Commit
·
dd41af7
1
Parent(s):
b58ee86
Upload 4d/f6/coairfresh_NBK579085.jsonl with huggingface_hub
Browse files
4d/f6/coairfresh_NBK579085.jsonl
ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1 |
+
{"file": "coairfresh_NBK579085/bck.ack.nxml", "text": "We would like to thank colleagues from ConsExpo2015 project partners ANSES, BfR, Health Canada and FOPH for critically reviewing earlier versions of the Air Fresheners Fact Sheet, as well as for their contribution to general discussion points. We also thank the Netherlands Food and Consumer Product Safety Authority for critically reviewing the draft version in the consultation round. Christiaan Delmaar is acknowledged for his contribution to discussions with regard to general discussion points and ConsExpo Web models. Susan Wijnhoven and Gerlienke Schuur are acknowledged for critically reviewing several drafts of the Air Fresheners Fact Sheet and delivering valuable feedback. Special thanks go to to Myrna Kooi (now retired), who drafted the first inventory of air freshener products to include in this Air Fresheners Fact Sheet.", "pairs": [], "interleaved": []}
|
2 |
+
{"file": "coairfresh_NBK579085/abb1.nxml", "text": "American Cleaning Institute\nAssociation Internationale de la Savonnerie, de la D\u00e9tergence et des Produits d\u2019Entretien\nAgence Nationale de S\u00e9curit\u00e9 Sanitaire de l\u2019alimentation, de l\u2019environnement et du travail\nBundesinstitut f\u00fcr Risikobewertung\nBiocidal Products Regulation\nDutch Central Bureau for Statistics (Centraal Bureau voor de Statistiek)\nCoefficient of Variation\nDanish Environmental Protection Agency\nEuropean Commission\nEuropean Chemicals Agency\nEmissions, Exposure Patterns and Health Effects of Consumer Products\nFederal Office of Public Health\nAd Hoc Working Group on Human Exposure to Biocides\nHealth and Safety Laboratory (United Kingdom)\nSwedish Chemical Agency\nDutch National Information Centre for Pets\nQuality Factor\nNational Institute of Environmental Research (South Korea)\nNetherlands Food and Consumer Product Safety Authority (Nederlandse Voedsel- en Warenautoriteit)\nOrganisation for Economic Co-operation and Development\nQuality factor\nRegistration, Evaluation, Authorisation and Restriction of Chemicals\nNational Institute for Public Health and the Environment (Rijksinstituut voor Volksgezondheid en Milieu)\nStandardised Consumer Exposure Determinant\nSocial Cultural Planning Bureau (Netherlands)\nUnited States Environmental Protection Agency\nMinistry of Health, Welfare and Sport (Netherlands)", "pairs": [], "interleaved": []}
|
3 |
+
{"file": "coairfresh_NBK579085/ch5.nxml", "text": "EPHECT survey\nThe EPHECT project (Emissions, Exposure Patterns and Health Effects of Consumer Products in the EU) is a collaborative project, co-funded by the European Union, in which important information has been gathered about the use of cleaning products by European consumers (EPHECT, 2012). The report on the EPHECT survey was published in 2012 (EPHECT, 2012) and additions are published in 2015 (Dimitroulopoulou et al., 2015a, 2015b; Trantallidi et al., 2015). The survey was designed to collect household use data for 16 consumer products across 4 geographical regions of Europe. A total of 4,335 people from 10 European countries (Czech Republic, Germany, Denmark, Spain, France, Hungary, Italy, Poland, the UK and Sweden) were interviewed.\nFour of the 16 products considered were air fresheners and a large number of survey respondents stated that they used such products, namely combustible air fresheners (N=1004), air freshener sprays (N=1364), electric air fresheners (N=952) and passive air fresheners (N=822).\nThe EPHECT (2012) survey results suggest that European consumers tend to follow the user instructions of air freshener products, as stated by 60% of the respondents using combustible air fresheners (N=1004), by 53% of those using air freshener sprays (N=1364) and by 72% of those using electric air fresheners (N=952).\nFor this reason, product use instructions are consulted here in cases where representative data are not available for ConsExpo (Web) input parameter fields such as product amount, use frequency or applications. The Q-factors are nevertheless generally set to 2, because a considerable fraction of survey respondents stated that they did not respect the user instructions and, even in cases where they claimed to do so, actual use did not necessarily correspond to user instructions.\nNIER Survey\nThe South Korean National Institute of Environmental Research (NIER) conducted a nationwide survey study to compile a database for calculating exposure factors of consumer products (Lee et al., 2018; Kim et al., 2020). Some of these exposure factors are used in ConsExpo (Web) as input fields, e.g. product amounts, application durations and use frequencies. The survey includes data on air freshener products used in indoor locations and vehicles as sprays, liquids, candles or gels (Kim et al., 2020), but the actual number of respondents from which the percentiles were derived to characterise the consumer use of these specific products is not available (Kim et al., 2018; Lee et al., 2018). The total number of respondents to the NIER survey was 10,000 (Park et al., 2019), but it is not clear how many of these respondents provided information on the consumer use of air fresheners in specific. The NIER data are referred to in this Fact Sheet to describe to what extent other data sources may agree with the NIER data. Q-factors are therefore not assigned to the NIER data.", "pairs": [], "interleaved": []}
|