for cooking choice and child health: evidence from Nigeria’s demographic health survey Toluwalope Ogunro

PDS72.06 / EXP260 Spatial analysis of childhood leukemia and industrial air pollution sources in metropolitan areas of Colombia Laura Andrea Rodriguez-Villamizar

PDS72.04 / EXP261 Short-term effects of heatwave and PM2.5 exposure on the risk of preterm birth in Guangzhou, China: A survival analysis Qiong Wang

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 111 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

POSTER DISCUSSIONS

PDS72.08 / EXP262 Association between apparent temperature and cardiovascular disease hospital admissions in Cape Town, South Africa Janine Wichmann

PDS72.01 / EXP263 Susceptibility of individuals with COPD to the health effects of air pollution: a nested case-control panel study in Beijing, China Tong Zhu

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMPDS 66: Climate change

PDS66.07 / EXP256 Temperature-related myocardial infarction under and beyond Paris Agreement goals in Augsburg, Germany Susanne Breitner

PDS66.14 / EXP255 El Niño-Southern Oscillation and Under-5 Diarrhea in Botswana Carlos Gould

PDS66.19 / EXP254 Heat-mortality vulnerability by individual air conditioning, residential housing, and comorbidity index among older adults in five Ohio counties, 2006-2013 Carina Gronlund

PDS66.01 / EXP253 Relation between temperature and heatstroke ambulance transport in Japan Yasushi Honda

PDS66.04 / EXP252 Low Daily Ambient Temperature is Associated with Increased Fibrinogen Levels in Older Adults Trenton Honda

PDS66.15 / EXP251 Heat wave effects on morbidity in the Netherlands using general practice data. Laurens Severijn Hondema

PDS66.18 / EXP250 The complex non-linear associations of climate variability with seasonal influenza transmission in Shanghai, China Wenbiao Hu

PDS66.20 / EXP257 Seasonal variations and use of health care in Cotonou’s health facilities Nonvignon Marius Kedote

PDS66.02 / EXP258 Temperature and Assault Deaths: Their Relationship and Implications of Climate Change Satbyul Estella Kim

PDS66.08 / EXP259 The effects of heat wave on health indicators of the elderly during 2018 heat waves in Korea Soyeon Kim

PDS66.06 / EXP260 Effects of heat on ambulance call-outs: a multi-city study in China Yonghong Li

PDS66.17 / EXP261 Nationwide analysis on the effect of outdoor temperature on occupational injuries in Italy Matteo Scortichini

1:30 PM – 3:00 PMPDS 70: Green space

PDS70.04 / JFF1 The impact of urban environment and physical activity on middle-aged and older adults’ hypertension Sandra Andrusaityte

PDS70.02 / JFF2 Impact of the Residential Surrounding Greenness and the parent-child’s relationships on the preschool-children asthma risk Sandra Andrusaityte

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POSTER DISCUSSIONS

PDS70.08 / JFF3 Results from the Pilot Study of a Birth Cohort of Environmental Exposure and Childhood Development - Pipa Project. Brazil Carmen Asmus

PDS70.06 / JFF4 Greenness effect on oxidative stress and respiratory flows in children Roberto Bono

PDS70.05 / JFF5 Associations between access to green and blue spaces and physical activity attainment – an 18-country study Lewis Elliott

PDS70.07 / JFF6 Air pollution and greenness, and their associated risk with pediatric inflammatory bowel disease Michael Elten

PDS70.18 / JFF7 Exploring recreational physical activity over space-time: a new approach to built-environment exposure assessment. The RECORD Multisensor study Amanda Fernandes

PDS70.14 / JFF8 Urban Green Space and Health: Findings from 350 Communities in 20 Countries within the Prospective Urban and Rural Epidemiology Study Perry Hystad

PDS70.03 / JFF9 A Real-World Experimental Study of Physiological Stress Responses to Urban Green Space Perry Hystad

PDS70.11 / JFF12 Residential Greenness and Vitamin D Concentrations John Ji

PDS70.12 / JFF13 Interactive Effect of Residential Greenness and Air Pollution on Mortality in China John Ji

PDS70.09 / JFF14 Associations of exposure to surrounding green, air pollution and traffic noise with mortality in a large national health survey Jochem Klompmaker

PDS70.10 / JFF15 Health effects of greenspace on outdoor physical activity and indoor PM2.5 and noise: A case study of four European cities Will Mueller

PDS70.15 / JFF17 Comparison of satellite-based exposure metrics to assess exposure to residential greenness in a nationwide cohort of coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery patients in Israel Maya Sadeh

PDS70.16 / JFF18 Green in the neighbourhood Peter van den Hazel

PDS70.01 / JFF19 Intra-urban pollen data to inform buffer selection for greenspace research Kate Weinberger

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ThEMATIC POSTERS MONDAY – 26 August 2019

3:00 PM – 4:30 PMTPS 621: Exposure to metals

TPS621.19 / JFF23 Analysis of heavy metals concentrations in Earthworms and Cattle Egret feathers and eggs collected around an informal electronic waste recycling and dumpsite John Arko-Mensah

TPS621.21 / JFF24 A longitudinal study of chronic lead exposure in Beninese children Florence Bodeau-Livinec

TPS621.10 / JFF25 Folic acid effects blood arsenic metabolites: Results from the Folic Acid and Creatine Trial in Bangladesh Anne Bozack

TPS621.11 / JFF26 Variation in levels of urinary cadmium and its relationship with occupation in smokers from the Multiethnic Cohort Study Shannon Sullivan Cigan

TPS621.16 / JFF27 Folic acid intake, urinary creatinine, and arsenic concentrations in Canadian pregnant women Mandy Fisher

TPS621.08 / JFF28 Continual decrease in blood lead levels in children of Hoboken (Antwerp, Belgium) Carmen Franken

TPS621.23 / JFF29 Characterizing manganese in children’s teeth in a community-based pilot research study in Holliston, MA Alexa Friedman

TPS621.27 / JFF30 Preschool children´s exposure to metals via measurements of hand deposition Katja Hagstrom

TPS621.17 / JFF31 Assessment of Heavy Metal Exposure to Residents around Abandoned Metal Mines Young-Seoub Hong

TPS621.18 / JFF32 The Truth Fairy Project: Assessing legacy pollution in communities near a lead-acid battery smelter Jill Johnston

TPS621.22 / JFF33 A Review of Copper concentrations in Iranian populations Narges KhanjaniTPS621.26 / JFF34 Cadmium, lead, mercury levels in blood and arsenic levels in urine among school

children living in glassworks areas, Sweden Kristoffer MattissonTPS621.03 / JFF36 Bayesian-imputation of urinary arsenic species below the detection limit in

NHANES 2003-2016 Anne NigraTPS621.06 / JFF37 Lead Levels in Blood Donors at the Kintampo Municipal Hospital, Ghana Felix

Boakye OppongTPS621.24 / JFF38 Exposure to mixtures of heavy metals and metalloids in the adult population of

Andalusia: analysis in a sub-cohort of the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC) Miguel Rodríguez-Barranco

TPS621.02 / JFF39 Variability of 24h urine excretion of 22 elements in healthy individuals Gerd SallstenTPS621.20 / JFF40 Exposure to metals in adult population residing in industrial areas: a systematic

review Ilce SilvaTPS621.07 / JFF41 Feasibility of lead exposure assessment in blood spots using x-ray fluorescence

Aaron SpechtTPS621.12 / JFF42 Deficient calcium, zinc, and iron intake on absorption of cadmium from diet Kristen

UpsonTPS621.15 / JFF43 Total Mercury Concentrations in Freshwater Fish & Riverine Sediment in Suriname,

South America Arioene Vreedzaam

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THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS621.04 / JFF44 Urinary Metals and Metal Mixtures in Midlife Women: Study of Women’s Health Across the Nation (SWAN) Xin Wang

TPS621.05 / JFF45 Effect of Dietary Sodium and Potassium Intake on the Mobilization of Bone Lead among Middle-aged and Older Men: the Veterans Affairs Normative Aging Study Xin Wang

TPS621.01 / JFF46 Demographic Characteristics of the U.S. Population with the Lowest and Highest Blood Metals Concentrations from NHANES 2013-2016 Biomonitoring Data Cynthia Ward

TPS 622: Exposure to flame retardants and plasticizers

TPS622.11 / JFF50 PVC flooring as a source for phthalates in indoor dust, the SELMA study Carl-Gustaf Bornehag

TPS622.05 / JFF51 Ultra-processed food consumption and exposure to phthalates and bisphenols in the United States: Results from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES), 2013-2014 Jessie Buckley

TPS622.02 / JFF52 Pre- and early post-natal exposure to plasticizers (phthalates and DINCH) in a new type of mother-child cohort relying on the collection of repeated urine samples. Philippat Claire

TPS622.03 / JFF53 Phthalate Metabolites in the Urine of German Preschool Children in 2017/18 – Health Relevance and Exposure Trends of the last 15 Years Jennifer Engelmann

TPS622.13 / JFF54 Patterns of phenol, paraben, and phthalate exposure in NYC women Elizabeth Gibson

TPS622.08 / JFF55 Temporal trends and risk assessment of perfluorinated alkyl acids (PFAAs) in food on the Swedish market 1999-2015 Anders Glynn

TPS622.06 / JFF56 Estimated daily dose and cumulative risk of phthalates Exposure in the general Children and Adolescents: Results from Taiwan Environmental Survey for Toxicants (TEST) 2013-16. Po-Chin Huang

TPS622.15 / JFF57 Dietary contribution to bisphenol A and bisphenol S body burden among mother-children pairs Sunmi Kim

TPS622.10 / JFF58 Pre- and postnatal levels of phthalates in indoor dust in the SELMA study. Malin Knutz

TPS622.14 / JFF59 Tracing the exposure sources of Bisphenols through matching urinary concentrations to time-activity diaries for a week Aram Lee

TPS622.01 / JFF60 Consistency between serum concentrations of perfluorinated compounds measured in early and late gestation in a Swedish cohort Christel Nielsen

TPS622.12 / JFF61 The GenX Exposure Study: Engaging community through reporting back of per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances exposure data in Wilmington, NC Adrien Wilkie

TPS622.07 / JFF62 Monitoring of perfluorinated compounds from the imported fishery products in Korea by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry(LC-MS/MS) Heedeuk Yang

TPS 623: Exposures to pesticides

TPS623.14 / JFF66 Urinary pesticide metabolite concentrations in pregnant women from Suriname Cecilia Alcala

TPS623.11 / JFF67 Neonicotinoid exposure in the U.S. general population Antonia CalafatTPS623.15 / JFF68 Household exposure to pesticides in pregnants of a Birth coort study – Project PIPA

pilot study Nataly Damasceno FigueiredoTPS623.09 / JFF69 Pesticides in indoor dust – A possible important route for residents’ exposure

Daniel FigueiredoTPS623.05 / JFF70 Variability and predictors of weekly pesticide exposure in applicators on organic,

sustainable, and conventional smallholder farms in Costa Rica Samuel Fuhrimann

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THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS623.08 / JFF71 Cumulative exposure to multiple pesticides in winegrowers and rural residents by hair analysis Silvia Fustinoni

TPS623.12 / JFF72 An Updated Review of the Evidence of Human Exposure to Glyphosate Christina Gillezeau

TPS623.01 / JFF73 Determinants of organophosphorus pesticide urinary metabolite levels in pregnant women from the CHAMACOS cohort Olga-Ioanna Kalantzi

TPS623.13 / JFF74 Prenatal Exposure to DDT and Pyrethroid Insecticides and Body Composition at Age 5 Years among Rural South African Children Participating in the VHEMBE Study Joanne Kim

TPS623.06 / JFF75 Pesticides residue in children hands, home indoor surfaces and soil of conventional and organic farmers in Thailand Pornpimol Kongtip

TPS623.03 / JFF76 Exposure of German Preschool Children to Organophosphate-Insecticides, Pyrethroids, Neonicotinoids and Glyphosate and Approaches for Health Risk Assessment Martin Kraft

TPS623.07 / JFF77 Pesticide residues in farm and home soil of conventional and organic farmer in Thailand Noppanun Nankongnab

TPS623.10 / JFF78 Determinants of exposure to agricultural pesticide drift: Science-based evidence and its application in environmental health studies John Nuckols

TPS 624: Exposures to pops, voc and other chemicals

TPS624.13 / JFF81 Literature Review of Common Environmental Exposures (mercury, mold, pesticides and secondhand smoke) in the Eastern Mediterranean Region Rawan Araj

TPS624.02 / JFF82 Co-occurrence of Urinary Markers of Aflatoxin and Fumonisin exposure from a Crossover study in Kenya: A case for public health efforts targeting both toxins Abigael Awuor

TPS624.06 / JFF83 Exposure to selected phenols during pregnancy and the first year of life in a new type of mother-child cohort relying on repeated urine biospecimens Philippat Claire

TPS624.10 / JFF84 National Secular Trends in Ambient Air Volatile Organic Compound Levels and Biomarkers of Exposure in the United States Stacey Konkle

TPS624.07 / JFF85 Concentration of N-Nitrosamines in condoms purchased in Korea Jeongsun LeeTPS624.08 / JFF86 Seasonal Variation of PBDE in Environmental Samples of ASAN Lake in Korea

Hyunhwa LeeTPS624.12 / JFF87 Emerging chemicals framework – curation of a database of chemicals of emerging

concern Jeroen MeijerTPS624.03 / JFF88 Establishment of N-nitrosamines analytical methods in agricultural foods using

LC-(APCI)-MS/MS Soyoung ParkTPS624.04 / JFF89 Gasoline Vapor Emissions During Vehicle Refueling Events, New York City Jenni

ShearstonTPS624.05 / JFF90 Development and Optimization of Biochar from Pyrolysis of Combustible

Healthcare Waste Firdu ZawideTPS624.11 / JFF91 DEHP and BPA by therapeutic exposure: a risk evaluation on population of Catania

Pietro Zuccarello

TPS 642: Environmental justice and impacts

TPS642.19 / EXP1 National and Sub-national Exposure to Ambient Particulate Matter and its Attributable Burden of Disease in Iran from 1990 to 2016 Heresh Amini

TPS642.01 / EXP2 Socioeconomic inequalities in suicide by herbicide poisoning before and after the implementation of the Paraquat ban in South Korea Jinwook Bahk

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THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS642.07 / EXP3 Population attributable fractions of cancers due to environmental risk factors in France in 2015 Alice Desbiolles

TPS642.12 / EXP4 Air pollution health risk perception among residents in Biancavilla: a national priority contaminated site Maria Fiore

TPS642.13 / EXP5 The burden of mortality attributable to anthropogenic PM2.5 in Australia, 2010-2016 Ivan Hanigan

TPS642.04 / EXP6 Distributions of mass concentrations and metal compositions of fine and ultrafine particles in lower socio-economic areas in a metropolitan city of Korea Dongmug Kang

TPS642.06 / EXP7 National Patterns in Exposure to Criteria Air Pollutants in the United States by Race-Ethnicity and Income, 1990-2010 Jiawen Liu

