Search results for 'waste'
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Previous <<< 0-9 of 25 (incl 0 In Press) >>> Next 10 Report: The assessment of hospital waste management: a case study in TehranArab, M.; Baghbani, R.A.; Tajvar, M.; Pourreza, A.; Omrani, G.; Mahmoudi, M.
Waste Management & Research, 2008; 26(3):304-308 DOI · PubMed · Abstract · WWW · Full Record · · Corrections · Journal Article - Original Research · IF(2008): 0.835
Hospital waste management is an important process that must be dealt with diligently. The management of hazardous waste material requires specific knowledge and regulations and it must be carried out by specialists in the field. In this cross-sectional study, we assessed the main stages of hospital waste management including separation, containment, removal and disposal of waste materials in public hospitals affiliated with Tehran University of Medical Sciences (TUMS). We selected 108 units of six hospitals (three general hospitals and three subspecialty hospitals) from those hospitals supervised by TUMS using the cluster sampling method. The measurement was conducted through a questionnaire and direct observation by researchers. Association analysis was done by statistical tests; Fisher exact test and chi-squared using SPSS software. According to the results obtained by the questionnaire, most of the studied wards scored moderately in terms of quality of their performance in all stages of waste management. About one-fifth of the wards were suffering from poor management of their medical waste and only a minority of wards obtained good scores for managing their waste materials. The findings also revealed significant associations between temporary waste storage and collection and the level of education of the managers (P = 0.040, P = 0.050, respectively). In summary, the study indicated a moderate management in all processes of separation, collection, containment, removal and disposal of waste materials in hospitals with several observed problems in the process. The potential monetary benefits of reclaiming hazardous waste sites in the Campania region: an economic evaluation. Environ Health, 2009; 8:28 DOI · PubMed · Abstract · WWW · Full Record · · Corrections · Journal Article - Original Research · IF(2008):
BACKGROUND: Evaluating the economic benefit of reducing negative health outcomes resulting from waste management is of pivotal importance for designing an effective waste policy that takes into account the health consequences for the populations exposed to environmental hazards. Despite the high level of Italian and international media interest in the problem of hazardous waste in Campania little has been done to reclaim the land and the waterways contaminated by hazardous waste. OBJECTIVE: This study aims to reduce the uncertainty about health damage due to waste exposure by providing for the first time a monetary valuation of health benefits arising from the reclamation of hazardous waste dumps in Campania. METHODS: First the criteria by which the landfills in the Campania region, in particular in the two provinces of Naples and Caserta, have been classified are described. Then, the annual cases of premature death and fatal cases of cancers attributable to waste exposure are quantified. Finally, the present value of the health benefits from the reclamation of polluted land is estimated for each of the health outcomes (premature mortality, fatal cancer and premature mortality adjusted for the cancer premium). Due to the uncertainty about the time frame of the benefits arising from reclamation, the latency of the effects of toxic waste on human health and the lack of context specific estimates of the Value of Preventing a Fatality (VPF), extensive sensitivity analyses are performed. RESULTS: There are estimated to be 848 cases of premature mortality and 403 cases of fatal cancer per year as a consequence of exposure to toxic waste. The present value of the benefit of reducing the number of waste associated deaths after adjusting for a cancer premium is euro11.6 billion. This value ranges from euro5.4 to euro20.0 billion assuming a time frame for benefits of 10 and 50 years respectively. CONCLUSION: This study suggests that there is a strong economic argument for both reclaiming the land contaminated with hazardous waste in the two provinces of Naples and Caserta and increasing the control of the territory in order to avoid the creation of new illegal dump sites. Risk of low birth weight near EUROHAZCON hazardous waste landfill sites in England.Morgan, O.W.; Vrijheid, M.; Dolk, H.;
Arch Environ Health, 2004; 59(3):149-51 DOI · PubMed · Abstract · WWW · Full Record · · Corrections · Journal Article - Original Research · IF(2008):
Few studies have investigated the occurrence of both low birth weight (LBW) and congenital anomalies in populations living near hazardous waste landfill sites. The authors investigated the risk of LBW near 10 English hazardous waste landfill sites included in a previous European study, which reported an increased risk of congenital anomalies. Odds ratios, adjusted for sex, deprivation, year of birth, and study area (pooled ORs), were estimated for LBW (< 2500 gm) within 0-3 km compared with 3-7 km zones around the landfill sites. The authors found a small and not statistically significant increase in risk of LBW (OR = 1.03, 95% confidence interval = 0.98-1.08) within 3 km of hazardous waste landfill sites. Their findings suggest that previously reported results for congenital anomalies should not be extrapolated to a wider range of pregnancy outcomes but should be evaluated separately for each. A review of the health hazards associated with the occupation of waste picking for childrenHunt, C.
