LIVE EVENT: Healthy Homes Grand Rounds (September 16, 2025)

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The Pediatric Environmental Health Center at Boston Children’s Hospital and the New England Region Pediatric Environmental Health Specialty Unit (PEHSU) welcome health professionals to attend the monthly virtual Pediatric Environmental Health (PEH) Grand Rounds.

Price range: $0.00 through $25.00

Description

Overview

The Pediatric Environmental Health Center at Boston Children’s Hospital and the New England Region Pediatric Environmental Health Specialty Unit (PEHSU) welcome health professionals to attend the monthly virtual Pediatric Environmental Health (PEH) Grand Rounds.

This Grand Rounds series will provide healthcare providers with state-of-the-science content on current topics in pediatric environmental health. Such information will fill in the knowledge gaps of practitioners, enabling them to effectively counsel families whose children face possible health issues due to environmental chemicals, toxins, and other insults. The PEH Grand Rounds will also educate on practice strategies for the biomonitoring of children at risk for specific exposures to environmental pollutants.

Course Format 

This course will be Presented online via Zoom, optimizing virtual interactions between faculty and participants and facilitating interactive discussions.

Course Topic: 

PCB’s: A Legacy Pollutant

This presentation explores the history, environmental persistence, health impacts and clinical diagnosis and management of exposure to polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and related chemical compounds. PCBs are a group of synthetic industrial chemicals widely used in electrical equipment, household products, and building materials until they were banned in the U.S. in the 1970s. Despite the ban, PCBs remain a major environmental pollutant due to their chemical stability and persistence, bioaccumulation in food chains, and toxicity to humans and wildlife. The presentation will highlight how PCBs have contaminated ecosystems globally and outline their long-term health effects, including cancer risk, endocrine disruption, and developmental problems. Groups that are particularly vulnerable to PCB toxicity will be described, as well as some clinical and public health strategies to prevent their exposure to these chemicals.

A short Q&A will follow the presentation.

Learning Objectives: 

At the conclusion of this educational program, learners will be able to:

    1. Define PCBs and describe sources of environmental exposure
    2. List adverse health effects possible associated with PCB exposure
    3. Discuss benefits and drawbacks to to testing blood for PCBs
    4. Cite key aspects of counseling families about prevention of low-dose environmental PCB exposures

Speakers:

Alan Woolf, MD, MPH, FAAP, FACCT, FACMT

Mara Seeley, PhD, DABT

Alicia Fraser, DSc

Registration

To register, please click on the register tab above. If this is your first time registering for a conference at Boston Children’s Hospital, you will need to create an account. Returning users can log in to their account to complete the registration process.   

General Admission (CE Credits):    $25.00

General Admission (No CE Credits): Free

Course Cancellation, Transfer & Refund Policy

Online/Virtual Course Registrations: Due to the propriety materials and content of each course, online virtual courses orders are NOT eligible for refund, cancellation or transfer. Online training courses may NOT be transferred to another Participant. Participants have 2 weeks to access any virtual online course content. Participants have until the expiration date to access and complete any enduring material courses. Boston Children’s Hospital CE is not responsible for user technical difficulties including loss of internet, power outages, etc.

In-Person Course Registrations: For in person course registrations, refunds are available on the following schedule: 100% refund up to 8 weeks before the first day of the course; 50% refund up to 2 weeks before the first day of the course; No refunds will be processed for cancellations within 2 weeks of the first day of the course

Boston Children’s offers the opportunity to change your attendance preference: Should your circumstances change after you have registered for either the ONLINE or IN-PERSON program, you have the ability to change from one attendance option to the other up until two weeks before the program begins. Please contact us via email if you would like to make a change.

“No shows” for both in person and virtual courses are subject to the full course fee and no refunds will be issued once the course has started.

Refunds will be made in the following ways: For payments received by credit or debit cards, the same credit/debit card will be refunded.

*If you have extenuating circumstances, please contact us at continuingeducation@childrens.harvard.edu

Cancellation of Services

Although highly unlikely, in case an event is canceled or postponed, Boson Children’s can provide a full refund or offer a credit towards future events to those who have already registered.

Accreditation

In support of improving patient care, Boston Children’s Hospital is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.

 

 

 

Physician

Boston Children’s Hospital designates this live activity for a maximum of 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credits ™. Physicians should claim only credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in this activity.