TPS642.14 / EXP8 Assessment of health impacts of fine particulate matter at small time scales Yi-Ping Luo

TPS642.02 / EXP9 Examining the relationship between air pollution and health inequalities in children in England using multilevel modelling Philip McBride

TPS642.09 / EXP10 Long-term Exposure to Outdoor Air Pollutants in Thailand: A Health Impact Assessment Will Mueller

TPS642.20 / EXP11 Air Pollution and Poverty: The Perfect Storm for Adverse Childhood Respiratory Health in Developing Countries Nithiseelan Naidoo

TPS642.11 / EXP12 Health risk and exposure assessment of indoor air pollutants in Shenzhen, China Shuyuan Yu

TPS642.17 / EXP13 Years lost due to sentinel events associated with short-term exposure to air pollutants in Medellin, Colombia 2011-2015 Juan Gabriel Pineros Jimenez

TPS642.18 / EXP14 Public Health Impact Atribution due to particulate matter from Biomass Burning Emissions Laura Catalina Pinto Herrera

TPS642.22 / EXP15 Estimation of excess mortality due to long-term exposure to PM2.5 in Continental United States using a high-spatiotemporal resolution model Joel Schwartz

TPS642.03 / EXP16 Health disparities attributable to air pollutant exposure in North Carolina: Influence of residential environmental and social factors Ji-Young Son

TPS642.08 / EXP17 What makes us feel the risk? Predicting risk perceptions of environmental exposures through socio-demographic and psycho-environmental variables Mikel Subiza-Pérez

TPS642.16 / EXP18 Air Pollution and Health Care Costs in Oakland, CA Stephen van den EedenTPS642.24 / EXP19 Application of the Navigation Guide systematic review methodology and meta-

analysis to evaluate the association between prenatal particulate matter air pollution exposure and birth weight Xiaohui Xu

TPS 661: Climate change: temperature effects 1

TPS661.15 / EXP20 Attributing summer mortality to heat during 2018 heatwave in Sweden Christofer Åström

TPS661.20 / EXP21 Sex-age trends in heat- and cold-related mortality from cardiovascular diseases in a warming climate: A nationwide time-series study from Spain Joan Ballester

TPS661.09 / EXP22 Effects of Temperature and Humidity (Heat Index) on the Incidence of Ventricular Tachyarrhythmias in Patients with an Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillator: Differential Association between Electrical Storm and Non-electrical Storm Patients Chu-Chih Chen

TPS661.26 / EXP23 The Impact of Diurnal Temperature Range and Years of Life Lost in Six Major Cities in South Korea Haejin Choi

TPS661.22 / EXP24 The use of high resolution temperature exposure data to estimate the short-term effects on cause specific mortality at municipal level in 5 Italian regions. Francesca de’Donato

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THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS661.16 / EXP25 Oppressive weather air masses and all-cause mortality in Sweden: A time-series analysis Osvaldo Fonseca Rodriguez

TPS661.08 / EXP26 Overlooked heat-related morbidity indicator: consequences from rising ambulance dispatches associated with high ambient temperature Yiling He

TPS661.12 / EXP27 A high-resolution air temperature model for epidemiological studies in France Ian Hough

TPS661.05 / EXP28 The fine-scale spatial variation of mortality risk attributed to urban heat island effect in Guangzhou, China Jianxiong Hu

TPS661.13 / EXP29 Is ‘tropical night’ an effective Heat-Health Indicator of Heatwave for South-East Asian Cities? Ejin Kim

TPS661.25 / EXP30 The effects of climate and air pollution on people with chronic lung disease in Australia Luke Knibbs

TPS661.10 / EXP31 Mortality effect of heatwaves in Finland – factors affecting sensitivity Virpi KollanusTPS661.03 / EXP32 Environmental Fate and Transport Analysis of Low Global Warming Potential

(GWP) Refrigerant, R-514A Hien LeTPS661.07 / EXP34 Long-term Temperature Exposure and Cause-Specific Mortality in the U.S Chris

LimTPS661.21 / EXP33 Estimation of heat-related deaths during heat wave episodes in South Korea Youn-

Hee LimTPS661.19 / EXP35 The association between power outage and the exacerbation of Chronic

Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) Shao LinTPS661.18 / EXP36 Impacts of Snow Storm and Power Outage on Critical Care for Multiple Health

Outcomes in New York State Shao LinTPS661.04 / EXP38 Impact of temperature variability on cause-specific mortality in Japan Chaochen

MaTPS661.06 / EXP37 Moderate hot rather than extreme hot is mainly responsible for temperature-

related excess outpatient visits for respiratory diseases: a case study in a subtropical city of China Wenjun Ma

TPS661.14 / EXP39 Impact of Maximum Air Temperature on Ambulance Transports Owing to Heat Stroke During Spring and Summer in Tottori Prefecture, Japan: A Time-stratified Case-crossover Analysis Shinji Otani

TPS661.11 / EXP40 Cold impacts on neonatal mortality in an extreme climate – the role of ethnicity in pre-industrial Sweden Barbara Schumann

TPS661.02 / EXP41 The impacts of anomalous temperature events on mortality outside the core of summer and winter Scott Sheridan

TPS661.24 / EXP42 Association of ambient temperature with lung function of school children living in tropical climatic conditions. Saira Tasmin

TPS661.23 / EXP43 Association between stroke occurrence and changes in atmospheric circulation Jone Vencloviene

TPS661.17 / EXP44 Time-series analysis of hot temperatures and mortality in Ahmedabad, 1987 to 2017 Yaguang Wei

TPS661.18 / EXP36 Impacts of Snow Storm and Power Outage on Critical Care for Multiple Health Outcomes in New York State Wangjian Zhang

TPS 671: Cardiometabolic effects of long-term air pollution exposure

TPS671.17 / EXP45 Dose-response relationship between longitudinal fine particulate matter and hypertension: a perspective cohort study in China Kun Chen

TPS761.22 / EXP46 Exposure to ambient volatile organic compounds in an area with excess cancer and asthma morbidity Shimon Chen

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THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS671.23 / EXP47 Exposure to PM2.5 and its association with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus in adults of Mexico City Metropolitan Area Olivia Chilian-Herrera

TPS671.07 / EXP48 Long-term exposure to ambient air pollution and marker of inflammation and cardiovascular risk in Chinese older adults. ; Data from WHO study on AGing and Adult Health (SAGE) wave1. Mona Elbarbary

TPS671.22 / EXP49 Physical activity, long-term exposure to particulate matter, and risk of cardiovascular disease in women Elise Elliott

TPS671.21 / EXP50 Associations between air pollution and cardiovascular disease in the Taipei City How-Ran Guo

TPS671.06 / EXP51 Long term exposure to air pollution and atherosclerotic plaques in the Malmö Diet and Cancer Cohort Helena Hasslof

TPS671.16 / EXP52 Impacts of birth season on the burden of hypertension related to ambient ozone exposure in a coastal city in South China Jing Huang

TPS671.02 / EXP53 Short-term and long-term effect of air pollution and its susceptibility factors on glucose metabolism in Korean adults: KNHANES study Myung-Jae Hwang

TPS671.04 / EXP54 Public Health Impact Assessment of Asian dust in Japan Saori KashimaTPS671.15 / EXP55 Critical periods for long-term exposure to PM10 associated with incident

cardiovascular diseases Ok-Jin KimTPS671.05 / EXP56 Children’s microvascular traits and air pollution exposure: prospective evidence to

elucidate the developmental origin of particle-induced disease Leen LuytenTPS671.13 / EXP57 Assessing the Association between Pre- and Postnatal Air Pollution Exposures and

Childhood Blood Pressure: Results from the CANDLE study Yu NiTPS671.11 / EXP58 Identifying critical windows of prenatal particulate air pollution exposure and

children’s blood pressure at age 4-6 Maria Jose RosaTPS671.14 / EXP59 Traffic exposures, air pollution and outcomes in pulmonary arterial hypertension:

a United Kingdom cohort study analysis Eleni SofianopoulouTPS671.19 / EXP60 Long-term exposure to outdoor air pollution and risk factors for cardiovascular

disease within a cohort of older men in Perth Stephen Vander HoornTPS671.09 / EXP61 Longitudinal associations of air pollution with biomarkers of inflammation and

insulin resistance Siqi Zhang

TPS 681: Short-term health effects of air pollutants 1

TPS681.09 / EXP62 A systematic review and meta-analysis of the effect of landscape fire smoke particulate matter (PM) on asthma-related outcomes Nicolas Borchers Arriagada

TPS681.14 / EXP63 A Multi-Pollutant Air Quality Health Index (AQHI) Based on Short-Term Respiratory Effects in Stockholm Christer Johansson

TPS681.24 / EXP64 Air pollution and cardiovascular death in Tehran, Iran Narges KhanjaniTPS681.19 / EXP65 Dust storms and years of life lost in Seoul, South Korea: a distributed lag analysis

Hyewon LeeTPS681.26 / EXP66 The Seasonal and Demographic Modification Effects on the Association Between

Particulate Matter and Outpatient Visits for Acne in Beijing Guoxing LiTPS681.07 / EXP67 Non-accidental mortality risk of short-term exposure to fine particulate matter

and its components in Tokyo Takehiro MichikawaTPS681.12 / EXP68 Acute effects of air pollution from road traffic in a panel of healthy students Hanns

MoshammerTPS681.02 / EXP69 Extreme heat and air pollution-related risk of hospitalization and mortality

among end-stage renal disease patients Richard RemigioTPS681.11 / EXP70 Personal Exposure to Ultrafine Particles is Associated with Reduced Lung Function

in Adolescents with Asthma Patrick Ryan

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THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS681.01 / EXP71 Socioeconomic and climatic factors modifying the short-term association between ambient particulate air pollution and mortality: a multi-country multi-city analysis Francesco Sera

TPS682.11 / EXP72 Exposure to air pollution during the first 1000 days of life and subsequent health service and medication usage in children Jingyi Shao

TPS681.27 / EXP73 Spatial analysis of hospital admissions for respiratory disease and the relationship with air pollution sources in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Ilce Silva

TPS681.17 / EXP74 Ambient air pollution and injury Mieczyslaw SzyszkowiczTPS681.10 / EXP75 Short-term effects of desert dust and particulate matter on daily mortality in Iran

Aurelio TobiasTPS681.18 / EXP76 Association between asthma symptoms and NO2 exposure Vera van ZoestTPS681.23 / EXP77 Associations between residential exposure to fine particulate matter and days

spent in hospital for heart failure patients Cavin Ward-CavinessTPS681.03 / EXP78 Apparent temperature as a modifier of the effects of air pollution on respiratory

disease hospital admissions in Secunda, South Africa Janine WichmannTPS681.20 / EXP79 Elevated PM2.5 increases the risk for hospital admissions and readmissions in

end-stage renal disease patients Lauren WyattTPS681.06 / EXP80 Effects of ambient air pollution exposure on frequency of hospital admissions for

appendicitis in Taipei, Taiwan Chun-Yuh YangTPS681.29/ EXP81 Estimating joint effects of ambient air pollution on cardiovascular morbidity in

the elderly U.S. population Dongni YeTPS681.27 / EXP82 How Many Hospital admissions in Massachusetts Would Have Been Saved, Had

the Particulate Air Pollution Level Been Lower? Antonella ZanobettiTPS681.13 / EXP83 Personal Exposure to PM2.5-bound Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons and Lung

Function Alteration: Results of a Panel Study in China Yun Zhou

TPS 684: Long-term health effects of air pollutants 1

TPS684.02 / EXP84 Effects of traffic-related air pollution on asthma onset in children from a French birth cohort. Nicolas Bougas

TPS684.08 / EXP85 Traffic-related fine particulate matter associated with carotid-intima-media thickness in young population Szu-Ying Chen

TPS684.04 / EXP86 PM2.5 exposure and oxidative stress in a cohort of obese with and without asthma Leticia Hernández Cadena

TPS684.13 / EXP87 Childhood cancer and traffic-related air pollution in Switzerland: a nationwide cohort study Christian Kreis

TPS684.11 / EXP88 Exposure to air pollution and breast cancer risk in the CECILE case-control study. Clementine Lemarchand

TPS684.16 / EXP89 Children’s lung function result from long-term exposure to PM2.5 Sai LiTPS684.12 / EXP90 The trend of children’s respiratory health and air pollution in a typical northern

city over two decades Sai LiTPS684.07 / EXP91 Low-level air pollution and incidence of asthma among adults: pooled analysis of

2 European cohorts in the ELAPSE project Shuo LiuTPS684.10 / EXP92 Air Pollution Exposure and Infant Lung Function in the MACE Cohort, South

Africa Sheena MuttooTPS684.03 / EXP93 Particulate Matters and Mortality from Renal Failure in Hong Kong’s Elderly

Population Jinjun RanTPS684.17 / EXP94 Risk of developing malignant pleural mesothelioma in a rural population

exposed to Erionite from the State of Guanajuato, Mexico Liliana Ruiz-GarcíaTPS684.05 / EXP95 Air pollution differential exposure and under-5 mortality in Bogota between

2000 and 2014 Rodrigo Sarmiento-Suárez

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THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS684.18 / EXP96 Long-term Effect of Air Pollution on Hospital Admissions Among Medicare Participants Using a Doubly Robust Additive Hazards Model (DRAHM) Joel Schwartz

TPS684.19 / EXP97 Long-term Exposure to PM2.5 and Road Traffic Noise and All-cause Natural Mortality: A Danish Nurse Cohort Study Rina So

TPS684.14 / EXP98 Long-term exposure to ambient fine particulate matter and Vitamin D levels: a longitudinal study of the Chinese elderly Jiaonan Wang

TPS684.06 / EXP99 The impact of exposure to coal mine fire smoke in utero and in early childhood on parent-reported indicators of childhood atopic and respiratory illness Gabriela Willis

TPS684.09 / EXP100 Long-term exposure to fine particulate matter and cancer mortality in Japan Takashi Yorifuji

TPS 711: The exposome

TPS711.01 / EXP101 Disinfection by-product haloacetamides show different cytotoxicity to two exposure pathway-related cell lines: human gastric epithelial cell line GES-1 and immortalized human keratinocyte cell line HaCaT Xinliang Ding

TPS711.09 / EXP102 Differences in the metabolome according to the body mass index in adolescents in the Metropolitan Area of the Valley of Mexico Consuelo Escamilla-Nuñez

TPS711.13 / EXP103 The Environmental Exposome: Urinary Biomarkers and Asthma Morbidity in a School Inner City Asthma Study Marissa Hauptman

TPS711.10 / EXP104 Saliva Metabolome in Detecting Internal Exposure to Traffic Related Air Pollution Donghai Liang

TPS711.06 / EXP106 Associations of blood trihalomethanes (THMs) and urinary haloacetic acids (HAAs) with oxidative stress markers among Chinese pregnant women: a repeated measurements analysis Chong Liu

TPS711.03 / EXP105 Untargeted Metabolomics Analysis of Wood Smoke and Diesel Exhaust Particulate Matter Yisi Liu

