Review of the evidence for oceans and human health relationships in Europe: A systematic map

•Marine exposure and human health research in Europe is patchy but expanding.•Foci include marine-derived fats, chemical & microbial pollution, the oil industry.•Climate change and wellbeing research remains less well developed.•Knowledge gaps and scope for evidence syntheses highlighted toward...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environment international 2021-01, Vol.146, p.106275, Article 106275
Hauptverfasser: Short, Rebecca E., Cox, Daniel T.C., Ling Tan, Yin, Bethel, Alison, Eales, Jacqualyn F., Garside, Ruth
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Marine exposure and human health research in Europe is patchy but expanding.•Foci include marine-derived fats, chemical & microbial pollution, the oil industry.•Climate change and wellbeing research remains less well developed.•Knowledge gaps and scope for evidence syntheses highlighted toward informing policy.•Understanding of synergistic exposures needed for effective Blue Growth strategies. Globally, there is increasing scientific evidence of critical links between the oceans and human health, with research into issues such as pollution, harmful algal blooms and nutritional contributions. However, Oceans and Human Health (OHH) remains an emerging discipline. As such these links are poorly recognized in policy efforts such as the Sustainable Development Goals, with OHH not included in either marine (SDG14) or health (SDG3) goals. This is arguably short-sighted given recent development strategies such as the EU Blue Growth Agenda. In this systematic map we aim to build on recent efforts to enhance OHH in Europe by setting a baseline of existing evidence, asking: What links have been researched between marine environments and the positive and negative impacts to human health and wellbeing? We searched eight bibliographic databases and queried 57 organizations identified through stakeholder consultation. Results include primary research and systematic reviews which were screened double blind against pre-defined inclusion criteria as per a published protocol. Studies were limited to Europe, US, Australia, New Zealand and Canada. Data was extracted according to a stakeholder-defined code book. A narrative synthesis explores the current evidence for relationships between marine exposures and human health outcomes, trends in knowledge gaps and change over time in the OHH research landscape. The resulting database is available on the website of the Seas, Oceans and Public Health in Europe website (https://sophie2020.eu/). A total of 1,542 unique articles were included in the database, including those examined within 56 systematic reviews. Research was dominated by a US focus representing 50.1% of articles. A high number of articles were found to link: marine biotechnology and cardiovascular or immune conditions, consumption of seafood and cardiovascular health, chemical pollution and neurological conditions, microbial pollution and gastrointestinal or respiratory health, and oil industry occupations with mental health. A lack of evidence relates to direct impac
ISSN:0160-4120
1873-6750
1873-6750
DOI:10.1016/j.envint.2020.106275