Read the fourth edition of the European Human Exposome Network newsletter!
Read about the latest updates and upcoming events from the European Human Exposome Network (EHEN). In this fourth edition of the EHEN newsletter, we preview the [...]
Read about the latest updates and upcoming events from the European Human Exposome Network (EHEN). In this fourth edition of the EHEN newsletter, we preview the [...]
Researching the human exposome, the totality of environmental exposures over a lifetime, can help us better understand how the environment can impact people’s health and how we can prevent [...]
Join us for the 2023 European Human Exposome Network (EHEN) event “Exposome Research: Understanding and Addressing Policy Challenges” on 1st June 2023 at 09:00-12:00 CEST. The European Human Exosome Network [...]
An intervention study focusing on reducing women’s exposure to environmental contaminants was recently launched by the French National Institute of Health and Medical Research INSERM, in the framework of [...]
Air pollution is one of the greatest environmental risks to health. To help identify effective, feasible and applicable interventions to reduce children’s exposure to air pollution and other environmental [...]
Around 140 researchers representing 23 different partners from 12 countries gathered in Barcelona, Spain and online for the fifth annual consortium meeting of ATHLETE, an EU-funded project that aims [...]
This is the first exposome study to systematically associate over 1000 environmental exposures during vulnerable early life periods with molecular signatures in childhood Researchers now [...]
Read about the latest updates and upcoming events from each project and EHEN working groups. In this third edition of the European Human Exposome Network (EHEN) newsletter, [...]
On Tuesday, 6 December, 16:00-17:00 Brussels time, join us for a special webinar organized by the ATHLETE research project in collaboration with the Health and Environment Alliance (HEAL), where [...]
“Some of the chemicals we looked at only stay in the body for a few hours, but because exposure is continuous, the internal concentrations are always topped up. This [...]