Abstract

ABSTRACT The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA), Office of Water, is developing a risk assessment protocol for determining microbiological pathogen risks in water (drinking, recreational, waste waters, etc.). This effort has been conducted in collaboration with the International Life Sciences Institute. A microbiological risk assessment framework was prepared and has been peer reviewed in the open literature and vetted at the USEPA and other federal government risk assessment venues. Some goals in development of the Framework were to make it comprehensive, easy to understand and to use, since it is recognized that improvements to the framework structure and instructional material would facilitate its use. The USEPA's Office of Water wishes to develop improved tools, methods, and approaches for conducting the analysis phase for risk assessments and would like to evaluate its efficacy for a broad range of waterborne pathogens in water/wastewater media. Improved understanding of microbiological survival, infectivity, and virulence factors is needed, especially at the genomic and proteomic levels to accurately assess the occurrence and fate of pathogens in water and to predict what intrinsic factors allow pathogens to be invasive and virulent. Development of improved dose-response models (including animal models) for pathogen exposures focusing on the dynamic circumstances of immunity, secondary spread, and sensitive subpopulations, would be useful additions to the Framework. In the future, USEPA may consider establishing comprehensive pathogen risk assessment guidelines that all its program offices can use.

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