TPS711.12 / EXP107 The Exposome Paradigm and its Applications in Health and Safety Aspects of Hydrocarbons Operations in the Eastern Mediterranean: The EXPOSOGAS project Konstantinos Makris

TPS711.05 / EXP108 Functional correlate of CYP2E1 methylation in chronic exposure to VOCs: promoter methylation vs. 5’UTR methylation Liliana Ruiz-García

TPS711.08 / EXP109 Prenatal exposome and childhood general, visceral and liver fat assessed by magnetic resonance imaging Susana Santos

TPS711.11 / EXP110 The First Cycle of China National Human Biomonitoring Program Has Been Launched: Plan and Operation Feng Zhao

TPS711.07 / EXP111 Associations between PBDEs exposure during pregnancy, fetal growth and aberrant DNA methylation of human placenta Yingya Zhao

TPS 723: Low and middle income countries: sanitation, infections and other health effects

TPS723.09 / EXP112 Impact of prenatal maternal stress on birth anthropometrics and pregnancy outcomes in rural Ghana Kenneth Ayuurebobi Ae-Ngibise

TPS723.05 / EXP113 Associations between oxidative stress and inflammation and preterm birth in Puerto Rico Stephanie Eick

TPS723.11 / EXP114 Socio-demographic profile in pregnants of a Birth cohort study of environmental pollutant exposure at a urban area – Project PIPA pilot study Nataly Damasceno Figueiredo

TPS723.15 / EXP115 Impact of improved cook stove intervention on reduction of exposure to PM2.5 among rural women and children in Andhra Pradesh, India Krishnendu Mukhopadhyay

TPS723.12 / EXP116 Spatial Epidemiology of Vitamin D Status in Mongolia Shinji OtaniTPS723.08 / EXP117 Trend analysis of colorectal cancer incidence in Latin American Ilce Silva

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THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS723.03 / EXP118 Cancer mortality among indigenous people in western amazon Ilce SilvaTPS723.04 / EXP119 Cancer incidence among indigenous people in western amazon Ilce SilvaTPS723.07 / EXP120 Incidence of colon and rectal cancer in selected countries in Latin America: the

analysis of the age-period-cohort effect Ilce SilvaTPS724.03 / EXP121 Type of sanitation and drinking water source in relation to stunting among

children in Madagascar Ondine Von EhrensteinTPS724.02 / EXP122 Emerging Chronic Kidney Disease of uncertain aetiology (CKDu) among rural

farming communities in Southern and Uva Provinces of Sri Lanka Gayani WanniarachchiTPS724.05 / EXP123 Spatio-temporal Analyses for Dengue Outbreak in Tarawa, Kiribati Mi Ryoung

Yoon

TPS 731: Neurological effects in children

TPS731.26 / EXP124 Perinatal Phthalates exposure decreases fine-motor functions in 11-year-old girls: results from Weighted Quantile Sum regression Arin Allahverdi Balalian

TPS731.19 / EXP125 Smoking during pregnancy and cognitive and psychomotor development at 1 year and in preschool age Asier Anabitarte Riol

TPS731.16 / EXP126 Indoor and outdoor PM2.5 exposure, and anxiety in schoolchildren, Korea: a panel study Kyung-Hwa Choi

TPS731.10 / EXP127 Prenatal Sex Hormones and Behavioral Outcomes in Children Drew DayTPS731.09 / EXP128 Phthalate Mixtures in Pregnancy and Childhood Behavioral Outcomes Drew DayTPS731.18 / EXP129 Perinatal exposure to air pollution and childhood autism spectrum disorder in

Taiwan How-Ran GuoTPS731.03 / EXP130 Prenatal air pollution exposure and child’s attentional function at 7 years old:

exploring windows of susceptibility Mònica GuxensTPS731.23 / EXP131 Air Pollution and Academic Performance in School Children: Preliminary Results

from a Longitudinal Study in Chile Raquel Jimenez-CelsiTPS731.25 / EXP132 Exposure to endocrine disrupting chemicals and behaviors associated with

ADHD in adolescents Susan KorrickTPS731.28 / EXP133 Assessing the impact of school socioeconomic status (SES) and school building

conditions on student performance among upstate New York public schools: Does it mediate by the students’ respiratory health? Shao Lin

TPS731.17 / EXP134 Early life exposure to outdoor air pollution and child behavior in the Conditions Affecting Neurocognitive Development and Learning in Early Childhood (CANDLE) Study Christine Loftus

TPS731.04 / EXP135 Number of words at 2.5 years predicts neurocognitive performance at age 7 years. A sensitive measure for assessing effects of EDC exposure? Results from the SELMA study. Sverre Wikström

TPS731.24 / EXP136 Air Pollution and cognitive impairment in 5 years old children from Chile Patricia Matus

TPS731.14 / EXP137 Early Life PM2.5 Exposure and Behavioral Development in Children from Mexico City Laura McGuinn

TPS731.13 / EXP138 Pre- and Postnatal Air Pollution Exposure and Autism Spectrum Disorder: Findings from the Study to Explore Early Development Laura McGuinn

TPS731.12 / EXP139 Fetal exposure to tobacco smoke and offspring early-life neurodevelopment in the Healthy Start study Brianna Moore

TPS731.02 / EXP140 Attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder in Catalonia, Spain: a New Population-Based Case-Control Study to Investigate Environmental Factors Laura Pérez-Crespo

TPS731.20 / EXP141 Impact of lifetime exposure to air pollution on cognitive development in young children: findings from the UK Millennium Cohort Study Francesco Sera

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THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS731.08 / EXP142 Hyperactivity disorder in children was related to traffic-related air pollutant during pregnancy Ping Shih

TPS731.01 / EXP143 Maternal Exposure to Air Pollutions and Risk of Autism in Children: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis Hwashin H. Shin

TPS731.21 / EXP144 The CREATE study: Pilot testing Cumulative Personal Environmental Exposure and Educational Readiness Assessments in Pre-school Children (ages 3-4) Alexandra Spicer

TPS731.27 / EXP145 Acetylcholinesterase inhibition and symptoms of depression and anxiety among adolescents in agricultural communities in Ecuador: transient effects on mood. Jose Ricardo Suarez

TPS731.15 / EXP146 Exposure to fungicides and attention in 6-year old children from the Infants′ Environmental Health Study (ISA) Berna (Berendina) van Wendel de Joode

TPS731.06 / EXP147 Associations between in utero phthalate exposure and non-nutritive suck: a measure of early neurodevelopment Deborah Watkins

TPS731.11 / EXP148 Association between prenatal exposure to organochlorine pesticides and the intelligence at 7 years old children: The Hokkaido Study on Environment and Children’s Health Keiko Yamazaki

TPS731.30 / EXP149 Prenatal exposure to arsenic and neurobehavioral development of newborns in China Xiaodan Yu

TPS 743: Health effects in pregnancy

TPS743.05 / EXP150 Endocrine disrupting chemicals mixture and pregnancy glucose levels among women from a fertility clinic Andrea Bellavia

TPS743.16 / EXP151 Individual and joint effects of phthalate metabolites on oxidative stress among pregnant women in Puerto Rico Amber Cathey

TPS743.10 / EXP152 Prenatal Mixtures of Environmental Exposures and Associations with Subsequent Teen Births Nicole Deville

TPS743.13 / EXP153 Urinary phenols exposure in early to mid-pregnancy and gestational diabetes mellitus: A multi-racial/ethnic longitudinal study Assiamira Ferrara

TPS743.14 / EXP154 Exposure to organochlorine compounds during pregnancy and thyroid hormone levels in mothers and newborns Jesús Ibarluzea

TPS743.06 / EXP155 Exploring effects of polybrominated diphenyl ether and hydroxylated brominated diphenyl ether exposure among women undergoing in vitro fertilization Mary Ingle

TPS743.07 / EXP156 Associations between air pollution and sperm quality, a prospective study in a Barcelona fertility clinic Benedicte Jacquemin

TPS743.01 / EXP157 Effects of prenatal exposure to triclosan and parabens on thyroid hormones levels during pregnancy and birth outcomes: from the Mother And Kids Environmental health (MAKE) Study Sora Kang

TPS743.02 / EXP158 Prenatal exposure to parabens affects birth outcomes through maternal Glutathione S-Transferase (GST) Polymorphisms : from the Mother And Kids Environmental health (MAKE) Study Sora Kang

TPS743.12 / EXP159 Perfluoroalkyl Substances and thyroid hormones in early pregnancy; findings in the Danish National Birth Cohort (DNBC) Zeyan Liew

TPS743.17 / EXP160 Pesticides consumption in the middle west region of Brazil and risk of fetal death from central nervous system abnormalities Jaime Lima

TPS743.18 / EXP161 Maternal exposure to ambient air pollution and risk of preeclampsia: a population-based cohort study in Scania, Sweden Ebba Malmqvist

TPS743.15 / EXP162 Influence of residential exposure to traffic-related fine particulate matter on umbilical cord blood cytokine levels: a birth cohort study Eva Morales

TPS743.09 / EXP163 Host and environmental determinants of placental iodine concentrations Kristof Neven

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THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS743.19 / EXP164 Racial/ethnic disparities in critical periods of vulnerability to fine particulate matter during pregnancy Paige Sheridan

TPS743.11 / EXP165 Association of Ambient PM2.5 Air Pollution with Maternal Bone Strength in a Cohort of Pregnant Women from Mexico City Haotian Wu

TPS 751: Farms, antibiotics, infections

TPS751.09 / EXP166 Chronic exposure to sub-lethal concentrations of antibiotics in rural population and consequent health risks Abid Ali

TPS751.03 / EXP167 Morbidity rates in livestock dense areas: Recent findings from two registry-based studies in the Netherlands Christos Baliatsas

TPS751.15 / EXP168 The use of fixed-effects regression to assess work activities and protective measures associated with changes in respiratory function in a prospective industrial hog worker cohort, North Carolina, USA Vanessa Coffman

TPS751.14 / EXP169 Piloting the use of mobile devices in community-driven research to assess occupational and environmental exposures from industrial hog operations in rural eastern North Carolina, USA Vanessa Coffman

TPS751.02 / EXP170 Real-time West Nile virus forecasting in 2018 Nicholas DeFeliceTPS751.11 / EXP171 Antimicrobial resistance to Enterobacteriaceae in feral pigeons from urban and

rural areas Akihisa HataTPS751.12 / EXP172 Associations between medication use for asthma and COPD and proximity of

livestock farms in the Netherlands Danny HouthuijsTPS751.04 / EXP173 Transmission dynamics and community compliance of containing nipah virus

transmission in Kerala, India Dexton JohnsTPS751.10 / EXP174 Relationships between parental use of antimicrobial household products and

development of allergic rhinitis in children: a 5-year follow-up study Jeonghoon KimTPS751.06 / EXP175 Spatio-temporal analysis of Campylobacter incidence in Israel, 1999–2010 Chava

PeretzTPS751.07 / EXP176 Campylobacter and Laboratory Analysis Type: A Case-Case Analysis to Determine

Differences in Risk Factors Rietta Wagoner

TPS 771: Diet and lifestyle

TPS771.26 / EXP177 E-cigarette Use Patterns and Device Characteristics of Daily E-cigarette Users in Maryland Angela Aherrera

TPS771.14 / EXP178 Smoking-induced risk of future cardiovascular disease is partly mediated by cadmium in tobacco: Malmö Diet and Cancer Study Lars Barregard

TPS771.12 / EXP179 Exposure to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in adults differ by tobacco product type and frequency of use: Data from the U.S. Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH) Study Julianne Botelho

TPS771.29 / EXP180 Prenatal vitamins, folic acid intake, and folate metabolism gene variant in association with risk for autism spectrum disorder in the Early Autism Risk Longitudinal Investigation (EARLI) pregnancy cohort. Katharine Brieger

TPS771.25 / EXP181 Smoking habit in parents and exposure to environmental tobacco smoke in elementary school children of Milan Laura Campo

TPS771.11 / EXP182 Effects of environmental and lifestyle exposure on urinary polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon metabolites: a cross-sectional study of urban adults in China Limin Cao

TPS771.22 / EXP183 Associations of dietary factors and oral health behaviors with plasma fluoride concentrations in children and adolescents aged 6 to 19 years Jenny Carwile

TPS771.31 / EXP184 Breastfeeding is associated to mitochondrial DNA content of adolescents Charlotte Cosemans

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THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS771.04 / EXP185 The impact of military actions on hospitalization rates due to coronary heart disease and psychiatric disorders Svetlana Dorfman Sirota

TPS782.05 / EXP186 Short-term Exposures to Particulate Matter Gamma Radiation Activities and Biomarkers of Systemic Inflammation and Endothelial Activation in COPD Patients Shaodan Huang

TPS771.30 / EXP187 Prevalence and use frequency of personal care product of female students in elementary school in South Korea Jeonghoon Kim

TPS771.15 / EXP189 The association between sleep duration and cognitive function in 6-year-old children Kyung Shin Lee

TPS771.16 / EXP188 Does the dietary pattern at age four affect attention deficit / hyperactivity symptoms at age 6? Kyung Shin Lee

TPS771.19 / EXP190 Evaluating the impact of criminalizing drunk driving on years of life lost of road traffic deaths in one megacity, China Guoxing Li

TPS771.07 / EXP191 Associations between shift work and empty calorie food/beverage consumption Ting-Ti Lin

TPS771.28 / EXP192 Secondhand smoke exposure and blood pressure in children and adolescents participating in the United States National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 2007-2012 Shelley Liu

TPS771.08 / EXP193 Assessing Risk Factors for the Increased Risk of Pulmunary Cancer in Salento Area (Southern Apulia): first results from the “PROTOS” Case-control Study Fabrizio Minichilli

TPS771.24 / EXP194 Dietary and socio-demographic factors among pregnant women and newborns exposed to environmental pollutants: Results from a birth cohort (PIPA Longitudinal Study) in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Nathalia Naspolini

TPS771.06 / EXP195 Suicide in young people, an exploratory analysis involving data of young people: 15 and 19 years old from cities in Brazil and the United States. 2012 -2017 Telma Nery

TPS771.13 / EXP196 Prenatal Caffeine Exposure and Social Responsiveness Scores in Early Childhood Marisa Patti

TPS771.27 / EXP197 Socio-demographic, lifestyle, environmental and pregnancy-related determinants of micronutrients status during pregnancy Kinga Polanska

TPS771.18 / EXP198 Comparison of Nasal Biomarkers of Inflammation and Immune Status in Former Smokers with COPD and Healthy Adults with and without Tobacco Exposure: A Pilot Study Mary Rice

TPS771.32 / EXP199 Association between anthropometry and lifestyle factors and future risk of B cell lymphoma; an exposome wide analyses Fatemeh Saberi Hosnijeh

TPS771.20 / EXP200 A dietary intervention with nuts or olestra to enhance the excretion of persistent organic pollutants in healthy adults: The NO-POPs Trial Jose Ricardo Suarez

TPS771.23 / EXP201 Dietary Inflammatory Index of mothers during pregnancy and ADHD symptoms in the child at preschool age: A prospective investigation in the INMA and RHEA cohorts Mikel Subiza-Pérez

