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Research protocol for a multidimensional environmental and health impact study of petrochemical plant emissions in Calvert city, Kentucky

Huntington-Moskos, L.; Cave, M.; Reynolds, L.; Anderson, L.; Housman, B.; Abolins-Abols, M.; Fratzke, R.; Holm, R.; Smith, T. R.

2026-07-09 occupational and environmental health
10.64898/2026.07.07.26356427 medRxiv
Show abstract

While exposure to volatile organic compounds such as ethylene dichloride and vinyl chloride monomer is a well-established cause of liver disease, particularly hepatic hemangiosarcoma, characterizing real-world exposure profiles in communities surrounding industrial centers remains challenging. Calvert City, Kentucky (population ~2,500), provides a unique setting characterized by both active industrial emissions and legacy sources of air toxics. To address these complexities, this method paper describes the framework for the Biomonitoring and Environmental Assessment for Community Outreach and Neighborhood Safety (BEACON) study. By utilizing a novel, multi-dimensional exposure assessment strategy, BEACON aims to characterize air toxic exposures and provide actionable data for community health and safety. For the BEACON study, we will leverage Kentucky Department of Air Quality measures of air toxics, analyze urine samples in a small cohort of community volunteers, analyze community urine via wastewater in an adjacent community, geocode citizen odor reporting, assess blood markers in wildlife, survey small and large animal veterinarians in the area for anomalies in morbidity and mortality, and work with the regional health system to enhance vigilance for health issues associated with toxicants present in the area. In addition, blood samples will be collected at three time points and biobanked for future analyses. Efforts will be made to link this study to additional large-scale long-term cohorts where possible. Throughout the project, community engagement will play a critical role by raising awareness, fostering collaboration, and ensuring that the voices of affected residents are heard.

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