Nanotechnology: balancing benefits and risks to public health and the environment : expert paper

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_A8914B175D2E
Type
Report: a report published by a school or other institution, usually numbered within a series.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Nanotechnology: balancing benefits and risks to public health and the environment : expert paper
Author(s)
Feitshans Ilise L.
Institution details
Council of Europe, Parliamentary Assembly
Issued date
2013
Language
english
Number of pages
16
Abstract
Nanotechnology has been heralded as a "revolution" in science, for two reasons: first, because of its revolutionary view of the way in which chemicals and elements, such as gold and silver, behave, compared to traditional scientific understanding of their properties. Second, the impact of these new discoveries, as applied to commerce, can transform the daily life of consumer products ranging from sun tan lotions and cosmetics, food packaging and paints and coatings for cars, housing and fabrics, medicine and thousands of industrial processes.9 Beneficial consumer use of nanotechnologies, already in the stream of commerce, improves coatings on inks and paints in everything from food packaging to cars.
Additionally, "Nanomedicine" offers the promise of diagnosis and treatment at the molecular level in order to detect and treat presymptomatic disease,10 or to rebuild neurons in Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease. There is a possibility that severe complications such as stroke or heart attack may be avoided by means of prophylactic treatment of people at risk, and bone regeneration may keep many people active who never expected rehabilitation. Miniaturisation of diagnostic equipment can also reduce the amount of sampling materials required for testing and medical surveillance.
Miraculous developments, that sound like science fiction to those people who eagerly anticipate these medical products, combined with the emerging commercial impact of nanotechnology applications to consumer products will reshape civil society - permanently. Thus, everyone within the jurisdiction of the Council of Europe is an end-user of nanotechnology, even without realising that nanotechnology has touched daily life.
Keywords
Health , Jurisprudence , Nanotechnology , Commerce
Create date
20/01/2014 14:23
Last modification date
20/08/2019 16:13
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