TPS782.06 / EXP202 The associations of geomagnetic storms, fast solar wind, and stream interaction regions with cardiovascular characteristic in patients with acute coronary syndrome Jone Vencloviene

TPS771.17 / EXP203 Association between Marijuana Use and Serum Gamma-Glutamyltransferase in US Adults Binnian Wei

TPS771.01 / EXP204 Exploring risk factors for prostate cancer: A cross-sectional study Yuko Yamano

TPS 791: Occupational health 1

TPS791.18 / EXP205 Benzene exposure among selected job categories on offshore oil installations Magne Braatveit

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THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS791.03 / EXP206 A Study of Blood Multi-element Concentrations in Lead-exposed and Non-exposed Workers Hung-Yi Chuang

TPS791.15 / EXP207 Linking the Assessment of the Burden of Work-Related Cancer to Health Inequities Research: Past, Present and Future Emilie Counil

TPS791.04 / EXP208 Parental occupations at birth and risk of testicular germ cell tumor in adulthood: a French case-control study Aurélie Danjou

TPS791.02 / EXP209 Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons associated long non-coding RNAs and heart rate variability in coke oven workers Qin Fang

TPS791.23 / EXP210 Cohort study for construction workers in South Korea Se Yeong KimTPS791.09 / EXP212 The association of asbestosis and autoantibody titer among former asbestos

textile workers Eunsoo LeeTPS791.10 / EXP211 Association between Oil Spill Clean-up Work and Cardiovascular Disease Mihye

LeeTPS791.13 / EXP213 Cancer Mortality Among Agricultural Workers in the Midwest Region of Brazil

Jaime LimaTPS791.19 / EXP214 Characterizing Environmental and Occupational Exposures Associated to Kidney

Function among Migrant Farm workers in Mexico: A Study Protocol Nicolas Lopez-GalvezTPS791.08 / EXP215 Sleep situation of foreign workers coming from South East Asian countries in

Japanese rural companies Yoshitaka MorimatsuTPS791.12 / EXP216 Radon, cigarette smoking, and the risk of coronary heart diseases in the

Newfoundland Fluorspar miner’s cohort study with follow-up from 1950 through 2016 Toyib Olaniyan

TPS791.05 / EXP217 Mortality among workers in the Pooled Uranium Miners Analysis (PUMA) David Richardson

TPS791.16 / EXP218 A meta-analysis to assess the quantitative relationship between occupational benzene exposure and biomarkers of genetic damage (chromosomal aberrations and micronuclei) Bernice Scholten

TPS791.22 / EXP219 Pesticide Use and Kidney Function among Pesticide Applicators in the Biomarkers of Exposure and Effect in Agriculture Study Joe Shearer

TPS791.11 / EXP220 Cancer incidence in agricultural cohorts: an international consortium of agricultural cohort studies (AGRICOH) Kayo Togawa

TPS791.17 / EXP221 OMEGA-NET Inventory of Occupational Cohorts Michelle TurnerTPS791.07 / EXP222 Insights into the epidemiology of heat-related work injuries: a mixed-methods

analysis of workers’ compensation claims and stakeholder perspectives Blesson VargheseTPS791.01 / EXP223 Heart rate variability mediate the association between polycyclic aromatic

hydrocarbons exposure and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease risk in coke oven workers Liangle Yang

TPS 911: Air pollution, epigenetics, biomarkers

TPS911.09 / EXP227 Reconstructing Breastmilk and Infant Formula Intake using Novel Biomarkers in Baby Teeth Christine Austin

TPS911.12 / EXP228 Personal exposure to PM2.5 and its inflammatory effect on local residents in urban and rural Beijing, China: results of the AIRLESS project Yiqun Han

TPS911.14 / EXP229 Correlation and temporal variability of urinary biomarkers of chemicals among couples: Implications for reproductive epidemiological studies Russ Hauser

TPS911.13 / EXP230 Maternal cigarette smoking affects DNA methylation in imprinting control regions and enhancer regions in placenta Johanna Lepeule

TPS911.03 / EXP231 The alternation of LINE-1 DNA methylation may mediate the effects of air particulate matters on the risk of preterm birth in Guangzhou, China Tao Liu

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 126 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS911.01 / EXP232 Comparison of smoking related DNA methylation in newborns from maternal smoking exposure in pregnancy, and in adults from personal smoking Stephanie London

TPS911.11 / EXP233 Association between prenatal exposure to air pollution and inflammatory markers in children Marina Vafeiadi

TPS911.05 / EXP234 Associations of Annual Ambient PM2.5 Components with DNAm PhenoAge in Elderly Men: the Normative Aging Study Cuicui Wang

TPS911.06 / EXP235 Exposure to ambient air pollution and blood levels of gamma-glutamyl transferase (GGT) in a large Austrian cohort Gudrun Weinmayr

TPS911.07 / EXP236 Exposure to ambient particulate matter elements and blood levels of gamma-glutamyl transferase (GGT) in a large Austrian cohort. Gudrun Weinmayr

TPS911.02 / EXP237 Increased Risk of Trisomy 18 Observed after a Fertilizer Warehouse Fire in Brazos County, TX Xiaohui Xu

TPS911.15 / EXP238 Multi-omic profiling of Metabolome and Epigenome Signature Related with OP Exposure Qi Yan

TPS911.10 / EXP239 Short-term ambient ozone exposure and inflammatory biomarkers in adolescents: Results of the GINIplus and LISA birth cohorts Tianyu Zhao

TPS911.04 / EXP240 Effects of different PM2.5 pollution processes on inflammatory stress in Shanghai area Ji Zhou

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ThEMATIC POSTERS TUESDAY – 27 August 2019

TPS 631: Metals and health 1

TPS631.14 / JFF23 Chronic long-term exposure to cadmium air pollution and breast cancer risk in the French E3N cohort Amina Amadou

TPS631.04 / JFF24 Low concentration of cadmium, nickel, and lead in human body and cardio-metabolic diseases in the industrial area of Civitavecchia Lisa Bauleo

TPS631.11 / JFF25 Variability of Seminal Plasma Cadmium Concentrations and Its Associations with Semen Quality among Healthy Chinese Men Screened as Potential Sperm Donors Heng-Gui Chen

TPS631.22 / JFF26 Metals mixture exposure in pregnancy is associated with increased fetal growth Elena Colicino

TPS631.25 / JFF27 Early-life Dentine Manganese Concentrations and Intrinsic Functional Brain Connectivity in Adolescents and Young Adults Erik de Water

TPS631.10 / JFF28 Associations between prenatal and concurrent lead concentrations and IQ in preschool children in Korea Woo Sung Kim

TPS631.20 / JFF29 Sex-specific associations of blood mercury and iodine with thyroid hormones: results from the NHANES 2009-2012 Kyeezu Kim

TPS631.05 / JFF30 Association between blood mercury and selenium levels with infant birth weight in the Japan Environment and Children’s Study Sumitaka Kobayashi

TPS631.03 / JFF31 Social impairment in 6-year-old children exposed to manganese during prenatal and postnatal periods Woo-Seok Lee

TPS631.15 / JFF32 Lead’s seasonality: it’s all One Health Ronnie LevinTPS631.02 / JFF33 Association of Mercury Exposure with Decrease of Liver Function in Adults

Hyunmook LimTPS631.09 / JFF34 Maternal copper status and neuropsychological development in infants and

preschool children Sabrina LlopTPS631.27 / JFF35 Factors affecting arsenic methylation capacity: the italian case Fabrizio MinichilliTPS631.06 / JFF36 Exposure to cadmium is associated with impaired fasting glucose Chamjin ParkTPS631.13 / JFF37 Cadmium and mammographic volumetric density – preliminary results. Beata

PeplonskaTPS631.16 / JFF38 Elemental Analysis of Nasal Epithelial Lining Fluid in COPD Patients: A Pilot Study

Mary RiceTPS631.24 / JFF39 The association between in utero and early life metals and early life gut microbiota

Alexandra SitarikTPS631.12 / JFF40 Prenatal manganese exposure and neurodevelopmental effects at 1 year of age in

the INMA cohort (Spain) Raquel Soler-BlascoTPS631.19 / JFF41 Maternal Exposure to Metals Associated with Increased Cord Blood

Immunoglobulin E Tsung-Lin TsaiTPS631.18 / JFF42 Dietary Counseling on Risks and Benefits of Fish Consumption and Mercury Testing

in Reproductive Age Women in a Health Clinic Setting Mary TurykTPS631.07 / JFF43 Estimating effects of soil remediation on children’s blood lead near a former lead

smelter in Omaha NE, U.S. Dongni YeTPS631.17 / JFF44 The association of selenium and other metal/metalloids with incident

cardiovascular disease in the Strong Heart Study Di Zhao

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THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS631.28 / JFF45 Influence of maternal characteristics on child blood lead levels in selected locations of Kabwe district in Zambia Nosiku Munyinda

TPS 632: Health effects of flame retardants and plasticizers

TPS632.11 / JFF50 Health risk assessment of human exposure to phthalates-contaminated indoor dust in the environment of homes Kenichi Azuma

TPS632.01 / JFF51 Maternal Urinary Concentrations of Organophosphate Flame Retardant Metabolites: Effects on Maternal Gestational Weight Gain, Early Life Anthropometry, and Infant Eating Behaviors Kathryn Crawford

TPS632.08 / JFF52 Urinary biomarkers of phthalates exposure in relation to thyroid hormone levels among thyroid disorder patients Yan-Ling Deng

TPS632.12 / JFF53 Phthalate exposure and stressful life events in pregnancy have a joint effect on preterm birth Kelly Ferguson

TPS632.09 / JFF54 Perfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) exposure associated with immune markers: T & B lymphocytes and natural killer (NK) cells Tony Fletcher

PTS632.15 / JFF55 Phthalate exposure in pregnant women with systemic lupus erythematous (SLE) Akhgar Ghassabian

TPS632.10 / JFF56 Exposure to Phthalates and Association with Circulating Microparticles in A Young Population Ching-Chun Huang

TPS632.04 / JFF57 The association of brominated flame retardant exposure and semen parameters among men at a fertility clinic Mary Ingle

TPS632.19 / JFF58 The associations with thyroid hormone levels according to the urinary concentrations of bisphenol A, F, and S in children. Yoonyoung Jang

TPS632.04 / JFF59 Prenatal Phthalates Exposure and Childhood Adiposity, Adipokines, and Lipid Profiles at 48 and 72 months Allison Kupsco

TPS632.13 / JFF60 Exposure to di-(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate and skeletal muscle mass in 6-year-old children Dong-Wook Lee

TPS632.17 / JFF61 Sex-specific effects of bisphenol A exposure on adiposity in early childhood: a prospective cohort study Youn-Hee Lim

TPS632.16 / JFF62 Prenatal exposure to PFOS and anti-mullerian hormone concentrations in female adolescents Mildred Maisonet

TPS632.18 / JFF63 Prenatal exposure to mixture of bisphenol A and mono(2-ethyl-5-hydroxyhexyl) phthalate increases body mass index of 6 month-age infants Surabhi Shah

TPS632.02 / JFF64 Prospective evidence for the association between urinary bisphenol A and incidence of metabolic syndrome in Chinese males Lap Ah Tse

TPS632.03 / JFF65 Plasma concentrations of brominated flame retardants and risk of uterine leiomyomata Lauren Wise

TPS 633: Health effects of pesticides

TPS633.04 / JFF66 Parental occupational exposure to pesticides and risk of childhood cancer in Switzerland: A census-based cohort study Astrid Coste

TPS633.05 / JFF67 Domestic pesticide use during the perinatal period and risk of testicular germ cell tumor in adulthood: a French case-control study Aurélie Danjou

TPS633.08 / JFF68 The association between estimated dietary pesticide residue risk index and mortality in a population-based cohort Carolina Donat Vargas

TPS633.13 / JFF69 Pesticide use and breast cancer risk among farmers’ wives in the Agricultural Health Study Lawrence Engel

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 129 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS633.01 / JFF70 Prenatal organophosphorus pesticide exposure and childhood adiposity in the Mount Sinai Children’s Environmental Health Study Taylor Etzel

TPS633.03 / JFF71 Association between urinary triclosan concentration with bone mass density and osteoporosis in the US adult women, 2005-2010 Yingjun Li

TPS633.09 / JFF72 Association of Pesticides with Measures of Sex Steroid Hormones in Adult Males: Findings from the 1999-2004 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) Jessica Madrigal

TPS633.10 / JFF73 The Effects of Glyphosate Based Herbicides on Rat Sperm Mitochondria Hilary McLeland-Wieser

TPS633.11 / JFF74 Pesticides in Sao Paulo, Brazil and impacts on human health. Exploratory analysis of mortality in population in the period 2013-2018 Telma Nery

TPS633.02 / JFF75 Epidemiologic Evidence of Glyphosate’s Carcinogenic Potential Lianne SheppardTPS633.14 / JFF76 Residential proximity to specific crops and cause-specific mortality in The

Netherlands Mariana SimõesTPS633.12 / JFF77 Agricultural Pesticide Exposure and Congenital Abnormalities (CA) in Mexico:

A Systematic Review Brenda TrejoTPS633.06 / JFF78 Impact of Organophosphate Pesticide Exposures on Zika Infection Health

Outcomes Michael Welton

TPS 634: Health effects of pops, voc and other chemicals

TPS634.02 / JFF82 Gene-Dioxin Interactions and Time to Pregnancy in the Seveso Women’s Health Study Brenda Eskenazi

TPS634.06 / JFF83 Environmental toxicants in breast milk of Norwegian mothers and gut bacteria composition and metabolites in their infants at one month Nina Iszatt

TPS634.04 / JFF84 Low-dose persistent organic pollutants and mitochondrial dysfunction in humans Yu-Mi Lee

TPS634.11 / JFF85 Exposure to chemical and toxic elements following Hurricane Harvey Wil Lieberman-Cribbin

TPS634.09 / JFF86 Associations between endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) and thyroid hormones: a community-based survey in rural Newfoundland (Canada) Atanu Sarkar

TPS634.07 / JFF87 Associations of PCB and PBDE congeners with thyroid hormones in Great Lakes sport fish consumers Mary Turyk

TPS634.05 / JFF88 Persistent organic pollutants and the association with maternal and child thyroid hormone levels Marina Vafeiadi

TPS634.10 / JFF89 Spatiotemporal distributions of benzene exposure and risk assessment on Bangkok residents. Pornpun Watcharavitoon

TPS634.08 / JFF90 A prospective study of urinary melamine levels and renal function deterioration in early stages of chronic kidney disease Ming-Tsang Wu

TPS 651: Air pollution exposure modeling 1

TPS651.10 / EXP1 Visualizing and quantifying human internal black carbon load Hannelore BovéTPS651.12 / EXP2 Development of Smartphone Application for Modeling Personal Exposures to

Ambient PM2.5 and Ozone Miyuki BreenTPS651.02 / EXP3 Extracellular Vesicles in Saliva as Biomarkers of Exposure and Effect: A feasibility

pilot in the context of the New York City Biking and Breathing Study Nicole ComfortTPS651.21 / EXP4 Opportunities for mobile-phone based air pollution exposure assessment Audrey de

