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Curated Collections | EHP Publishing

Curated Collections gather previously published EHP and JHP content to help readers stay up to date on important topics and contemporary issues in environmental health. Articles are carefully selected by our editors to include highly cited papers and other notable content, providing background and context behind new discoveries and emerging issues.

 

Cover Image for the Extreme Temperature Collection 2024

Extreme Temperature Collection 2024
July 2024

As climate change continues to advance, the world will experience more extreme temperature events more frequently. Heatwaves often bring spikes in heat-related deaths, while low temperatures, too, are responsible for a considerable health burden. As heatwaves and cold snaps continue to become more common around the world, research on the environmental and health impacts of extreme temperatures is needed more than ever.


Cover Image for the JHP Past and Present Collection

JHP Past and Present: A Collection and a Call for Papers
April 2024

The Journal of Health and Pollution (JHP) publishes high-quality research on global environmental and occupational health from investigators in lower-resource areas. This collection includes papers that illustrate the scope, disciplines, and quality of reporting we seek in new submissions.



Cover Image for Editors' Choice Collection 2023Editors' Choice Collection 2023
February 2024

EHP published almost 200 almost research articles, reviews, commentaries, research letters, and seminars in 2023. From these, we have selected 12 of our favorites for our third annual Editors’ Choice Collection.



Cover Image for The Sister Study collectionThe Sister Study Collection: 20 Years of Research
October 2023

The Sister Study first began enrolling participants in the fall of 2003. In the beginning, the study focused on breast cancer with a special interest in gene–environment interactions. Twenty years later, with a committed cohort of more than 50,000 women, the Sister Study has branched out to explore other environmental health issues, including other cancers, cardiovascular disease, respiratory outcomes, and gynecological conditions.

Cover Image for WASH collectionWater, Sanitation, and Hygiene (WASH) Collection
July 2023

Access to safe water and sanitation is fundamental for a healthy environment, and the history of public health as a discipline closely follows the field of water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH). Yet billions of people globally still lack access to adequate WASH conditions. This collection highlights both international and domestic studies on WASH topics.

Cover Image for Editors' Choice Collection 2022Editors' Choice Collection 2022
March 2023

EHP published more than 180 research articles, reviews, commentaries, research letters, and invited perspectives in 2022. From these, we have selected 12 of our favorites for our second annual Editors’ Choice Collection.



Cover Image for Climate Change Collection 2022Climate Change Collection 2022
August 2022

For this collection we selected EHP papers from the past five years exploring multiple aspects of climate change and health research: temperature extremes, diminished air quality, disruption of food and water security, and infectious diseases. We also selected papers on mechanistic research. The papers we chose represent several continents, populations, age groups, species, and outcomes. All highlight the essential challenges humanity faces with ongoing climate change.

Cover Image for PFAS Collection 2022PFAS Collection 2022
May 2022

Per- and polyfluorinated alkyl substances (PFAS) comprise more than 4,500 complex compounds with strong carbon–fluorine bonds that prevent them from efficiently decomposing. These chemicals are used in everyday products and are found in our water, food, and air. Much of what we know about PFAS comes from highly exposed populations, but recent studies highlight the need to study multiple life stages and exposure levels.

Cover Image for Editor's Choice Collection 2021Editors' Choice Collection 2021
January 2022

EHP published almost 150 peer-reviewed research papers, research letters, reviews, and commentaries in 2021. From these, we have selected 15 for our first annual Editors’ Choice Collection.




Cover Image for Developmental Toxicology CollectionDevelopmental Toxicology Collection
November 2021

The temporal–spatial disconnect between exposure and consequence has masked the developmental toxicity of many agents. This disconnect also poses challenges to research designed to pinpoint causal mechanisms, assess and predict toxicity, inform regulatory guidance, and protect public health. Yet, challenges present exciting opportunities to learn more.

Cover Image for Environmental Racism Collection 2021Environmental Racism Collection 2021: Exposure and Health Inequities in Black Americans
May 2021

We compiled our first Environmental Racism Collection in the summer of 2020. Over the course of the past year, we have begun to grasp what authentic systemic change will require—specifically, in our case, in conducting and reporting environmental health research. Today, as we publish the 2021 version of our collection, confronting racism in America continues to be of paramount importance.

Cover Image for Wildfire Smoke CollectionWildfire Smoke Collection
November 2020

Over the coming century, both the number of wildfires and the intensity of the fires that occur are expected to increase with climate change. Epidemiological studies, including some of those included in this collection, indicate that wildfire smoke exposures are associated with health concerns such as respiratory problems, increased risk of cardiopulmonary hospitalization and death, and an elevated risk of certain adverse birth outcomes.

Cover Image for the Environmental Racism Collection: Exposure and Health Inequities in Black AmericansEnvironmental Racism Collection: Exposure and Health Inequities in Black Americans
July 2020

Environmental racism helps explain, in part, why Black Americans face higher rates of infant mortality as well as death from type 2 diabetes, heart disease, multiple cancers, homicide, and HIV, compared with White counterparts. Black Americans are also more likely to die younger overall. Yet this group also tends to be underrepresented in studies of many of the chronic diseases that affect them disproportionately.

