Environmental Health Perspectives (environmental-health-perspectives)
Journal positioning
Environmental Health Perspectives (EHP) is a peer-reviewed environmental-health journal
published with support from the U.S. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
(NIEHS), connecting environmental exposures to human health with strong public-health and
policy relevance. Its defining expectation is public-health significance backed by rigorous
epidemiology or toxicology: a study whose findings inform protection of human health and
sit within a public-health and regulatory context. Relative to Environment International's
broader environmental-science-plus-health scope, EHP is framed around the population-health
and policy mission and holds an explicit standard for transparency and reproducibility.
A purely environmental-chemistry or mechanistic study with no clear human-health and
public-health implication is a weak fit. This skill is a fit / venue-selection / re-framing
tool. It does not replace the journal's current author guidelines. Before submitting, re-check
the live EHP submission guidance.
When to trigger
- The author names EHP and wants a fit/framing check for an environmental-health paper with
public-health relevance.
- An exposure–health or toxicology study must be re-framed around its population-health and
policy implications.
- The author is deciding between EHP and Environment International, or between EHP and a
broader environmental-science venue.
- The author needs EHP's public-health-relevance bar and its rigor/transparency expectations.
Scope & topic fit
- Environmental epidemiology linking exposures (air, water, chemicals, climate-related
hazards, the built and occupational environment) to human health outcomes.
- Mechanistic and predictive toxicology, including new-approach methodologies, when anchored
to human health-relevance and hazard interpretation.
- Children's and developmental environmental health and effects in susceptible or vulnerable
populations.
- Climate change and health, environmental justice, and disparities in exposure and outcomes.
- Exposure science and biomonitoring with a clear public-health interpretation and risk context.
- Reviews, commentaries, and science-to-policy synthesis that advance environmental-health
decision-making.
Method & evidence bar
- The contribution must carry public-health significance: findings that inform human-health
protection, not exposure characterization or mechanism for its own sake.
- Epidemiological studies require rigorous design, confounding and bias control, exposure-
misclassification handling, sensitivity analyses, and cautious causal language.
- Toxicological studies need appropriate models, dose-response design, replication, and clear
human-health-relevance interpretation; relevance of doses to real exposures should be discussed.
- The journal emphasizes transparency and reproducibility: pre-specified analyses where
appropriate, full reporting of methods, and data/code availability.
- Risk and policy-relevant claims must be proportionate to the evidence and acknowledge
uncertainty; over-reach beyond the data is a recurring problem.
- Studies of vulnerable populations and environmental-justice questions require careful,
ethically grounded design and interpretation.
Structure & house style
- Standard research-article format with strong framing of the public-health question and
decision relevance; the journal also publishes reviews and commentaries — re-check current
article types and length on the live guide.
- The introduction must establish the public-health and policy context and the specific
health question, not only the environmental novelty.
- Figures and tables should be quantitative and interpretation-focused (effect estimates with
confidence intervals, exposure–response relationships), with full models and diagnostics in SI.
- Methods, data, and code transparency are expected; follow the journal's human-subjects,
ethics, and data-availability requirements.
Official-submission checklist
- Before giving submission-ready advice, read
../../resources/source-basis.md and
../../resources/official-source-map.md; start from the official-source anchors, then cite
the current EHP page you checked.
- Search the live site for "Environmental Health Perspectives instructions for authors" and follow the current version.
- Re-check article types, length, abstract format, and any structured-abstract or summary requirements.
- Confirm epidemiology/toxicology reporting-guideline expectations and ethics/consent and animal-care statements.
- Re-check the data-, code-, and reproducibility-availability policy and any deposition requirements.
- Re-check competing-interests, funding (including any disclosure norms relevant to a publicly supported journal), author-contribution, and AI-use disclosure, and open-access terms.
- If the live official instructions conflict with this skill, the official instructions win.
Pre-submission self-check
Common desk-reject triggers
- A study with no clear human-health and public-health implication (exposure or mechanism only).
- Epidemiology with weak design, uncontrolled confounding, or over-stated causal claims.
- Toxicology at exposures irrelevant to humans, or without dose-response and replication.
- Policy/risk over-reach unsupported by the evidence or ignoring uncertainty.
- Insufficient transparency: missing methods detail or non-compliant data/code availability.
- Scope mismatch: a pure environmental-chemistry, monitoring, or ecology paper without the human-health/public-health link.
Re-routing decision
- Broader environmental-science-plus-health or method-forward exposure science →
environment-international.
- Pollutant sources/fate and ecological (non-human) impact →
environmental-pollution.
- Major clinical/population-health epidemiology scope →
the-lancet.
- Broad solutions/sustainability framing →
nature-sustainability.
- Environmental-engineering/technology emphasis →
environmental-science-and-technology.
Output format
[Fit] High / Medium / Low (one-line reason)
[Target] Environmental Health Perspectives
[Topic tags] <2–3 closest environmental-health topics>
[Public-health significance] <how the finding informs human-health protection / policy>
[Method/evidence] <does epi/tox rigor + transparency + proportionate claims clear EHP's bar?>
[Top risk] <the single most likely reason for rejection>
[Official items to re-check] <article type / reporting guideline / ethics / data-reproducibility policy / disclosures>
[Re-route suggestion] <if not a fit, a better-matched venue>