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The Large Volume Organic Chemicals (LVOC) BREF (Best Available Techniques reference document) reflects an information exchange carried out under Article 16(2) of Council Directive 96/61/EC. This Executive Summary - which is intended to be read in conjunction with both the standard introduction to the BAT chapters and the BREF Preface’s explanations of objectives, usage and legal terms - describes the main findings, the principal BAT conclusions and the associated emission / consumption levels. It can be read and understood as a stand-alone document but, as a summary, it does not present all the complexities of the full BREF text. It is therefore not intended. | NUATRC NUMBER 16 2009 RESEARCH REPORT The National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys NHANES Volatile Organic Compound Dataset An Introduction to the Project and Analyses of the Relationship between Personal Exposures to VOCs and Behavioral Socioeconomic and Demographic Characteristics A Collaborative Project of The Mickey Leland National Urban Air Toxics Research Center and The National Center for Health Statistics MICKEY LELAND NATIONAL URBAN TOXICS RESEARCH CENTER ABOUT THENUATRC The Mickey Leland National Urban Air Toxics Research Center NUATRC or the Leland Center was established in 1991 to develop and support research into potential human health effects of exposure to air toxics in urban communities. Authorized under the Clean Air Act Amendments CAAA of 1990 the Center released its first Request for Applications in 1993. The aim of the Leland Center since its inception has been to build a research program structured to investigate and assess the risks to public health that may be attributed to air toxics. Projects sponsored by the Leland Center are designed to provide sound scientific data useful for researchers and for those charged with formulating environmental regulations. The Leland Center is a public-private partnership in that it receives support from government sources and from the private sector. Thus government funding is leveraged by funds contributed by organizations and businesses enhancing the effectiveness of the funding from both of these stakeholder groups. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency EPA has provided the major portion of the Center s government funding to date and a number of corporate sponsors primarily in the chemical and petrochemical fields have also supported the program. A nine-member Board of Directors oversees the management and activities of the Leland Center. The Board also appoints the thirteen members of a Scientific Advisory Panel SAP who are drawn from the fields of government academia and industry. These .