Nazelle

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 130 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS651.05 / EXP5 West Africa-Michigan CHARTER II in GEOHealth: Climate variables, ambient air quality and human exposure to environmental pollutants Julius Fobil

TPS651.20 / EXP6 Generating Spatiotemporal Records of Exposure for Utilization in Environment Epidemiology Ram Kiran Gouripeddi

TPS651.14 / EXP7 Outdoor and indoor levels of black carbon in central Stockholm, Sweden – implications for epidemiological studies Olena Gruzieva

TPS651.07 / EXP8 Ambient and Personal PM2.5 Measurements: What’s the Difference When Determining Associations with Individual Health Effects? Ashley Hernandez

TPS651.18 / EXP9 A Nationwide Land Use Regression Model for Ultrafine Particles Jules KerckhoffsTPS651.19 / EXP10 Changes in the air pollution levels during heating seasons in Krakow based on

individual measurements of pollutants over the last 15 years Renata MajewskaTPS651.11 / EXP11 A Low-Cost Passive Monitor for Black Carbon Air Pollution: Initial Testing Julian

MarshallTPS651.16 / EXP12 Personal exposure to black carbon in Stockholm, using different intra-urban

transport modes Anne-sophie MerrittTPS651.15 / EXP13 NO2 Air Pollution Exposure Assessment in Urban Mysore, India Amruta Nori-SarmaTPS651.04 / EXP14 Assessment of automatic geocoding tools in Temuco, Chile: a study using

addresses from hand-written hospital record Maria Elisa Quinteros CaceresTPS651.08 / EXP15 The effect of route selection on PM2.5, particle number count and lung deposited

surface area concentrations during bicycle commuting Taina SiponenTPS651.03 / EXP16 Novel exposure estimation for assessing the effects of long-term exposure to

pollutants in cohort studies. Dylan WoodTPS651.17 / EXP17 Land Use Regression models for Ultrafine Particles: development and

transferability within a mega-city Zhenchun Yang

TPS 664: Climate change: temperature effects 2

TPS664.21 / EXP21 Impact of the mitochondrial genome on the relationship between short-term changes outdoor temperature and cognitive function Jacopo Dolcini

TPS664.12 / EXP22 Impact of meteorological variables on physical activity in a sub-tropical city: evidence from mobile app data Janice Ying-en Ho

TPS664.20 / EXP23 Towards the development of a heat-health early warning system for South Africa Thandi Kapwata

TPS664.06 / EXP24 The Health Impact of Air Conditioning Use During the 2018 Heatwave in South Korea Yong-Han Lee

TPS664.14 / EXP25 The effect of regional and local climate indices on mortality in Kiribati (2009-2017) Ah-Young Lim

TPS664.19 / EXP26 Seasonality of mortality with temperature adjustment in Japan over 44 years Lina Madaniyazi

TPS664.10 / EXP27 Temporal changes in temperature-related hospitalizations in Spain Èrica Martínez-Solanas

TPS664.11 / EXP28 An integrated heat early warning system for Europe Èrica Martínez-SolanasTPS664.02 / EXP29 An additive index model for monitoring weather in a health warning system

context Pierre MasselotTPS664.18 / EXP30 On the importance of local meteorological data the absolute scale to define heat

waves for maximizing public health benefits Sara McelroyTPS664.07 / EXP31 A case-crossover analysis of indoor heat exposure on mortality and

hospitalizations among the elderly in Houston, Texas Cassandra O’lenick

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 131 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS664.13 / EXP32 The influence of apparent temperature on mortality in the middle belt of Ghana Felix Boakye Oppong

TPS664.08 / EXP33 Mortality projections for scenarios of temperature and air pollution in Norway Shilpa Rao-Skirbekk

TPS664.05 / EXP34 The Role of Hourly Temperature in Risk of Myocardial Infarction Sebastian Rowland

TPS644.03 / EXP35 The health burden of fall, winter and spring heatwaves and contribution of Santa Ana Winds in Southern California Lara Schwarz

TPS664.16 / EXP36 Short-Term Effects of Temperatureon Peadiatric Hospital Admissions for Respiratory Diseases in Italy Matteo Scortichini

TPS664.01 / EXP37 Short-term effects of heat and cold on cause-specific hospital admissions at municipal level in Italy – a national approach Matteo Scortichini

TPS664.15 / EXP38 Prediction of Microclimates Using Machine Learning Rachel SippyTPS664.09 / EXP39 Evaluation of the ERA5-based UTCI on mortality data in Europe Aleš Urban

TPS 682: Long-term health effects of air pollutants 2

TPS682.15 / EXP41 Associations Between Long-term Exposure to Traffic Air Pollution and Mortality in Heart Failure Patients Miyuki Breen

TPS682.03 / EXP42 Associations of traffic-related air pollution with cancer and mortality among coronary patients: Using an integrated approach for exposure assessment based on land use regression and dispersion modeling Gali Cohen

TPS682.10 / EXP43 Ambient air quality and human health in India Luke ConibearTPS682.16 / EXP44 Traffic-related air pollution and birth weight: the roles of noise, placental

function, green space, physical activity, and socioeconomic status (FRONTIER) Payam Dadvand

TPS682.08 / EXP45 Exposure to Coarse Particle (PM10-2.5) and Term Low Birth Weight: Who Is More Vulnerable? Keita Ebisu

TPS682.14 / EXP46 Effects of particulate matter and self-reported risk factors on incidence of airway diseases Salvatore Fasola

TPS682.06 / EXP47 Global estimation of effect on life expectancy at age of 60 by particulate air pollution Changwoo Han

TPS682.02 / EXP48 Long-term particulate matter exposure increases the mortality risk of patients with end-stage renal disease Jiyun Jung

TPS682.01 / EXP49 Air pollution and mortality in the elderly in Kerman, Iran, 2006-2012 Narges Khanjani

TPS682.18 / EXP50 Air pollution and incidence of lung cancer by histological type in Korean adults: A Korean National Health Insurance Service Health Examinee Cohort Study Woo Jin Kim

TPS682.17 / EXP51 Air Pollution and Quality of life in Adolescents - Use of KIDSCREEN 27 (K27) Questionnaire in 509 young people living in air-polluted cities in Brazil. Telma Nery

TPS682.09 / EXP52 Are the adverse health effects of air pollution modified among those with a more active lifestyle? A review of the literature Kristen Rappazzo

TPS682.04 / EXP53 Residential traffic exposure and lymphohematopoietic malignancies among young people in the city of São Paulo, Brazil Adeylson Ribeiro

TPS682.07 / EXP54 Health effects of ambient black carbon and ultrafine particles: review and integration of the epidemiological evidence Margaux Sanchez

TPS682.05 / EXP55 Trends in Annual Associations between Ozone and Circulatory Mortality by Age and Sex in Canada for 1984-2012 Hwashin H. Shin

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 132 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS682.13 / EXP56 Air pollution and cause-specific mortality in Switzerland: results from a large administrative cohort in the ELAPSE project Danielle Vienneau

TPS682.12 / EXP57 Cross-sectional Study of Children’s Respiratory Health and Ambient Air Exposure in two communities in Lanzhou Nathaniel Mopa Wambebe

TPS 701: Spatial determinants of population health

TPS701.13 / EXP61 Physical function as a moderator of associations between neighbourhood environments and neighbourhood (dis)satisfaction in older adults: Hong Kong & Ghent Anthony Barnett

TPS701.12 / EXP62 Association between residential stressors and mental health outcomes in Belgium Eva M De Clercq

TPS701.08 / EXP63 Natural environments and perceived health in Metro Vancouver, Canada Ingrid Jarvis

TPS701.11 / EXP64 Do area-level factors reduce individual-level socioeconomic mortality disparities associated with particulate matter? Sera Kim

TPS701.02 / EXP65 Cumulative Environmental Quality Associations with Limb Reduction Birth Defects Alison Krajewski

TPS701.03 / EXP66 Built environment survey in a small community: determinants of noise annoyance and sleep disturbance Benoit Lévesque

TPS701.01 / EXP67 Impact of commuting distance on travel mode choice: active and passive transport Aukse Miskinyte

TPS701.06 / EXP68 The perceived contribution of a biosphere reserve to physical and mental health Maya Negev

TPS701.15 / EXP69 Place and air connect through early life stress to affect inflammation Hector A. Olvera Alvarez

TPS701.04 / EXP70 Impact of a riverside accessibility intervention on use, physical activity, and wellbeing: A mixed methods pre-post evaluation Cristina Vert Roca

TPS701.16 / EXP71 Spatio-Temporal Analysis of Ovarian Cancer Mortality in California Carolina Villanueva

TPS701.10 / EXP72 Urban design and suicide in a megacity: a study on the long-term association Pin Wang

TPS701.05 / EXP73 Neighborhood Socioeconomic Status and Mortality Among Heart Failure Patients Anne Weaver

TPS 721: Low and middle income countries: e-waste, occupational health

TPS721.09 / EXP75 Non-Cancer risk among electronic waste workers due to inhalation of particulate matter emitted from informal electronic waste recycling activities in Ghana Afua Asabea Amoabeng Nti

TPS721.08 / EXP76 Health Status and Occupational Risks in Nepali Informal Waste Workers Nita Chaudhuri

TPS721.04 / EXP77 Disruption of thyroid hormone regulated proteins and gene expression by polychlorinated biphenyls, polybrominated diphenyl ethers, and new flame retardants in residents of an e-waste region Ling-Chuan Guo

TPS721.01 / EXP78 Occupational dust exposure and lung functions of steel industry workers in Tamilnadu – a cross sectional study Priscilla Johnson

TPS721. 05 / EXP79 Occupational exposure to pesticides and mental health among smallholder family farmers in Brazil Rafael Junqueira Buralli

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 133 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS721.06 / EXP80 Risk factors associated with self-reported health among waste pickers in landfill sites in Johannesburg Municipality, South Africa Felix Made

TPS721.07 / EXP81 PM4 exposures and respiratory symptoms in waste reclaimers at a landfill site, Pretoria, South Africa Tebogo Maeteletja

TPS721.11 / EXP82 A National Analysis of Potential Chronic Kidney Disease of Undetermined Causes in Ecuador Rachel Sippy

TPS721.03 / EXP83 Recycling of scrap metal into artisanal cookware: a public health threat? Renee Street

TPS 732: Neurological effects in adults

TPS732.04 / EXP84 Study of mixtures of organic solvent exposures and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis in Denmark Aisha Dickerson

TPS732.17 / EXP85 Plasma Extracellular Vesicle microRNA Expression in Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Patients Pam Factor-Litvak

TPS732.11 / EXP86 Predictors and long-term neurological effects of pesticide poisonings in smallholder farmers in Costa Rica Samuel Fuhrimann

TPS732.09 / EXP87 Air pollution and plasma amyloid beta levels in an older cohort: evidence from the Ginkgo Evaluation of Memory Study Anjum Hajat

TPS732.06 / EXP88 Air pollution and Parkinson’s disease: A systematic review and meta-analysis up to 2018 Maria Losifina Kasdagli

TPS732.14 / EXP89 The association between PM10 and Quality of Life(QoL) in South Korea: A Cross-sectional study Soo-Yeon Kim

TPS732.15 / EXP90 Long-term Exposure to Ambient Air Pollution, APOE-ε4 status, and Trajectories of Cognitive Decline in an Urban Cohort of Older Adults Erin Kulick

TPS732.07 / EXP91 Prenatal exposure to chemical mixtures and inhibition among adolescents in the New Bedford Cohort Anna Lokheles

TPS732.05 / EXP92 Exposure to fine particulate matter and the temporal dynamics of episodic memory and depressive symptoms in older women Andrew Petkus

TPS732.08 / EXP93 Long term fine particulate matter exposure and cerebrospinal fluid markers of vascular injury, oxidative stress, and neurodegeneration Rachel Shaffer

TPS731.29 / EXP94 Social Networking Site use in young adolescents: association with health-related quality of life and behavioural difficulties Chen Shen

TPS732.10 / EXP95 The association of short-term effects of air pollution and sleep disorders among elderly residents in China Mengling Tang

TPS732.02 / EXP96 Ambient Air Pollution and Daily Hospital Admission Risk of Depression in 75 Cities in China Shaowei Wu

TPS732.01 / EXP97 Association of Ambient Air Quality with Hand Grip Strength of Korean Elderly Ji-Hoo Yook

TPS 742: Adverse birth outcomes 1

TPS742.08 / EXP104 Adverse birth outcomes in Suriname related to maternal iron intake through consumption of leafy vegetables Firoz Abdoel Wahid

TPS742.20 / EXP105 Prenatal Exposure to organophosphate and pyrethroid pesticides and birth outcomes in two Urban cohorts of Pregnant Women Arin Allahverdi Balalian

TPS742.11 / EXP106 Associations between ambient air pollutant concentrations and birth weight: a quantile regression analysis Howard Chang

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 134 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS742.19 / EXP107 Prenatal exposure to BPA and birth outcomes- The TMICS Group Mei-Lien ChenTPS742.02 / EXP108 Higher Neonatal Blood Pressure in Association with Air Pollution Exposure

During the Last Weeks of Pregnancy: an ENVIRONAGE birth cohort study Bianca CoxTPS742.21 / EXP109 Associations between psychosocial stress and oxidative stress during pregnancy

in Puerto Rico Stephanie EickTPS742.22 / EXP110 Ambient Air Pollution and Risk of Pregnancy Loss among Women Undergoing

Assisted Reproduction Audrey GaskinsTPS742.16 / EXP111 Oil and gas development activity and spontaneous preterm birth risk in

California David GonzalezTPS742.05 / EXP112 Ambient air pollution and fetal mortality in Sao Paulo, Brazil Nelson GouveiaTPS742.18 / EXP113 Effects of maternal exposure to neonicotinoid pesticide and oxidative stress on

birth outcomes Yu Fang HuangTPS742.01 / EXP114 Maternal factors and risk of spontaneous preterm birth due to high ambient

temperatures in New South Wales, Australia Edward JegasothyTPS742.15 / EXP115 Organophosphate pesticide exposure during pregnancy associated with total

gestational weight gain: preliminary results from the New York University Children’s Health and Environment Study Linda Kahn

TPS742.13 / EXP116 Association of exposure to particulate matter with adverse birth outcomes in the Panel Study on Korean Children Hwan-Cheol Kim

TPS742.12 / EXP117 Modeling of Nitrogen Oxide Exposure during Pregnancy on Birthweigt using Generalized Additive Model: A Case of MACE Birth Cohort Study in Durban, South Africa Aweke Abebaw Mitku

TPS742.03 / EXP118 Nitrogen Dioxide pollutant exposure and Birthweight among HIV exposed Newborns within the MACE Birth Cohort Nithiseelan Naidoo

TPS742.17 / EXP119 Prenatal Exposure to Organophosphate Pesticide Metabolites Associated with Reductions in Gestational Age and Birth Weight: Results from a population-based cohort study in New York City Mrudula Naidu

TPS742.09 / EXP120 Prenatal exposure to ambient PM2.5, roadway proximity, pre-term birth, and effect modification by socioeconomic indicators and infant sex Sabah Quraishi

