The increasing number of human biomonitoring (HBM) studies undertaken in recent decades has brought to light the need to harmonise procedures along all phases of the study, including sampling, data collection and analytical methods to allow data comparability. The first steps towards harmonisation are the identification and collation of HBM methodological information of existing studies and data gaps. Systematic literature reviews and meta-analyses have been traditionally put at the top of the hierarchy of evidence, being increasingly applied to map available evidence on health risks linked to exposure to chemicals. However, these methods mainly capture peer-reviewed articles, failing to comprehensively identify other important, unpublished sources of information that are pivotal to gather a complete map of the produced evidence in the area of HBM. Within the framework of the European Human Biomonitoring Initiative (HBM4EU) initiative—a project that joins 30 countries, 29 from Europe plus Israel, the European Environment Agency and the European Commission—a comprehensive work of data triangulation has been made to identify existing HBM studies and data gaps across countries within the consortium. The use of documentary analysis together with an up-to-date platform to fulfil this need and its implications for research and practice are discussed.

Virgolino, A., Santos, O., Costa, J., Fialho, M., Iavicoli, I., Santonen, T., Tolonen, H., Samoli, E., Katsouyanni, K., Baltatzis, G., Ruggieri, F., Abballe, A., Petrovicova, I., Kolena, B., Sidlovska, M., Ancona, C., Erzen, I., Sepai, O., Castano, A., Kolossa-Gehring, M., Fiddicke, U., Challenges to evidence synthesis and identification of data gaps in human biomonitoring, <<INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH>>, 2021; 18 (6): 1-10. [doi:10.3390/ijerph18062830] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/312592]

Challenges to evidence synthesis and identification of data gaps in human biomonitoring

Iavicoli, Ivo;
2021

Abstract

The increasing number of human biomonitoring (HBM) studies undertaken in recent decades has brought to light the need to harmonise procedures along all phases of the study, including sampling, data collection and analytical methods to allow data comparability. The first steps towards harmonisation are the identification and collation of HBM methodological information of existing studies and data gaps. Systematic literature reviews and meta-analyses have been traditionally put at the top of the hierarchy of evidence, being increasingly applied to map available evidence on health risks linked to exposure to chemicals. However, these methods mainly capture peer-reviewed articles, failing to comprehensively identify other important, unpublished sources of information that are pivotal to gather a complete map of the produced evidence in the area of HBM. Within the framework of the European Human Biomonitoring Initiative (HBM4EU) initiative—a project that joins 30 countries, 29 from Europe plus Israel, the European Environment Agency and the European Commission—a comprehensive work of data triangulation has been made to identify existing HBM studies and data gaps across countries within the consortium. The use of documentary analysis together with an up-to-date platform to fulfil this need and its implications for research and practice are discussed.
2021
AREA06 - SCIENZE MEDICHE
Pubblicazione su rivista con Impact Factor
Inglese
Articolo in rivista
Inglese
Data triangulation
Environmental health
Harmonisation procedures
HBM4EU
Human biomonitoring
Settore MEDS-25/B - Medicina del lavoro
18
6
2021
1
10
10
2830
Esperti anonimi
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Virgolino, A., Santos, O., Costa, J., Fialho, M., Iavicoli, I., Santonen, T., Tolonen, H., Samoli, E., Katsouyanni, K., Baltatzis, G., Ruggieri, F., Abballe, A., Petrovicova, I., Kolena, B., Sidlovska, M., Ancona, C., Erzen, I., Sepai, O., Castano, A., Kolossa-Gehring, M., Fiddicke, U., Challenges to evidence synthesis and identification of data gaps in human biomonitoring, <<INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH>>, 2021; 18 (6): 1-10. [doi:10.3390/ijerph18062830] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/312592]
none
262
Virgolino, A.; Santos, O.; Costa, J.; Fialho, M.; Iavicoli, Ivo; Santonen, T.; Tolonen, H.; Samoli, E.; Katsouyanni, K.; Baltatzis, G.; Ruggieri, F.; ...espandi
21
art_per_29
03. Contributo in rivista::Articolo in rivista, Nota a sentenza
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10807/312592
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