Exposome project for health and occupational research
Acronym
EPHOR
Description of the granted funding
Exposures at the workplace contribute to many non-communicable diseases (NCDs) with a similar magnitude as urban air pollution or obesity. Given the associated societal and economic (2-6% GDP) pressure, ensuring a healthy work environment is a strategic goal for the European Commission. Demographic changes (aging workforce, female workers) and the rapidly changing nature of work with respect to secure employment and migration, are posing additional challenges. We define the working-life exposome as all occupational and related non-occupational factors (general and socio-economic environment, lifestyle, behaviour). Taking a working-life exposome approach will help address these challenges by providing better insights in how complex working-life exposures are related to NCDs, for vulnerable groups (female, migrant, insecure job workers) or life stages. The working-life exposome is in its infancy and new approaches and methods are needed. In EPHOR a consortium of exposure, health and data scientists and technology developers will develop a working-life exposome toolbox, with stakeholder involvement. The toolbox will make available to scientists, policy makers and occupational health practitioners: 1) innovative methods for collection, storage, and interpretation of more complete and individual level working life exposome data; 2) better knowledge on how the working life exposome relates to NCDs, including complex interactions, vulnerability, biological pathways and early signs of health damage, by uniquely combining large-scale pooling of existing cohorts with focused case studies; 3) models for assessing the economic and societal impact of working life exposures. EPHOR will lay the groundwork for evidence-based and cost-effective preventive actions to reduce the burden of NCDs as a result of the working-life exposome. Thereby, health, wellbeing and productivity of the EU population will be improved and the burden on the EU health care systems reduced. EPHOR is part of the European Human Exposome Network comprised of 9 projects selected from this same call.
Show moreStarting year
2020
End year
2025
Granted funding
INTERAKTIV GMBH (DE)
108 938.18 €
Participant
PANEPISTIMIO DYTIKIS ATTIKIS (EL)
50 149.5 €
Participant
AARHUS UNIVERSITET (DK)
1 169 807.88 €
Participant
OWLSTONE MEDICAL LIMITED (UK)
357 084.24 €
Participant
VTEC ENGINEERING BV (NL)
183 357.71 €
Participant
FUNDACION PRIVADA INSTITUTO DE SALUD GLOBAL BARCELONA (ES)
1 259 371.25 €
Participant
STATENS ARBEIDSMILJOINSTITUTT (NO)
822 075.53 €
Participant
LIFEGLIMMER GMBH (DE)
152 746.31 €
Participant
DET NATIONALE FORSKNINGSCENTER FORARBEJDSMILJO (DK)
Participant
INSTITUTE OF OCCUPATIONAL MEDICINE (UK)
582 487.85 €
Participant
STOCKHOLMS LANS LANDSTING (SE)
298 574.63 €
Participant
TECHNOLOGIKO PANEPISTIMIO KYPROU (CY)
89 138.53 €
Participant
THE UNIVERSITY OF MANCHESTER (UK)
828 731.43 €
Participant
UNIVERSITETET I BERGEN (NO)
161 821.54 €
Participant
UNIVERSITETET I BERGEN (NO)
366 990.88 €
Participant
KAROLINSKA INSTITUTET (SE)
791 445.01 €
Participant
UNIVERSITEIT UTRECHT (NL)
1 447 195.11 €
Participant
NEDERLANDSE ORGANISATIE VOOR TOEGEPAST NATUURWETENSCHAPPELIJK ONDERZOEK TNO (NL)
1 385 255.76 €
Coordinator
KATHOLIEKE UNIVERSITEIT LEUVEN (BE)
1 134 884.36 €
Participant
INSTITUT NATIONAL DE LA SANTE ET DE LA RECHERCHE MEDICALE (FR)
302 142.33 €
Participant
Amount granted
11 981 852 €
Funder
European Union
Funding instrument
Research and Innovation action
Framework programme
Horizon 2020 Framework Programme
Call
Programme part
Health (5290 Preventing disease (5295 )
Topic
The Human Exposome Project: a toolbox for assessing and addressing the impact of environment on health (SC1-BHC-28-2019Call ID
H2020-SC1-2019-Single-Stage-RTD Other information
Funding decision number
874703
Identified topics
public health, occupational health