Table 3.
Author-Defined Exposure | Exposure Measurement |
Child labour in the presence of chemicals | Sector where chemicals are used (usually based on questionnaire. Sometimes sector is used as a blanket category of chemical exposure by researchers before the study) |
Current work status/work history | Self-report questionnaire to determine number of hours at workplace where chemicals are used and number of years in sector |
Scientific measurement using specialised equipment | Biomarkers of exposure (e.g., chemical concentrations or metabolite levels) Environmental assessment to measure workplace exposure to chemical levels (e.g., environmental air, water, soil, or food samples) * |
Health Outcome Types | Examples |
DNA damage | Oxidative stress and DNA damage |
Biomarkers of effect | Toxin and metabolite levels (measured in blood, urine, hair, and saliva) |
Organ e.g., lung, heart, liver, skin, kidneys |
Cancer, diabetes, asthma, kidney disease, dermatitis |
Body system e.g., Cardiovascular, endocrine, respiratory, neurological, reproductive, immune |
Cardiovascular disease, neurotoxic symptoms, neurobehavioural deficits, hypothyroidism, hypertension, pulmonary function |
Mental health | Mood disorders e.g., anxiety, depression |
Non-specific symptoms | Wheezing, nail discolouration, fatigue |
* in Table 4, “environmental exposure” is used to describe studies where authors use these measurements as exposures, while “environmental assessment” is used to describe studies where authors use measurements as an outcome.