TPS742.10 / EXP121 Maternal gestational exposure to di-butyl phthalate (DBP) from medications and birthweight of progeny Ran Rotem

TPS742.07 / EXP122 Ambient Air Pollution Exposure During Pregnancy and Neurobehavioral Status at Birth David Savitz

TPS742.04 / EXP123 El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and Birthweight in Tuvalu Jisun SungTPS742.06 / EXP124 A National Study of Maternal and Paternal Occupational Exposure to Endocrine

Disrupting Chemicals and Pregnancy Outcomes Maysoon Zeidan

TPS 752: Respiratory effects and allergies

TPS752.12 / EXP127 Prenatal exposure to phenols and lung function, wheeze, and asthma in school-age children from 8 European birth cohorts Alicia Abellan

TPS752.17 / EXP128 Short-term exposure to air pollution and pollen and associations with lung function in French children from the PARIS birth cohort Hélène Amazouz

TPS752.26 / EXP129 Interaction between air pollution and pollen seasons on allergic rhinitis control Annabelle Bédard

TPS752.18 / EXP130 Sensitization profiles at age 8-9 years in the PARIS birth cohort and related environmental risk factors Mélissa Berroua

TPS752.01 / EXP131 Use of cleaning agents at home and respiratory and allergic symptoms in adolescents: the PIAMA birth cohort study Joseph Bukalasa

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 135 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS752.10 / EXP132 Determinants of airborne rodent allergens in Dutch households: a pilot study Inge Wouters

TPS752.11 / EXP133 Is childhood asthma associated with biological aging markers? Maribel CasasTPS752.19 / EXP134 The body of evidence on pollen-related asthma exacerbations in children in the

climate change era Francesca de’DonatoTPS752.06 / EXP135 Assessment of Airborne Fungal Spores in a tertiary care hospital in South

Western Nigeria Adekunle FakunleTPS752.03 / EXP136 Role of timing of exposure to pets and dampness or molds on asthma and

sensitization in adolescence Ulrike GehringTPS752.13 / EXP137 Cross-sectional associations between per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances and

asthma in children. Medina Jackson-BrowneTPS752.08 / EXP138 Breathe Easy Dallas: Measuring the Impact of School-Based Interventions on Air

Quality and Daily Asthma Exacerbations at High Risk Schools Haneen KhreisTPS752.24 / EXP139 Prenatal exposure to perfluoroalkyl substances and children’s allergic diseases

Ting Jui LiuTPS752.20 / EXP140 Prenatal exposure to phthalate esters and its associations with childhood

allergies (TMICS Study) Chin-Li LuTPS752.09 / EXP141 Improving Indoor Microbiological Measurements for Health Protection Mark

MendellTPS752.21 / EXP142 Infections, Respiratory Symptoms, and Allergy in Relation to Rice Cereal

Consumption in a United States Cohort Yuka MoroishiTPS752.02 / EXP143 Air microflora study of selected offices In Elizade University, Ilara-Mokin Olayinka

OsuolaleTPS752.27 / EXP144 Childhood Atopy and Airway Inflammation among communities with high

ambient pollution Shumani PhaswanaTPS752.22 / EXP145 Investigation of the Association between Adult Wheeze and Household

Beta(1→3)-glucan Exposures in First Nations Communities in Canada Donna RennieTPS752.25 / EXP146 Exposures and respiratory health among children in an ongoing birth cohort in

Puerto Rico Zaira Rosario-PabonTPS752.16 / EXP147 Respiratory health outcomes associated with different grass taxa in the UK

Francis RowneyTPS752.23 / EXP148 Relative influence on childhood allergic diseases of meteorological factors and

air pollutants in Shanghai, China Shilu TongTPS752.32 / EXP149 The association between pediatric asthma and body composition in Lima, Peru

Lindsay UnderhillTPS752.15 / EXP150 Pollen Flowing over the Great Dividing Range, Australia Charlotte WaudbyTPS752.04 / EXP151 Association between Chemical Components of PM2.5 and Children’s Primary

Care Night-time Visits due to Asthma Attacks: a Case-crossover Study Shin YamazakiTPS752.05 / EXP152 Association of airborne endotoxin concentrations with pulmonary function and

airway inflammation among students Yoshiko YodaTPS752.07 / EXP153 Association between early life indoor environment factors and prevalence and

onset of asthma/allergic disease among preschool children in Taiyuan Xin Zhang

TPS 781: Health effects of noise

TPS781.10 / EXP167 Sex/gender differences in the association of environmental noise exposure and cardiovascular health - systematic review and meta-analysis Gabriele Bolte

TPS781.11 / EXP168 Long-term exposure to road traffic noise, air pollution and adiposity markers: a joint analysis of HUNT3, Lifelines and UK Biobank Yutong (Samuel) Cai

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 136 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS781.08 / EXP169 Health effects of exposure to aircraft noise: a cross-sectional study on adult residents near the Orio al Serio International Airport, Italy Michele Carugno

TPS781.03 / EXP170 Associations between exposure to road traffic noise and particles and the prevalence of renal dysfunction in Taichung, Taiwan Ta-Yuan Chang

TPS781.02 / EXP171 Road traffic noise and markers of adiposity in the Danish Nurse Cohort: a cross-sectional study Johannah Cramer

TPS781.12 / EXP172 High spatial resolution health risk assessment of road traffic noise on ischemic heart disease deaths for Melbourne, Australia in 2011 Ivan Hanigan

TPS781.05 / EXP173 Depression as an effect modifier of an association between outdoor and indoor traffic noise and cognitive function - Results from the Heinz Nixdorf Recall study Barbara Hoffmann

TPS781.14 / EXP174 Can vegetation cover and traffic noise exposure be differentiated at residential address-level in UK Biobank? Charlotte Roscoe

TPS781.07 / EXP175 Aircraft noise exposure assessment for a case-crossover study in Switzerland Apolline Saucy

TPS781.13 / EXP176 Sociodemographic and Segregation Patterns of Civil Aviation Noise Exposures Matthew Simon

TPS781.09 / EXP177 Long-term Exposure to Road Traffic Noise, Air Pollution and Incidence of Atrial Fibrillation: A Danish Nurse Cohort Study Jeanette Therming Jørgensen

TPS781.06 / EXP178 Leisure noise exposure and its association with tinnitus among adolescents Veronika Weilnhammer

TPS 792: Occupational health 2

TPS792.19 / EXP187 Genotoxic damage in a Bolivian agricultural population exposed to a mixture of pesticides Jessika Barron Cuenca

TPS792.15 / EXP188 Oxidative Stress Profile of workers exposed to formaldehyde in the hospital Roberto Bono

TPS792.16 / EXP189 Oxidative stress induction in woodworkers exposed to wood dust and formaldehyde Roberto Bono

TPS792.06 / EXP190 Longitudinal study of effects of welding fumes on the cardiovascular system Karin Broberg

TPS792.13 / EXP191 Occupational Risk Factors for Health Disparities among Latina Farm Workers in Southern Idaho Cynthia Curl

TPS792.10 / EXP192 Differences in physical activity between employed and unemployed individuals: a cross-sectional study Audrius Dedele

TPS792.09 / EXP193 Validity of Retrospective Occupational Exposure Estimates of Lead and Manganese in a Case-Control Study Melissa Friesen

TPS792.22 / EXP194 Early Life Respiratory Status And Adult Occupational Exposures: Prospective Evidence For Healthy Worker Bias Melissa Furlong

TPS792.23 / EXP195 Self-reported health status of tour managers leading tours to different geographic areas How-Ran Guo

TPS792.03 / EXP196 The association between salivary cortisone level and structural change of Limbic system based on differences in blood heavy metal concentration among Korean firefighters: a cross-sectional study Woojin Kim

TPS792.20 / EXP197 The Association of Sleep Disorder and PTSD Symptoms by Work Tasks in Firefighters Yun Tae Kim

TPS792.02 / EXP198 Exposure to styrene and styrene-7,8-oxide among workers in the glass fibre-reinforced plastics industry Jorunn Kirkeleit

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 137 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS792.17 / EXP199 Professional Drivers Exposure to Black Carbon in London; the Diesel Exposure Mitigation Study Shanon Lim

TPS792.07 / EXP200 Evaluation of the reliability and convergent validity of a monitoring battery including three Screening Test (CDT, FAB and TMT) of neuropsychological outcomes on agricultural and non-agricultural workers from Chile Boris Lucero

TPS792.01 / EXP201 Environmental risk factors for acute kidney injury in agricultural workers in Spain Cristina O’Callaghan-Gordo

TPS792.11 / EXP202 Measurement of urinary 1-hydroxy pyrene in a pilot study of airport workers exposed to jet fuel Audil Rashid

TPS792.21 / EXP203 Occupational exposure to n-hexane is associated with reduced gonadotropins and with prolonged menstrual cycles in Mexican workers of reproductive age Liliana Ruiz-García

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 138 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

ThEMATIC POSTERS WEDNESDAY – 28 August 2019

TPS 636: Metals and health 2

TPS636.16 / JFF23 Body Mass Index is Associated with Arsenic Metabolites in three studies in Bangladesh Ahlam Abuawad

TPS636.17 / JFF24 Hand Grip Strength in Relation to Blood Levels of Lead, Mercury, Cadmium Selenium, and Manganese Among Adults Living in the United States Maryse Bouchard

TPS636.19 / JFF25 Prenatal exposure to environmental heavy metals and language development in toddlers Mei-Ju Chien

TPS636.26 / JFF26 Arsenic and cadmium exposure and albuminuria: exploring causal associations by a Mendelian randomization approach Maria Grau-Perez

TPS636.02 / JFF27 Combined parental exposure of cadmium and other heavy metals on birth outcomes (weight, height, WFL): The Mothers and Children’s Environmental Health (MOCEH) Study Eunhee Ha

TPS636.10 / JFF28 Arsenic Exposure in Drinking Water and Occurrence of Chronic Kidney Disease: The Association and Effect Modifications by Comorbidities Shih-Chieh Huang

TPS636.11 / JFF29 Hypertension Control in the Presence of High Blood Lead Level in US adults John JiTPS636.12 / JFF30 Blood Lead Concentration and Prescription Medication Use Among US Children

and Adolescents John JiTPS636.13 / JFF31 Associations between cadmium and lead concentrations and hypertension in

NHANES 2013-2016: mediation effect of kidney function Sunmi KimTPS636.24 / JFF32 Associations between toxic metals and reproductive hormones modified by

specific food intakes among healthy premenopausal women: BioCycle Study Keewan KimTPS636.08 / JFF33 Higher levels of Hg or Cd in the first trimester among pregnant women in Korea

and Thailand Jieun KoTPS636.22 / JFF34 Socioeconomic adversity and risk of lead exposure is associated with brain and

cognitive development in the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study Andrew Marshall

TPS636.04 / JFF35 Blood Manganese Levels and Wheezing among Children in Mexico City Nia McRaeTPS636.18 / JFF36 Pipa - Project about Childhood and environmental pollutants - prenatal exposure

to metals and birth weight Ana NatividadeTPS636.14 / JFF37 Positive association between salivary arsenic concentration and obesity in a pilot

study of women living in rural communities in the United States Shelbie StahrTPS636.25 / JFF38 Genetically elevated levels of metals and subclinical atherosclerosis in an adult

population from Spain: preliminary results from the Aragon Workers Health Study Maria Tellez-Plaza

TPS636.15 / JFF39 Manganese transporter genetics and sex modify the association between environmental manganese exposure and neurobehavioral outcomes in children Karin Wahlberg

TPS636.06 / JFF40 Exposure to alkali and alkaline earth metals during pregnancy and gestational weight gain Pengpeng Wang

TPS636.09 / JFF41 Effect Modification of Vitamin B6 on Blood Lead Level and Cardiovascular Diseases in US Adults Jia Wei

TPS636.01 / JFF43 Birth outcomes of pregnant women exposed to mercury and non-chemical stressors in Suriname Wilco Zijlmans

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 139 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS 641: Policies, interventions, communication

TPS641.19 / EXP1 Air filtration and building envelop modification reduce traffic pollution exposure and blood pressure Doug Brugge

TPS641.07 / EXP2 Noise Barriers in Somerville: A Health Lens Analysis (HLA) Doug BruggeTPS641.28 / EXP3 Enhancing LPG Adoption in Ghana: A Factorial Cluster-Randomized Trial Daniel

CarrionTPS641.08 / EXP4 Assessing the Safety of Glyphosate: Comparing IARC, EFSA and EPA procedures,

transparency, and outcomes for environmental health Yogi HendlinTPS641.24 / EXP5 Evidence to support clean-energy transition and related health co-benefits: air

quality monitoring in Suva, Fiji Luke KnibbsTPS641.26 / EXP6 Cigarette Package Health Warnings in Japan Naoki KunugitaPTS641.14 / EXP7 Quantifying the mortality benefits of China’s winter heating policy: A quasi-

experimental study Tiantian LiTPS641.05 / EXP8 The dual effects of particulate respirator use in elderly adults: An experimental

study Youn-Hee LimTPS641.09 / EXP9 Measuring the effectiveness of an intervention for atmospheric pollution

abatement: the case study of Taranto Cristina MangiaTPS641.01 / EXP10 Population-based morality data suggests remediation is only modestly effective

in two Superfund counties Suzanne McDermottTPS641.04 / EXP11 Health Impact of Local Interventions: Association of Trends in Air Quality and in

Cardiovascular Hospital Admissions at the ZIP code-level within US Metropolitan Areas Lucas Neas

TPS641.18 / EXP12 Implications of standards in setting environmental policy Maya NegevPTS641.15 / EXP13 Development of an APP as alert system for severe air pollution episodes Regina

PickfordTPS641.30 / EXP14 Metamodel of a Data Warehouse for the Discovery of Knowledge in Air Quality

and Health in Aburra Valley region (Colombia) Juan Gabriel Pineros JimenezTPS641.22 / EXP15 Approaches on implementing innovations to achieving faster progress on air

quality improvement in DKI Jakarta, Indonesia. Vivian C. PunTPS641.21 / EXP16 Expected changes in PM2.5-related premature mortality from 2010-2040 under

various emission countermeasure scenarios Xerxes SeposoPTS641.17 / EXP17 An overview of the EU regulation on endocrine disruptors Remy SlamaTPS641.02 / EXP18 Impacts of smoke-free policies on 30-day readmission rates following

hospitalization for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in the United States Sericea Stallings-Smith

PTS641.20 / EXP19 Poisonous plant exposure, human health harms and the development of culturally relevant public education messaging Renee Street

PTS641.16 / EXP20 Ambient Air Quality Assessment within Abuja Municipal Area, Nigeria Nathaniel Mopa Wambebe

TPS 652: Air pollution exposure modelling 2

TPS652.12 / EXP21 Inter-comparison of Publicly-available National-scale Integrated Empirical Geographic Regression Models for Outdoor Air Pollution in the Contiguous United States Matthew Bechle

TPS652.13 / EXP22 Geocoding and spatio-temporal modeling of chronic PM2.5 exposure of the Mexican Teachers’ Cohort. Karla Cervantes-Martínez

