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PARTNERSHIP EVENTS

CHE Partnership call: 25 Years of the Superfund Research Program: Highlights and Hope
Thur, May 23

CHE Partnership call: Cancer: The Professional and the Personal: A Conversation with Dr. Susan Love and Susan Braun
Tues, May 28

CHE Partnership call: The Story of Camp Lejeune: Contaminated Drinking Water, Cancer Clusters, and the Struggle for Justice
Wed, May 29
Hosted by the CHE Alaska Working Group and ACAT

CHE Partnership call: Stress as an Endocrine Disruptor: Maternal Psychosocial Stress During Pregnancy and Fetal Development
Thur, June 6
Hosted by the CHE Fertility and Reproductive Health Working Group

CHE Cafe call: The Rise of the US Environmental Health Movement: A Conversatin with Kate Davies
Thur, June 20


Conference: Healthy Environments Across Generations
New York Academy of Medicine
June 7-8, 2012
Continue the conversation: Join the conference on Facebook

5/2/13: MP3 recording available: When There Is No Epidemiologist

4/16/13: MP3 recording available: Late Lessons from Early Warnings: A Retrospective Look at Learning About Precaution

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CHE Partners on why they value our work

CHE Alaska call: Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals - New Directions in Science and Policy

Jul 25, 2012

DATE: Wednesday, July 25, 9:00 AM Alaska Time / 10:00 AM Pacific / 1:00 PM Eastern

RSVP: To join this call please email diana@akaction.org or call 907-222-7714.

Overwhelming scientific evidence indicates that the presence of infinitesimally small quantities of endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) in the womb can interfere with the normal signaling systems that determine every aspect of embryonic and fetal development. Disorders that have increased in prevalence in recent years such as abnormal male gonadal development, infertility, ADHD, autism, diabetes, thyroid disorders, and childhood and/or adult cancers are now being linked to fetal exposure. The discovery of prenatal effects from EDCs threw a monkey wrench in the current system of evaluating the safety of chemicals for the protection of public health. Join Dr. Carol Kwiatkowski, PH.D., Executive Director and Senior Research Associate at The Endocrine Disruption Exchange (TEDX) for a discussion of why the old system of setting safety standards doesn’t work, how the principles of endocrinology can be used to create a better system, and to hear the latest news on current directions in endocrine disruption science.

Featured speaker:
Carol Kwiatkowski
, Executive Director and Senior Research Associate at The Endocrine Disruption Exchange (TEDX), a US based NGO founded by Theo Colborn and dedicated to compiling and disseminating the scientific evidence on health and environmental problems caused by low level exposure to endocrine disrupting chemicals. Dr.  Kwiatkowski joined the TEDX team in 2007. She created the Critical Windows of Development website tool, a timeline of how the human body develops in the womb, paired with animal research showing when low-dose exposure to endocrine disrupting chemicals during development results in altered health outcomes. In 2008 she became TEDX’s first Executive Director and now oversees the development and execution of all of TEDX’s programs. Prior to working at TEDX she was an Assistant Professor at the University of Colorado. Her training in behavioral science began at the College of William and Mary where she received her BA, followed by a PhD from the University of Denver.

 

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