5 research outputs found

    Non-heat related impacts of climate change on working populations

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    Environmental and social changes associated with climate change are likely to have impacts on the well-being, health, and productivity of many working populations across the globe. The ramifications of climate change for working populations are not restricted to increases in heat exposure. Other significant risks to worker health (including physical hazards from extreme weather events, infectious diseases, under-nutrition, and mental stresses) may be amplified by future climate change, and these may have substantial impacts at all scales of economic activity. Some of these risks are difficult to quantify, but pose a substantial threat to the viability and sustainability of some working populations. These impacts may occur in both developed and developing countries, although the latter category is likely to bear the heaviest burden

    Additional file 1: of PROXIMAL: a method for Prediction of Xenobiotic Metabolism

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    This file includes a list of substrates used in estimating cytochrome P450 enzyme activity. The data is collected for the following 9 CYP enzymes: 1A2, 2A6, 2B6, 2C8, 2C9, 2C19, 2D6, 2E1, and 3A4. (PDF 120 kb
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