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THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS652.15 / EXP23 A pilot study to collect and integrate multi-dimensional personal air pollution exposure data: China Kadoorie Biobank (CKB)-Air study Ka Hung Chan

TPS652.18 / EXP24 Incorporation of air pollution dispersion principals into regression models - how far can we take it? Shimon Chen

TPS652.19 / EXP25 Evaluation of PM2.5 Exposures for an Environmental Justice Community Using a Low-Cost PM Sensor Seung-Hyun Cho

TPS652.02 / EXP26 Assessment of long-term exposure to airborne pollution in France (1990-2010) Thomas Coudon

TPS652.09 / EXP27 Prediction models for human active mobility in rural areas, for the improvement of exposure assessment models Gijs Klous

TPS652.07 / EXP28 Characterization of Personal Fine and Ultrafine Particle Exposures in Children with Asthma Kirsten Koehler

TPS652.05 / EXP29 Developing a black carbon land use regression model for the Denver, CO metropolitan area Sheena Martenies

TPS652.01 / EXP30 Sources of Error in Carbon Monoxide Exposure Measurement: a Systematic Review Stefania Oliverio

TPS652.03 / EXP31 Developing an Exposure Framework to Systematically Review the Health Effects of Long-term Exposure to Traffic-Related Air Pollution Allison Patton

TPS652.06 / EXP32 Estimation of Personal Daily Pollutant Exposures in Boston using Portable Air Quality Monitors Mary Rice

TPS652.14 / EXP33 Dispersion modelling of Particles in Scania Ralf RittnerTPS652.10 / EXP34 Determination of time-activity model based on real-time personal exposure

positioning Qinghua SunTPS652.04 / EXP35 The Indonesian Family Life Survey (IFLS) and proxy measures for traffic related air

pollution Martie Van TongerenTPS652.20 / EXP36 Estimating annual residential exposure averages by extrapolating snapshot

PM2.5 campaign results and translating ambient measurements Hanbin Zhang

TPS 662: Climate change effects on labour, migration and infections

TPS662.04 / EXP41 Exploring the impact of climate change on public space: consolidating environmental sustainability in Nigeria Oluwagbemiga Paul Agboola

TPS662.03 / EXP42 Landslides, Displacement, and Mental Health in Banjarnegara, Indonesia Kate Burrows

TPS662.11 / EXP43 Guidance for estimating and reporting the health co-benefits of mitigation policies Kristie Ebi

TPS662.16 / EXP44 The Comprehensive Disaster Assessment and Readiness Tools (CDART) Project for elder care/senior living facilities and shelters in Puerto Rico Elizabeth Irvin-Barnwell

TPS663.08 / EXP45 A study on the seasonality of scabies as temperature changes in South Korea, 2010–2017 Jong-Hun Kim

TPS663.10 / EXP46 Impact of anthropogenic activities and climate variability on the epidemiology of malaria and bilharziasis in Kaedi (Mauritania) Kouame Kouadio

TPS663.01 / EXP47 Climate and dengue in central region of Thailand Uma LangkulsenTPS662.14 / EXP48 Resilience to the Health Impacts of Weather-Related Disasters Jaime MadriganoTPS662.01 / EXP49 The health impacts of climate-related migration Patricia Nayna SchwerdtleTPS662.09 / EXP50 Study of KAP Investigation and Interventions on the Impact of Migrant Workers

under Heatwaves Chaoqiong PengTPS663.05 / EXP51 The Effects of Meteorological factors on the Incidence of Hand, Foot and Mouth

Disease in Shanghai, China Li Peng

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THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS663.13 / EXP52 Hurricane Maria Response in Puerto Rico: Piloting an app-based survey during an emergency response Chris Poulet

TPS663.02 / EXP53 Seasonal variation in glycated hemoglobin in type 2 diabetes patients on semi-arid climate between the years 2005-2015 Allon Raphael

TPS662.17 / EXP54 The NIEHS Climate Change and Human Health Literature Portal: The Way to the Science You Want Kimberly Thigpen Tart

TPS662.08 / EXP55 Extreme Weather Events in Europe and Their Possible Health Consequences; A Systematic Review Veronika Weilnhammer

TPS531.05 / EXP56 Cause-specific emergency hospitalizations in New York City following Hurricane Sandy Kate Weinberger

TPS662.10 / EXP58 Perception, Knowledge and Communication; Current Profiles and Potential for Climate Change Health Adaptation in the Eastern Caribbean Steve Whittaker

TPS663.09 / EXP57 Climate Change and Diet: Perceived, Actual and Projected Impacts on Food Resources in the Eastern Caribbean Steve Whittaker

TPS663.12 / EXP59 Hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome and climate variability in China Ariana Zeka

TPS 683: Short-term health effects of air pollutants 2

TPS683.01 / EXP61 Association between PM2.5 exposure and peak expiratory flow rate in schoolchildren: a panel study Sanghyuk Bae

TPS672.10 / EXP62 Air pollutants and daily outpatient visits for cardiovascular and cerebrovascular diseases in central Taiwan Ya-Yun Cheng

TPS672.06 / EXP63 Cycling, potential Inhaled dose, and cardiovascular indicators: Pilot results from the New York City Biking and Breathing study Steven Chillrud

TPS683.07 / EXP64 Hospital outpatient visits for Stoke Associated with Short-term Exposure to Ambient Particulate Matter: Exploring Temporal Variability of the Effect Yongsoo Choi

TPS683.21 / EXP65 Do nurse advice calls follow ozone pollution? Using syndromic surveillance to evaluate short-term respiratory effects of ambient ozone concentrations in the Washington, DC metropolitan area Christina Fuller

TPS683.06 / EXP66 Acute effects of personal exposure to fine particulate matter on pulmonary health:a panel study among Chinese children Wenting Guo

TPS672.07 / EXP67 Global association between short-term exposure to sulfur dioxide and ischemic stroke: evidence from a meta-analysis Fang Guo

TPS683.13 / EXP68 Variability in individual ventilation rate and effects on the inhaled dose of traffic-related air pollution (TRAP) and exhaled nitric oxide (eNO) amongst children with asthma Nan Ji

TPS683.14 / EXP69 Inter-mortality displacement and effects of short-term exposure to air pollution Honghyok Kim

TPS683.18 / EXP70 Short-term effects of various ozone metrics on cardiopulmonary function in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients: Results from a panel study in Beijing, China Hongyu Li

TPS683.11 / EXP71 An evaluation of the Air Quality Health Index Program on respiratory diseases in Hong Kong: an interrupted time series analysis Tonya G. Mason

TPS683.10 / EXP72 Contribution of Asian Dust to suspended particulate matter and its association with daily mortality in Southern Japan Chris Fook Sheng Ng

TPS683.19 / EXP73 Investigating variation in urinary isoprostane levels with PM2.5 Christy PorucznikTPS683.12 / EXP74 Out of hospital non-accidental death and air pollution in a rural population

Kristen RappazzoTPS672.04 / EXP75 Short-term effects of real-time personal PM2.5 exposure and exposure from fixed

stations on ambulatory blood pressure: a panel study in young adults Meng Ren

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THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS672.05 / EXP76 Associations between Ambient Particulate Matter (PM2.5), Endothelial Dysfunction and Inflammation Daniel Riggs

TPS683.04 / EXP77 Visualizing Carbon Monoxide Poisoning Surveillance Data on the US CDC National Environmental Public Health Tracking Network Mikyong Shin

TPS672.02 / EXP78 Association between ambient fine particulate matter and seasonal variation in acute myocardial infarction morbidity Jiyoung Shin

TPS683.05 / EXP79 Exposure to industrial air pollutant emissions and asthma-related effects in children: A systematic review and meta-analysis Audrey Smargiassi

TPS683.20 / EXP80 Heterogeneity in the association between fine particulate matter and asthma among children Heather Strosnider

TPS683.16 / EXP81 The health effect of PM2.5 on daily outpatient visits for respiratory diseases in central Taiwan Chang-chih Tsai

TPS683.09 / EXP82 Temporal changes in short-term mortality risks associated with air pollution reduction in Guangzhou, China (2006-2016) Rongshan Wu

TPS683.03 / EXP83 Personal exposure to fine particulate matter and renal function in Children Xiaomin Zhang

TPS 691: Methods of measurement, design and data analysis

TPS691.13 / EXP84 Calibration of Spatiotemporal Missing Data Imputation Algorithm in Distributed Space-Time Expectation-Maximization with Application in Recovering of Air Pollution Missing Data in Multi-Site Monitoring Network Heresh Amini

TPS691.23 / EXP85 Assessing the relevant window of exposure – a comparison between different methods Eva Andersson

TPS691.28 / EXP86 Asthma severity phenotype creation from electronic health records diagnostic codes and prescriptions Komal Basra

TPS691.03 / EXP87 Using a space-time model to identify asthma emergency department risk clustering: a case study in South Carolina 1999-2015 Matthew Bozigar

TPS691.17 / EXP88 To impute or exclude, what’s the impact? Anders EricksonTPS691.10 / EXP89 GOURAMIC: A Software to Estimate Historical Land Use in Epidemiological

Studies Elodie FaureTPS691.22 / EXP90 Recruitment methods in obtaining a prospective, general population cohort after

environmental exposure Denise FedaTPS691.05 / EXP91 The impact of left truncation of exposure information in environmental case-

control studies: Evidence from breast cancer risk associated with airborne dioxin exposure Beatrice Fervers

TPS691.16 / EXP92 Evidence Consistency via a Study Quality Lens in Systematic Reviews: a case-study of formaldehyde exposure and respiratory associations Barbara Glenn

TPS691.29 / EXP93 The Los Angeles PRISMS Breathe Kit: An mHealth Platform for Predicting Risk of Pediatric Asthma Exacerbation Using Personal Sensors and Wearables Rima Habre

TPS691.11 / EXP94 Creating an open algorithm ecosystem on top of open air quality data from 70 countries Christa Hasenkopf

TPS691.24 / EXP95 Development of Analytical Method for OPFRs in particle air samples Wanseo KimTPS691.25 / EXP96 Development of Analytical Method for Glyphosate and Glufosinate in Animal

Feeds using LC-MS/MS Jisu LeeTPS691.20 / EXP97 Systematic Identification of Allostatic Load Components Associated with

Mortality Vy NguyenTPS691.01 / EXP98 Assessing Potential Gains in Statistical Power in Case-Crossover Studies of Short-

Term Associations between Particulate Matter Exposures and Incident Cardiac Events: A Simulation Study Ronit Nirel

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THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS691.19 / EXP99 Would you like some extra mercury with your fish? Applying a causal inference framework to study diet as a source of exposure to environmental contaminants in early life Eleni Papadopoulou

TPS691.04 / EXP100 Prediction Equations of Phytoncide Concentration in Korean Pine(Pinus Koraiensis) Forest Sujin Park

TPS691.21 / EXP101 Assessing confounding by co-exposure across per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in a systematic review Elizabeth Radke

TPS691.06 / EXP102 Assessing Exposure-Response Trends Using the Disease Risk Score David Richardson

TPS691.15 / EXP103 Predicting Fine Particulate Matter (PM2.5) in the Greater London Area: An Ensemble Approach using Machine Learning Methods Joel Schwartz

TPS691.07 / EXP104 Using an Artificial Neural Networks to identify environmental and health indicators for predicting the hospital visits of children with respiratory disease Nantika Soonthornchaikul

TPS691.27 / EXP105 The CHEAR Data Repository: Facilitating children’s environmental health and exposome research through data harmonization, pooling and accessibility Jeanette Stingone

TPS691.26 / EXP106 Moving Beyond Birthweight – Examining Developmental Origins of Disease Using Dynamic Postnatal Growth Indicators Eva Tanner

TPS691.08 / EXP107 Using Bayesian distributed lag models to identify the susceptible window for maternal air pollution exposure and low birth weight at term in Guangzhou, China Qiong Wang

TPS691.09 / EXP108 Modeling exposure effects on the trajectories of longitudinal outcome measures: an example of studying fine particulate matter and late-life depressive symptoms Xinhui Wang

TPS691.02 / EXP109 Evaluating direct and indirect effects between metal mixtures and serum vaccine antibody concentrations using structural equation models Barrett Welch

TPS 702: Green space and population health

TPS702.06 / EXP111 Children exposure to green and blue spaces and attention span Asier Anabitarte Riol

TPS702.02 / EXP112 Combined effects of surrounding greenness and maternal stress on pregnancy outcomes Sandra Andrusaityte

TPS702.01 / EXP113 Gender differences in the impact of perceived or objectively measured residential green or blue space on self-rated health – a systematic review Gabriele Bolte

TPS702.12 / EXP114 Residential surrounding greenspace and the age at menopause: A 20-year European study (ECRHS) Payam Dadvand

TPS702.14 / EXP115 Improving healthy living by urban walking and cycling: Impacts of the built environment, green cover, air quality and noise in Brussels-Capital, Belgium. Morgane Eggen

TPS702.08 / EXP116 Immigrant Proportion and Surrounding Greenness in the United States Kelvin Fong

TPS702.13 / EXP117 Urban residential greenness and cancer incidence: longitudinal approach Inass Kayyal-Tarabeia

TPS702.10 / EXP118 Associations between surrounding residential greenness and birth outcomes Kyung Shin Lee

TPS702.03 / EXP119 The Effects of Forest Healing Programs on Psychological Health of Alcohol Dependent Females Sujin Park

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THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS702.04 / EXP120 Effects of School Forest Creation on Psychological and Cognitive Changes in Students Sujin Park

TPS702.07 / EXP121 Long-term exposure to residential greenness and development of hypertension in Stockholm County Åsa Persson

TPS702.05 / EXP122 Population scale data linkage methods for an 11-year natural experimental study of green/blue space availability, visits and mental health and wellbeing Benedict Wheeler

TPS 722: Low and middle income countries: indoor air pollutants

TPS722.12 / EXP127 Characterization of smoke and emission factors of the solid fuel for cooking Asmamaw Abera

TPS722.11 / EXP128 Long-term solid fuel use for cooking in relation to risk of common eye diseases in 0.5 million Chinese adults Ka Hung Chan

TPS722.14 / EXP129 Estimation of Indoor Air Pollution Levels in the Upper Himalaya Elizabeth AbbaTPS722.08 / EXP130 Cardiovascular and Air Pollution Impacts of a High-Performing Semi-Gasifier

Stove and Fuel Intervention in China Sierra ClarkTPS722.06 / EXP131 Acute changes in C-reactive protein and lipoproteins following controlled

exposures to cookstove air pollution in the Subclinical Tests of Volunteers Exposed to Smoke (SToVES) Study Nick Good

TPS722.07 / EXP132 The effect of clean cooking interventions on maternal personal exposure to air pollution: Results from the Ghana Randomized Air Pollution and Health Study (GRAPHS) Carlos Gould

TPS722.15 / EXP133 The PURE-Air HAP Study: Modeling 48-Hour Household Concentrations & Personal Exposures to Fine Particulate Matter in Rural Communities within Eight Countries Perry Hystad