Physician Assistant

Boston Children’s Hospital designates this live activity for a maximum of 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credits ™. Physicians should claim only credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in this activity.

Nurse

Boston Children’s Hospital designates this activity for 1.00 contact hours for nurses. Nurses should only claim credit commensurate with the extent of their participation in the activity. 

Disclosure Policy 
Boston Children’s Hospital adheres to all ACCME Essential Areas, Standards, and Policies. It is Boston Children’s policy that those who have influenced the content of a CE activity (e.g. planners, faculty, authors, reviewers and others) disclose all relevant financial relationships with commercial entities so that Boston Children’s may identify and resolve any conflicts of interest prior to the activity. These disclosures will be provided in the activity materials along with disclosure of any commercial support received for the activity. Additionally, faculty members have been instructed to disclose any limitations of data and unlabeled or investigational uses of products during their presentations.

Disclosure Statement

The following planners, speakers, and content reviewers, on behalf of themselves, have reported the following relevant financial relationships with any entity producing, marketing, reselling, or distributing health care goods or services consumed by, or used on patients: 

Mitigation of Relevant Financial Relationships

Boston Children’s Hospital adheres to the ACCME’s Standards for Integrity and Independence in Accredited Continuing Education. Any individuals in a position to control the content of a CE activity, including faculty, planners, reviewers or others are required to disclose all relevant financial relationships with ineligible entities (commercial interests). All relevant conflicts of interest have been mitigated prior to the commencement of the activity.

 

Faculty

Alan Woolf, MD, MPH, FAAP, FACCT, FACMT

Co-Director, Pediatric Environmental Health Center, Boston Children’s Hospital
Co-Director, Region 1 Pediatric Environmental Health Specialty Unit (PEHSU)
Professor of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School

 

Dr. Alan Woolf is a pediatrician, medical toxicologist and medical educator. He is the Co-Director of both the Pediatric Environmental Health Center at BCH and the Region 1 New England Pediatric Environmental Health Specialty Unit and a Professor of Pediatrics at Harvard Medical School. Dr. Woolf is a past-president of both the American Academy of Clinical Toxicology and the American Association of Poison Control Centers. In 2018, he received the Career Achievement Award from the American Academy of Clinical Toxicology and, in 2019, was named the Louis Roche Lecturer by the European Association of Poisons Centers and Clinical Toxicologists, the highest honor given to a toxicologist by that organization. Dr. Woolf has published extensively on childhood poisonings and environmental hazards, toxic reactions to heavy metals, poisoning prevention, poison control center functioning, toxic reactions to botanicals, herbs and dietary supplements, and the contamination of everyday products. He has published two books: The Children’s Hospital Guide to Your Child’s Health and Development (Perseus Publishers, Cambridge, MA) and, most recently, The History of Modern Clinical Toxicology (2021: Academic Press).

 

Mara Seeley, PhD, DABT

Senior Toxicologist, Division of Environmental Toxicology, Hazard Assessment and Prevention
Massachusetts Department of Public Health, Bureau of Climate and Environmental Health

 

Mara Seeley is a Senior Toxicologist in the Bureau of Climate and Environmental Health at the Massachusetts Department of Public Health (MDPH).  Prior to working for MDPH, Mara worked as a senior toxicologist at a consulting company, where she specialized in human health risk assessment.  Mara has authored or co-authored peer-reviewed articles and book chapters on various toxicology and risk assessment topics, and served on two committees of the National Academies’ Institute of Medicine; she has a Masters in Environmental Engineering & Science and a Doctorate in Environmental Health/Toxicology, both from the University of Washington, and is a Diplomate of the American Board of Toxicology.

 

Alicia Fraser, DSc

Director of Environmental Epidemiology, Massachusetts Department of Environmental Health, Bureau of Climate and Environmental Health

 

 

Dr. Fraser is the Director of Environmental Epidemiology for the Bureau of Climate and Environmental Health with the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Health. For 13 years, she has worked with DPH conducting community-based epidemiology studies, overseeing statewide surveillance and tracking of environmental health outcomes such as childhood blood lead exposure and pediatric asthma, and helping to address community concerns associated with environmental exposures alongside a team of dedicated scientists. Prior to this role, Dr. Fraser studied at the Boston University School of Public Health, earning her doctor of science degree in environmental health in 2010.