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Integrating Human Health and Environmental Health into the DPSIR Framework: A Tool to Identify Research Opportunities for Sustainable and Healthy Communities
Authors:Susan H Yee  Patricia Bradley  William S Fisher  Sally D Perreault  James Quackenboss  Eric D Johnson  Justin Bousquin  Patricia A Murphy
Institution:1. Office of Research and Development, Gulf Ecology Division, US Environmental Protection Agency, Gulf Breeze, FL, 32561, USA
2. Office of Research and Development, Atlantic Ecology Division, US Environmental Protection Agency, Naragansett, RI, 02882, USA
3. Office of Research and Development, US Environmental Protection Agency, Research Triangle Park, NC, 27711, USA
4. Office of Research and Development, Human Exposure and Atmospheric Sciences Division, US Environmental Protection Agency, Las Vegas, NV, 89119, USA
5. Office of Research and Development, National Center for Environmental Assessment, US Environmental Protection Agency, Edison, NJ, 08837, USA
Abstract:The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has recently realigned its research enterprise around the concept of sustainability. Scientists from across multiple disciplines have a role to play in contributing the information, methods, and tools needed to more fully understand the long-term impacts of decisions on the social and economic sustainability of communities. Success will depend on a shift in thinking to integrate, organize, and prioritize research within a systems context. We used the Driving forces–Pressures–State–Impact–Response (DPSIR) framework as a basis for integrating social, cultural, and economic aspects of environmental and human health into a single framework. To make the framework broadly applicable to sustainability research planning, we provide a hierarchical system of DPSIR keywords and guidelines for use as a communication tool. The applicability of the integrated framework was first tested on a public health issue (asthma disparities) for purposes of discussion. We then applied the framework at a science planning meeting to identify opportunities for sustainable and healthy communities research. We conclude that an integrated systems framework has many potential roles in science planning, including identifying key issues, visualizing interactions within the system, identifying research gaps, organizing information, developing computational models, and identifying indicators.
Keywords:
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