TPS722.16 / EXP134 Exposure misclassification from area sampling in epidemiologic studies of cookstove emissions Kirsten Koehler

TPS722.01 / EXP135 Exposure to indoor and outdoor air pollution and prevalence of asthma in children under 5 years (Abidjan, Cote d’Ivoire) Ahua Kouassi Rene Kouao

TPS722.13 / EXP136 Variability of exposure to PM2.5 related to indoor pollution sources in low socio-economic urban households, Durban, South Africa Shumani Phaswana

TPS722.09 / EXP137 Air pollution and child stunting – a systematic review and meta-analysis Vivian C. Pun

TPS722.02 / EXP138 Personal exposures to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and biological monitoring among rural women cooking with different fuels in India Naveen Puttaswamy

TPS722.17 / EXP139 Effect of residential wood-burning air pollution on pre-eclampsia in Temuco, Chile: a retrospective cohort study Maria Elisa Quinteros Caceres

TPS722.03 / EXP140 A single-arm trial examining the feasibility, acceptability and distribution of LPG cookstoves and gas cylinders to pregnant women living in rural Bangladesh, in preparation for The Poriborton: Change Trial Camille Raynes-Greenow

TPS722.10 / EXP141 Pregnant Women’s Exposure to Household Air Pollution During a LPG Cookstove Intervention in Rural Bangladesh: The Value of Real-Time Data Camille Raynes-Greenow

TPS722.18 / EXP142 A cross-sectional study of natural LPG users in rural Bangladesh. Camille Raynes-Greenow

TPS722.05 / EXP143 Characterisation of Carbon Monoxide concentrations associated with biomass fuel cooking in two university canteen settings, Kigali Rwanda Katherine Woolley

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THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS 741: Adverse birth outcomes 2

TPS741.12 / EXP147 Birth outcomes and organophosphate pesticide exposure in the SAWASDEE birth cohort Brittney Baumert

TPS741.07 / EXP148 Association Between Gestational Phthalate Exposure and Newborn Head Circumference; Impacts by Race and Sex Michael Bloom

TPS741.10 / EXP149 Particulate Matter, Dietary Inflammatory Index and Preterm Birth in Mexico City Miatta Buxton

TPS741.08 / EXP150 Association between prenatal exposure to air pollution and low birth weight: A retrospective cohort study in Ningbo, China Kun Chen

TPS741.01 / EXP151 Associations between Cumulative Environmental Quality and Neural Tube Defects Alison Krajewski

TPS741.05 / EXP152 Prenatal selenium exposure and postnatal anthropometric effects in Spanish INMA cohorts. Manuel Lozano

TPS741.06 / EXP153 Major Birth Defects among Offspring of Iowa Agricultural Health Study Applicators Paul Romitti

TPS741.03 / EXP154 Prenatal Exposure to Airborne Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons and Childhood Growth Trajectories from Age 5 to 13 Years Andrew Rundle

TPS741.13 / EXP155 A quantile regression approach to reveal the influence of fine particles and birth weight reduction and racial/ethnic disparities Lara Schwarz

TPS741.17 / EXP156 Effects of Prenatal Per- and Polyfluroalkyl Substances Exposure on Birth Outcomes and Its Potential Mechanism Ying Tian

TPS741.15 / EXP157 Environmental Complex Exposure and the Risk of Fetal Neural Tube Defects in North China Bin Wang

TPS741.18 / EXP158 Air Pollution, Maternal Hypertensive Disorders, and Preterm Birth Kari WeberTPS741.11 / EXP159 Association between Birthweight and Ambient PM2.5 in United States:

Individually-varied Susceptibility and Spatial Heterogeneity Tao XueTPS741.19 / EXP160 Effect of Heat and Fine Particulate Matter on the Preterm Birth, Seoul 2010-2016

Kwag YoungrinTPS741.16 / EXP161 Effects of maternal homelessness, Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for

Women, Infants and Children (WIC), and prenatal PM2.5 exposure on birthweight in a multi-ethnic and low-income urban community Antonella Zanobetti

TPS 761: Health effects of pollution sources and components

TPS761.06 / JFF50 The effect of industry-related air pollution on lung function and respiratory symptoms in school children Arnold Bergstra

TPS761.10 / JFF51 Increased cancer risk among residents living in the vicinity of an incinerator Chang-Chuan Chan

TPS761.07 / JFF52 Sources identification of personal exposure to PM2.5 in adult subjects in Hong Kong Xiaocui Chen

TPS761.19 / JFF53 Residential proximity to dioxin-emitting facilities and risk of non-Hodgkin lymphoma in the NIH-AARP Diet and Health Study Jared Fisher

TPS761.11 / JFF54 Characterization of PM2.5-bound polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in Taiwan Chin Yu Hsu

TPS761.01 / JFF55 Does Urinary Thiodiglycolic Acid Increase the Risk of Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease in Children Living Near a Petrochemical Complex? Po-Chin Huang

TPS761.21 / JFF56 Exposure to ultrafine particles and black carbon at schools near a large Dutch Airport Nicole Janssen

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THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS761.08 / JFF57 Residential risk of leukemia for individuals living near petrochemical industrial complexes Cheng-Kuan Lin

TPS761.15 / JFF58 Childhood cancer and residential proximity to petrol stations: a nationwide case-control study in Switzerland Antonella Mazzei-Abba

TPS761.14 / JFF59 Health risk analysis of Elemental component of respirable particulate matter in an urban area in South Africa Oyewale Morakinyo

TPS752.28 / JFF60 Airborne fungal spores diversity and abundance in two Southwestern states of Nigeria Adeyinka Odebode

TPS761.16 / JFF61 Chronic long-term exposure to airborne dioxin at a national level, and breast cancer risk in a nested case-control study in the French E3N cohort Delphine Praud

TPS761.03 / JFF62 Towards an assessment of the health impact of industrially contaminated sites: waste landfills in Europe Andrea Ranzi

TPS761.13 / JFF63 Associations between the onset of hypertension and diabetes, and exposure to fine particles from regional and industrial sources Audrey Smargiassi

TPS761.05 / JFF64 Health Effects in Sweden Due to Air Pollution from Shipping in the Baltic Sea Leo Stockfelt

TPS761.12 / JFF65 Speciation analysis of air pollution particles directly from filters: a LA-ICP-MS feasibility study Erik Svendsen

TPS761.17 / JFF66 Quantification of fine particulate matter in ambient air, chemical characterization and the geographical origin of the air masses passing through Thohoyandou, South Africa Janine Wichmann

TPS761.09 / JFF67 PM2.5 as a Mixture: Association of Daily PM2.5 Sources and Components, Singly and Combined, with Daily Cardiovascular Mortality (Phoenix, AZ 1995-1998). A Multipollutant Approach to Air Pollution Epidemiology II William Wilson

TPS761.18 / JFF68 Association of exposure to metallic components in fine particles and respiratory mortality: a multi-city study in South Korea Si-Eun Yoo

TPS761.20 / JFF69 Sources of Black Carbon in Beijing, China Mei Zheng

TPS 782: Health effects of emf, radiation and light

TPS782.12 / JFF77 The role of ambient particle radioactivity in inflammation and endothelial function in an elderly cohort Annelise Blomberg

TPS782.18 / JFF78 Assessment on the influential factors of Radon exposure from school and residential Radon surveys in Korea Minhyuk Choi

TPS782.02 / JFF79 The possible health effects of evacuation after the 2011Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant disaster in Kawauchi Village, Fukushima Yun-Shan Chung

TPS782.07 / JFF80 Effects of Particulate Matter Gamma Radiation Activities on Pulmonary Function in COPD Patients Eric Garshick

TPS782.01 / JFF81 The light pollution and the public health – a global issue Manoela GeorgievaTPS782.14 / JFF82 The consistent of light at night intensity: examining measurement result in

different placement position and direction Anke HussTPS782.10 / JFF83 The Association of Urinary Tract and Genital Cancers (Bladder, Ovary, Prostate and

Cervix) with Ultraviolet Radiation in Iran - An Ecological Study Narges KhanjaniTPS782.13 / JFF84 Artificial light at night (ALAN), blue light spectrum exposure and colorectal cancer

risk in Spain (MCC-Spain study) Manolis KogevinasTPS782.16 / JFF85 Light and School Performance in Schoolchildren from 12 European countries Cara

MaesanoTPS782.08 / JFF86 Incidence of Brain and Spinal Cord Cancer and County-Level Radon Levels in

Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey, USA Jaymie Meliker

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 147 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS782.09 / JFF87 Relationships of serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels with dietary intake and exposure to UV Yuji Nishiwaki

TPS782.11 / JFF88 Exposure to Particle Radioactivity Triggers Ventricular Arrhythmias Adjani PeraltaTPS782.04 / JFF89 Outbreak of photokeratitis and erythema attributed to exposure to artificial

source of ultraviolet radiation, Tamil Nadu, India, 2018 Rubeshkumar Polani ChandrasekarTPS781.01 / JFF90 Traffic noise and other determinants of blood pressure in adolescence Alva Wallas

TPS 901: Indoor air pollution

TPS901.15 / EXP167 Investigating cooking activity patterns and exploring perceptions of air quality interventions among women in biomass fuel households in urban Rwanda; a cross-sectional study Suzanne Bartington

TPS901.04 / EXP168 Spatiotemporal distribution of air particulate pollution in a pub Dana DrahlerTPS901.10 / EXP169 Health Effects of Lebanese Schools Indoor Pollution (HELSIE) Pilot Study

Raymond El HajjTPS901.03 / EXP170 Acute changes in lung function following controlled exposure to cookstove air

pollution in the Subclinical Tests on Volunteers Exposed to Smoke (SToVES) Study Nick Good

TPS901.12 / EXP171 Mapping the effect of IEQ on health, comfort and perception – a real-life Danish multiple site longitudinal panel study Charlotte Gabel

TPS792.04 / EXP172 Resolving employment overlaps in occupational history data Tom K GrimsrudTPS901.16 / EXP173 Exposure assesment of indoor PM2.5 monitoring among local residents near

coal-fired power plants in Korea Xue HanTPS901.13 / EXP174 Evaluation of the impact of indoor air filtration on particulate matter exposures

and measures of cardiovascular health: a randomized crossover pilot study Shirley Ching-Hsuan Huang

TPS901.07 / EXP175 Distribution of SVOCs for each particle size of house dusts in Japan Yohei InabaTPS901.06 / EXP176 Residential incense smoke exposure and obesity among Hong Kong Chinese

Elderly Priscilla Ming Yi LeeTPS901.17 / EXP177 A new way of analyzing how the association between lung cancer and indoor air

pollution is altered by tobacco use: using Xuanwei as a case Xia WanTPS901.09 / EXP178 A global response to solid fuel use, a local impact on children’s developmental

status: the case of clean cooking practices José Ignacio Nazif-MuñozTPS901.05 / EXP179 Effect of indoor particulate matter on high-sensitivity C-reactive protein(hs-CRP)

in Korean housewives cohort study Jongmin OhTPS901.11 / EXP180 Phthalate levels in indoor dust and associations with croup in infants in the

SELMA study Anna-Sofia PreeceTPS901.19 / EXP181 Exposure to traffic related pollution in buildings – a risk factor approach Froukje

van DijkenTPS901.14 / EXP182 Indoor Exposure to Selected Air Pollutants and Associated Health Effects: A

Global Review Sotiris VardoulakisTPS901.18 / EXP184 Exploring time use as a co-benefit and potential modifier of environmental-

focused clean cooking interventions Kendra WilliamsTPS901.21 / EXP185 Association of air purifier use with allergic markers Shinhee YeTPS901.01 / EXP186 Effect of indoor PM2.5 and PM10 on hemoglobin, MCV, MCH, and MCHC: Korean

Housewives Cohort Study Kwag Youngrin

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THEMATIC POSTERS

TPS 931: Water and foodborne chemicals

TPS931.08 / EXP187 Associations of Blood Trihalomethanes with Repeated Measurements of Semen Quality among 1199 Healthy Chinese Men Screened as Potential Sperm Donors Ying-Jun Chen

TPS931.05 / EXP188 Influence of population age and socioeconomics on chemical consumption and diet patterns measured by wastewater based epidemiology Phil Choi

TPS931.14 / EXP189 Health adaptation gap in low and middle-income countries: particular challenges for water- and food-borne diseases Guéladio Cissé

TPS931.16 / EXP190 Omega-3 And Omega-6 Fatty Acid Profiles in Select Freshwater and Marine Species of Fish in Suriname Lissa Fortes Soares

TPS931.01 / EXP191 Water Fluoridation and Urinary Fluoride Concentrations in a National Sample of Young Canadian Children Rivka Green

TPS931.07 / EXP192 Perfluoroalkyl acids (PFAAs) in children’s serum and contribution from PFAA contaminated drinking water Irina Gyllenhammar

TPS931.13 / EXP193 Re-evaluation of the water quality and gastrointestinal tumors after water pollution control in the H river basin in China Liqun Liu

TPS931.09 / EXP194 Relationship between access to piped water and CKDu: a conditional autoregressive model Nicholas Osborne

TPS931.04 / EXP195 Assessment of Chlorine Tolerant Escherichia coli Recovered from Wastewater Effluents Mojisola Owoseni

TPS931.02 / EXP196 Spatio-Temporal Data Modelling and Prediction of PFOA Drinking Water Contamination Jonathan Rathjens

TPS931.15 / EXP197 Fluorinated water consumption in pregnancy and neuropsychological development of children at 14 months and 4 years of age Mikel Subiza-Pérez

TPS931.12 / EXP198 Pilot study on chemical pollution of drinking water sources in rural Mozambique Cristina Villanueva

TPS931.03 / EXP199 Why spatial and temporal variations in magnesium in drinking water are important considerations when magnesium in drinking water is used as exposure in health related studies. Kirstine Wodschow

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COMMITTEES FAIRIf you want to learn more about how to get involved in ISEE, join us at the Committees Fair on Tuesday, August 27, 2019 at lunch time where representatives for 5 ISEE committees will be on hand to showcase their activities and recruit members.

Stand Name 3 ISEE Annual Conference Committee 4 ISEE Capacity Building &Education Committee 7 ISEE Communications Committee 1 ISEE Membership Committee 10 ISEE Policy Committee 9 ISEE Students and New Researchers Network (SNRN)

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 150 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

SPONSORS, GRANTS AND EXhIBITORSSponsors & Exhibitors

Grants

“Funding for this conference was made possible (in part) by 1U13ES028574 from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences. The views expressed in written conference materials or publications and by speakers and moderators do not necessarily reflect the official policies of the Department of Health and Human Services; nor does mention by trade names, commercial practices, or organizations imply endorsement by the U.S. Government.”

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ISEE 2019 | Utrecht, The Netherlands 151 “On Airs, Waters, Places”

FUTURE MEETINGS [BOUT: advertentie ook toegevoegd als bijlage

The International Society for Environmental Epidemiology 32nd Annual Conference

Advancing Environmental

Health in a Changing World

ISEE 2020washington dc

August 23-27, 2020

Join Us!isee2020dc.org