National Center for Environmental Health
CDC’s National Center for Environmental Health (NCEH) plans, directs, and coordinates a program to protect the American people from environmental hazards. We promote a healthy environment and prevent premature death, avoidable illness and disability caused by non-infectious, non-occupational environmental and related factors. We are especially committed to safeguarding the health of people who are at increased/higher risk–such as people from racial and ethnic minority groups, people with lower socioeconomic status, children, the elderly, and people with disabilities – from environmental hazards.
A-Z Index
- Air Quality
- Asthma
- Biomonitoring
- Carbon Monoxide Poisoning
- Chemical Weapons Elimination
- Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention
- Climate and Health
- EH Nexus
- Emergency Response
- Environmental Health Science and Practice
- Environmental Health Services
- Environmental Public Health Tracking Network
- Food Safety
- Health Studies
- Human Exposure to Environmental Chemicals
- Laboratory Quality Assurance
- Mold
- Natural Disasters
- Newborn Screening
- Noise-Induced Hearing Loss
- Nutritional Indicators
- Radiation Emergencies
- Radiation and Your Health
- Research (e.g., Biomonitoring, Genetics, Laboratory Quality Assurance)
- Safe Water
- Vessel Sanitation
Introducing CDC/ATSDR’s PFAS Blood Level Estimation Tool
The PFAS Blood Level Estimation Tool (“the tool”) was created to help individuals who have consumed PFAS-contaminated drinking water and who have information about the levels of PFAS in their water estimate their PFAS blood levels. The tool is a user-friendly, web-based estimator for the public, housed on the ATSDR website.
- About NCEH
- NCEH Organization Chart [PDF – 115 KB]
- Calendar
- Data Resources
- Emergency Response
- Employment
- Environmental Health Features
- Environmental Health Toolkits
- Infographics
- Multimedia Tools
- Press Room
- Programs & Divisions
- Publications & Products
- Sharing Our Stories
- Social Media
- Training
- Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry
Follow @CDCEnvironment on Twitter for info, tips, and news you can use about ways your environment and your health are connected!
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