Biomonitoring in Washington State

Washington Environmental Biomonitoring Survey (WEBS)

Biomonitoring measures the amount of environmental chemicals or their breakdown products (metabolites) in human blood, urine, hair or other body tissues. It tells us the amount of the chemical that gets into people from all sources combined, such as from air, soil, water, dust, and food. Biomonitoring provides useful information on how much people are exposed to chemicals from the environment. View a WEBS Overview Presentation (PDF).

Biomonitoring Data

How to access biomonitoring data on the CDC Data Explorer, National Environmental Public Health Tracking Network

Step 1: Content

  1. Select ‘Biomonitoring: Population Exposures’ as the content area.
  2. Select ‘State Biomonitoring Data’ as the Indicator.
  3. Select a measure of interest.

Step 2: Geography Type

Single State (No Maps) will be selected as a default.

Step 3: Geography

Select Washington

Step 4: Time

2010-2011 will be selected as a default.

Step 5: Advanced Options

Make your selections. Select the green ‘Go’ button at the bottom right to see the data.
 

WEBS Advisory Committee

The Washington State Department of Health periodically convenes an Advisory Committee to help identify and prioritize biomonitoring activities for the Washington Environmental Biomonitoring Survey (WEBS).

Current Advisory Committee Members (PDF)

2013 Committee Meeting Presentations

Low Income Survey and Testing (LIST) project: Biomonitoring among Residents of Subsidized Housing in King County (PDF)

Pyrethroid Exposure Survey and Testing (PEST) Study (PDF)

WEBS Overview of Activities (PDF)

WEBS Speciated Arsenic and Pesticide Results (PDF)