Work Packages

We have 10 strongly interrelated scientific Work Packages delivering project outcomes. They are grouped as follows:

Key interrelationship between work packages
Image: Key interrelationship between work packages

Methods for collection, storage and interpretation
of working life exposome data

medium-06.svg

WP 1: New technologies for external exposome and health

Collection of more complete and individual level external working-life exposome data using a wearable sensor system including sensors for light, dust, noise, sleep, physical activity, heart rate and location, and a new way of environmental exposure data collection based on passive sampling.

Lead:

Miranda Loh, IOM

Eelco Kuijpers, TNO

medium-27.svg

WP 2: Standardized assessment of multiple exposures in large populations

Assessment of the external working-life exposome in large-scale (pooled) cohort studies, based on job title and existing exposure data through the development of harmonised and enhanced job-exposure matrices (JEMs): EuroJEM.

Lead:

Maria Albin,  Jenny Salander, Karolinska Institute

Svetlana Solovieva, FIOH

medium-23.svg

WP 3: Internal exposure and effect assessment using biomonitoring, omics and minimally invasive biomarker development

Assessment of internal exposome data based on biomonitoring, non-invasive breath analyses techniques and cross-omics and biological pathway data from various biomatrices.

Lead:

Lode Godderis, Manosij Ghosh, KU Leuven

Karin Broberg, Karolinska Institute

medium-17.svg

WP 4: Working-life exposome data management and analytics platform

Data management and analytics for (decentralised) analyses of working-life exposome data, ensuring data privacy and security. New data analyses and mining methods will be developed to model and assess complex individual exposures and exposure interactions, linking these to health outcomes via biological pathway analysis, making use of omics data and text-mining.

 Lead:

Roel Vermeulen, Susan Peters, Utrecht University

Anjoeka Pronk, TNO

Better and more complete knowledge
of the working life exposome in relation to NCDs

medium-25.svg

WP 5: EPHOR mega cohort

Large-scale pooling of ~40 existing European cohorts with data on working-life amounting to ~21 million study subjects, including pregnant women, children and mother-child pairs. Occupational risk factors will be systematically linked to cancers, cardiovascular, respiratory, musculoskeletal, mental, metabolic and neurodegenerative diseases. This will advance knowledge on interactions between occupational and general life exposures, vulnerable life stages and subpopulations within the EU.

 

Lead:

Ingrid Sivesind Mehlum, STAMI

Michelle Turner, ISGLOBAL

medium-22.svg

WP 6: Working-life exposome, lung function, and obstructive lung disease among men and women

Case study to investigate the effects of working-life exposures on respiratory health in the general population. Effects of short-term exposures, in relation to the working life exposome, biological pathways, early markers of disease and key body functions will be assessed using external and internal exposome data.

 

Lead:

Vivi Schlünssen, Aarhus University

Anjoeka Pronk, TNO

medium-24.svg

WP7: Exposome case studies on night shift work and health

Case study to investigate the effects of shift work on health by looking at short-term exposures. Effects of short-term exposures, in relation to the working life exposome, biological pathways, early markers of disease and key body functions will be assessed using external and internal exposome data.

 

Lead:

Manolis Kogevinas,  Barbara Harding, ISGlobal

Roel Vermeulen, UU

Methods for impact assesment of the exposome

medium-15.svg

WP 8: Impact assessment

EPHOR will develop models and guidance for health scientists and policy makers to estimate the impact of the working-life on health, including complex interactions, insights in biological pathways and early markers of disease and vulnerable groups.

 

Lead:

Martie van Tongeren, Matt Gittins, University of Manchester

Svetlana Solovieva, FIOH

Project outcomes

illustrations-25.svg

WP 9: EPHOR Working-life Exposome Toolbox

The EPHOR working life exposome toolbox will be developed, containing project data, methods and models and made available to health scientists, policy makers and occupational health practitioners.

 

Lead:

Eelco Kuijpers, TNO

Miranda Loh, IOM

illustrations-24.svg

WP 10: Dissemination, communication and exploitation

Stakeholders will be engaged in project activities. The data, methods and models developed in the project will also be commercially exploited.

 

Lead:

Astrid Kruizinga, TNO

Miranda Loh, IOM

Project management and network activities

illustrations-16.svg

WP 11: Project management

Project management to ensure compliance with planning, budgeting, contractual obligations, intellectual property rights and fostering within-project communication.

 

Lead:

Astrid Kruizinga, TNO

medium-11.svg
WP 12: European Human Exposome Network Activities
Lead:
Anjoeka Pronk, Astrid Kruizinga, TNO
illustrations-17.svg

WP 13: Ethics requirements

Set out the ethics requirements for EPHOR and ensure the project complies with them.

 

Lead: Tina Garani-Papadatos,  University of West Attica

Wird geladen
This page was last edited on 02 October 2023, at 08:46 (GMT)