Cover Image for the EHP 2019 Journal Impact Factor Collection2019 Journal Impact Factor Collection
June 2020

With this collection, we are pleased to present a selection of the papers that contributed the most to our new 8.38 Journal Impact FactorTM (JIF) and 10.08 5-Year Journal Impact Factor. Based on the 2020 Journal Citation ReportsTM (JCR), EHP now ranks 2 among 92 Toxicology journals; 6 among 193 Public, Environmental & Occupational Health journals; and 11 among 265 Environmental Sciences journals.

Cover Image for the EHP Mercury CollectionMercury Collection
November 2019

The identification of mercury’s adverse health effects has led to measures to minimize further environmental contamination and human exposure. As with many metals, different spectra of effects are associated with the different forms of mercury. While the presence of mercury in the human population does not necessarily imply an adverse health effect, this may change with greater understanding of long-term effects of early exposure or effects following lifetime exposure.

 

Cover Image for the EHP Microbiome CollectionMicrobiome Collection
October 2019

The field of environmental health and toxicology is now beginning to appreciate just how crucial the microbiome is to understanding the host response to toxic events. The reports and reviews in this collection represent some of the first attempts to systematically evaluate what we currently know as well as to lay the groundwork for how we might go about investigating these interactions.

Cover Image for the EHP Environmental Health in Aging CollectionEnvironmental Health in Aging Collection
September 2019

The global percentage of individuals aged 60 years and older is expected to increase to 22% in 2050. Diseases predominantly of the elderly can have a substantial public health and economic burden. As we improve our understanding of how potentially modifiable environmental risk factors contribute to aging-related diseases, we may also better understand the etiology of these conditions and develop appropriate interventions.

Cover Image for the EHP Extreme Weather Collection Extreme Weather Collection
August 2019

In the past two decades, numerous studies have explored the impacts of heat and other weather extremes on human health. By improving our understanding of the risks of weather extremes, we can develop a richer evidence base for present-day public health planning and disaster response. We can also safeguard public health in the future, as climate change is expected to alter patterns in many extreme weather exposures.

 

Cover Image for the EHP 2018 Journal Impact Factor Collection2018 Journal Impact Factor Collection
July 2019

With this collection, we are pleased to present the papers that contributed the most to our new 8.05 Journal Impact Factor (JIF) and 9.99 5-Year Journal Impact Factor. Based on the 2019 Journal Citation Reports, EHP now ranks second among 93 Toxicology journals; fifth among 185 Public, Environmental & Occupational Health journals; and eighth among 250 Environmental Science journals.

Cover Image for the EHP Autism Spectrum Disorders CollectionAutism Spectrum Disorders Collection
June 2019

The “autistic conditions” described in the early literature were once thought to be quite rare. Over the past 70 years, prevalence estimates have varied considerably by case definition, study population, and surveillance methodology. The current diagnostic criteria appreciate the heterogeneity among individuals with autism spectrum disorders (ASDs), and the estimated prevalence among school-age children in the United States is approximately 1 in 59.

Cover Image for the EHP Noise Exposures CollectionNoise Exposures Collection
May 2019

Environmental noise is a peculiar agent. You can’t see, smell, or taste it. But you certainly can hear it, and a growing body of evidence indicates that chronic noise exposure can have adverse effects on human health beyond auditory impairment. The observational and experimental studies reported in this collection explore a variety of health outcomes for which noise may one day be implicated as an important factor.

Cover Image for the EHP Indigenous Health CollectionIndigenous Health Collection
April 2019

In the United States alone, an estimated 6.6 million people identify as American Indian, Alaska Native, or Native Hawai’ian, with affiliations to hundreds of federal and state recognized tribes. Indigenous peoples overall experience a disproportionate burden of several chronic diseases, compared with other racial and ethnic groups. Some of this burden is related to behaviors such as smoking, adoption of a poor Western diet, and physical inactivity.

Cover Image for the EHP PFAS CollectionPFAS Collection 2019
February 2019

Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are the largest identified complex group of environmental pollutants reported in the scientific literature. These chemicals have many uses in the marketplace. However, their strong carbon–fluorine bonds keep them from degrading, and they bind to blood proteins, hindering their elimination from the body. PFAS exposure may occur through oral, inhalation, and dermal routes.

Cover Image for the EHP Arsenic CollectionArsenic Collection
January 2019

Arsenic is a major toxicant and carcinogen affecting multiple organs and systems. Millions of people worldwide, including 4 million in the United States, drink water that exceeds the World Health Organization guideline and U.S. Environmental Protection Agency drinking water standard for arsenic. Many more millions around the world are exposed to lower levels through drinking water and food.

Cover image for EHP Preterm Birth CollectionPreterm Birth Collection
November 2018

November is Prematurity Awareness Month, while November 17 is recognized as World Prematurity Day. These events call attention to preterm birth and highlight what can be done to ensure babies are born at full term. To mark these occasions, we compiled articles related to preterm birth from the past three years. We have also included a selection of highly cited articles from further back in our archive.