Browsing by Author "Balthazart, J."
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- Policy decisions on endocrine disruptors should be based on science across disciplines: a response to Dietrich et al.Publication . Gore, A. C.; Balthazart, J.; Bikle, D.; Carpenter, D. O.; Crews, D.; Czernichow, P.; Diamanti-Kandarakis, E.; Dores, R. M.; Grattan, D.; Hof, P. R.; Hollenberg, A. N.; Lange, C.; Lee, A. V.; Levine, J. E.; Millar, R. P.; Nelson, R. J.; Porta, M.; Poth, M.; Power, Deborah; Prins, G. S.; Ridgway, E. C.; Rissman, E. F.; Romijn, J. A.; Sawchenko, P. E.; Sly, P. D.; Söder, O.; Taylor, H. S.; Tena-Sempere, M.; Vaudry, H.; Wallen, K.; Wang, Z.; Wartofsky, L.; Watson, C. S.We are writing as scientists and editors of leading peer-reviewed journals that have published important contributions in the study of endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs). By signing this editorial, we affirm that regulatory decisions on EDCs should be made based on the best available science and expertise that involves, among others, reproductive biology, endocrinology, medicine, genetics, behavior, developmental biology, and toxicology (1). (For a complete list of Signatories and their Disclosures, see Supplemental Table 1 published on The Endocrine Society’s Journals Online web site at http://end.endojournals.org.)
