2019
DOI: 10.2903/j.efsa.2019.e170708
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Using problem formulation for fit‐for‐purpose pre‐market environmental risk assessments of regulated stressors

Abstract: Pre-market/prospective environmental risk assessments (ERAs) contribute to risk analyses performed to facilitate decisions about the market introduction of regulated stressors. Robust ERAs begin with an explicit problem formulation, which involves among other steps: (1) formally devising plausible pathways to harm that describe how the deployment of a regulated stressor could be harmful; (2) formulating risk hypotheses about the likelihood and severity of such events; (3) identifying the information that will … Show more

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Cited by 23 publications
(42 citation statements)
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“…In the case of regulated stressors connected to food and feed production, risk assessors use scientific information to test risk hypotheses about the likelihood and seriousness of harmful effects that may occur following a proposed activity (Devos et al., ). Hypotheses take the form that the proposed activity will pose no greater harm or risk, usually when compared with the existing activity (Raybould, , , ).…”
Section: Fit‐for‐purpose Food Safety Risk Assessmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In the case of regulated stressors connected to food and feed production, risk assessors use scientific information to test risk hypotheses about the likelihood and seriousness of harmful effects that may occur following a proposed activity (Devos et al., ). Hypotheses take the form that the proposed activity will pose no greater harm or risk, usually when compared with the existing activity (Raybould, , , ).…”
Section: Fit‐for‐purpose Food Safety Risk Assessmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It has been asserted that problem formulation is key to identifying relevant information for the risk assessment of regulated stressors (Devos et al., ). Robust risk assessments begin with an explicit problem formulation (EFSA, ), which involves among other steps: (1) formally devising plausible pathways to harm that describe how a proposed activity could be harmful; (2) formulating risk hypotheses about the likelihood and severity of such events; (3) identifying the information that will be useful to test the risk hypotheses; and (4) developing a plan to acquire new data for hypothesis testing should tests with the available information be insufficient for decision‐making (Raybould, , , ).…”
Section: Fit‐for‐purpose Food Safety Risk Assessmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Having identified and accessed relevant new data sources, the next challenge will be to ensure that the data quality (fitness‐for‐purpose) is appropriate to meet EFSA's standards of scientific rigour (Devos et al., ,b). Building on the conclusions of the EFSA Prometheus report (EFSA, ), quantitative methods for data appraisal and validation will need to continue to develop in parallel with changing approaches to data identification and retrieval to ensure its appropriate transformation into sound scientific evidence.…”
Section: Thematic Areasmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Problem formulation has a human and societal dimension, and is important to determine the acceptable residual level of uncertainty (e.g. Devos et al., ,b).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Equally, informative problem formulation is key to frame premarket (prospective) environmental risk assessments of regulated stressors, though this effort is often hindered by the absence of clear policy goals and decision‐making criteria. Greater discussion and interaction between risk assessors and regulators is essential to clarify such policy goals and decision‐making criteria (Devos et al., ). Using an ecosystem services framework can strongly enhance the ecological and societal relevance of environmental risk assessment and facilitate more holistic assessments that integrate assessments across multiple stressors, geographical/temporal scales and policies/legal frames (Devos et al., ).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%