Occupational asthma and the paper recycling industry. (1/69)

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Lung cancer mortality in arsenic-exposed workers from a cadmium recovery plant. (2/69)

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Implementation of a reuse process for liquid crystal displays using an eccentric-form tool. (3/69)

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"This is public health: recycling counts!" Description of a pilot health communications campaign. (4/69)

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Clinical transformation: the key to green nephrology. (5/69)

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Palladium/zirconium oxide nanocomposite as a highly recyclable catalyst for C-C coupling reactions in water. (6/69)

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Recyclable nanostructured catalytic systems in modern environmentally friendly organic synthesis. (7/69)

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A recycling index for food and health security: urban Taipei. (8/69)

The modern food system has evolved into one with highly inefficient activities, producing waste at each step of the food pathway from growing to consumption and disposal. The present challenge is to improve recyclability in the food system as a fundamental need for food and health security. This paper develops a methodological approach for a Food Recycling Index (FRI) as a tool to assess recyclability in the food system, to identify opportunities to reduce waste production and environmental contamination, and to provide a self-assessment tool for participants in the food system. The urban Taipei framework was used to evaluate resource and nutrient flow within the food consumption and waste management processes of the food system. A stepwise approach for a FRI is described: (1) identification of the major inputs and outputs in the food chain; (2) classification of inputs and outputs into modules (energy, water, nutrients, and contaminants); (3) assignment of semi-quantitative scores for each module and food system process using a matrix; (4) assessment for recycling status and recyclability potential; (5) conversion of scores into sub-indices; (6) derivation of an aggregate FRI. A FRI of 1.24 was obtained on the basis of data for kitchen waste management in Taipei, a score which encompasses absolute and relative values for a comprehensive interpretation. It is apparent that a FRI could evolve into a broader ecosystem concept with health relevance. Community end-users and policy planners can adopt this approach to improve food and health security.  (+info)