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The phrase "avoidable exposure" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in contexts discussing risks, safety, or health, where certain exposures can be prevented or minimized.
Example: "To ensure the safety of our employees, we must identify and eliminate any avoidable exposure to hazardous materials in the workplace."
Alternatives: "preventable exposure" or "unnecessary exposure".
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Our study identified exposure to tobacco smoke as the main avoidable exposure related to the asthma alone phenotype.
PAHs the source of ubiquitous and avoidable exposure from grilled and smoked foods, tobacco smoke, and air pollution from vehicle exhaust and other fossil fuel burning have clear action implications.
Smoking is an avoidable exposure that has previously been linked with an estimated 50% increased risk of developing multiple sclerosis in case-control studies (Antonovsky et al., 1965; Ghadirian et al., 2001; Hernan et al., 2001; Riise et al., 2003, 2011; Hawkes, 2007; Hedstrom et al., 2009, 2011; Simon et al., 2010).
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Meanwhile priorities for prevention, from avoidable exposures to carcinogens in air, water, consumer products, and the workplace have remained minimal.
No one profits when schoolhouses collapse; no one profits when children are disabled by avoidable exposures; and no one profits if a child can't think because the air and surfaces are thick with molds, or when the dilapidated gym is closed and the drinking water contaminated by lead.
Understanding the exposures that mediate these socioeconomic position (SEP) patterns could help identify avoidable exposures.
Mounting awareness and concern about environmental pollutants and their adverse health effects have led to an increase in measures to protect the public from avoidable exposures.
The contamination has been found in varying concentrations in every state, and many radiation control experts have come to believe that naturally occurring radiation from industries other than the nuclear industry may be the largest source of avoidable radiation exposure in the United States.
Avoidable body exposure can be considered an important aspect of dignity, as most studies reported [ 4, 8, 9, 23].
Although further research is necessary to confirm these findings and to estimate the increase in cancer risk from the exposures, these results demonstrate once again the importance of protecting children from avoidable harmful exposures.
However, in spite of well-documented evidence relating the escalating incidence of cancer to a wide range of avoidable carcinogenic exposures, the NCI remains "asleep at the wheel," and has stubbornly refused to devote significant resources to prevention.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com