The
Children's Environmental Exposure Research Study (or
CHEERS) was a study conducted by the United States
Environmental Protection Agency designed to examine how children may be exposed to
pesticides and other chemicals used in U.S. households, such as
phthalates,
brominated flame retardants, and
perfluorinated compounds (
PFOS,
PFOA,
PFNA, and others). The two-year study began in the summer of 2004, but was halted that November by
Stephen L. Johnson (who was then Assistant Administrator of the EPA Office of Prevention, Pesticides and Toxic Substances and later became
Administrator). On April 8, 2005, Johnson cancelled the study while he was awaiting Senate confirmation as EPA Administrator after the program was criticized. Johnson himself was also heavily criticized for his record of supporting the use of human test subjects in pesticide experiments when he was EPA's Assistant Administrator for Toxic Substances.