International Journal of Adolescent Medicine & Health, 2001; 13(3):177-189 Many thousands of children, adolescents and women in the South (the countries of Africa, Asia and Latin America) work in the informal solid waste management sector, collecting and sorting recyclable solid waste from roadsides, bins and dumpsites. This work brings low pay and can be very hazardous for health. The occupation is seen as a survival strategy by many observers. This paper seeks to review the literature describing the health hazards they face. Published and grey literature were reviewed. MEDLINE and BIDS were used to search for published literature. Only a small number of epidemiological studies have been carried out. They are all small cross-sectional studies. The hazards can be classified as direct health hazards posed by the nature of solid waste and both the direct and indirect environmental hazards of solid wastes and their collection. High prevalence of worm infections was found among waste pickers in most studies. Waste pickers were also found to have high prevalence of respiratory infections, lead and mercury poisoning, tetanus and, in a small number of cases, HIV infection and hepatitis B. Beyond its impact upon physical health, the work is seen as being stigmatised and this has an impact on self-esteem, employment chances (outside waste picking) and even marriage prospects. This work is clearly hazardous to health and action is needed to separate hazardous waste, and protect those engaged in it. More attention needs to be given to waste pickers who, despite performing an important, environmentally beneficial job, are rewarded with very low incomes and virtual social exclusion. Risk of congenital anomalies near the Byker waste combustion plantCresswell, P. A.; Scott, J. E. S.; Pattenden, S.; Vrijheid, M.
Journal of Public Health Medicine, 2003; 25(3):237-242 DOI · PubMed · Abstract · WWW · Full Record · · Corrections · Journal Article - Original Research · IF(2008):
Background The aim of this study was to determine whether the risk of congenital anomalies in a population resident close to a waste combustion plant located at Byker in the city of Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom, was higher than in a population resident further away. Methods A geographical study was carried out on the prevalence of congenital anomalies in residents living within 3 km (inner zone) of the Byker combustion plant compared with those living 3-7 km (outer zone) from the plant. There were 81255 live births (1985-1999) and 1508 cases with chromosomal and non-chromosomal congenital anomalies. The cases were identified from the Northern Region Congenital Abnormality Survey. Results After the site commenced operation the estimated rate ratio (inner versus outer zone) was 1.11 (95 per cent confidence interval (CI) 0.96-1.28) adjusted for socio-economic deprivation. There was significant heterogeneity across years and an increasing trend, of marginal significance (p = 0.07), in the rate ratio. The inner zone rate approached or became significantly higher than that in the outer zone in some of the later years. Conclusions No significant overall association between the number of congenital anomalies and proximity of residence to the Byker waste combustion plant has been found in this study. Significantly increased rates near the site during the later years may suggest a possible risk but are difficult to interpret. More comprehensive, multi-site investigations around other waste combustion plants are indicated. Waste stabilization pond performance in Pakistan and its implications for wastewater use in agricultureEnsink, J.; Hoek, W.V.; Mara, D.; Cairncross, S.
Urban Water Journal, 2007; 4(4):261 - 267 Chromosomal congenital anomalies and residence near hazardous waste landfill sitesVrijheid, M.; Dolk, H.; Armstrong, B.; Abramsky, L.; Bianchi, F.; Fazarinc, I.; Garne, E.; Ide, R.; Nelen, V.; Robert, E.; Scott, J. E.; Stone, D.; Tenconi, R.
Lancet, 2002; 359(9303):320-2 DOI · PubMed · Abstract · WWW · Full Record · · Corrections · Journal Article - Original Research · IF(2008): 28.409
Previous findings of the EUROHAZCON study showed a 33% increase in risk of non-chromosomal anomalies near hazardous waste landfill sites. Here, we studied 245 cases of chromosomal anomalies and 2412 controls who lived near 23 such sites in Europe. After adjustment for confounding by maternal age and socioeconomic status, we noted a higher risk of chromosomal anomalies in people who lived close to sites (0-3 km) than in those who lived further away (3-7 km; odds ratio 1.41, 95% CI 1.00-1.99). Our results suggest an increase in risk of chromosomal anomalies similar to that found for non-chromosomal anomalies. Simple intervention to reduce mosquito breeding in waste stabilisation ponds.Ensink, J.H.; Mukhtar, M.; van der Hoek, W.; Konradsen, F.;
Trans R Soc Trop Med Hyg, 2007; 101(11):1143-6 DOI · PubMed · Abstract · WWW · Full Record · · Corrections · Journal Article - Original Research · IF(2008): 2.062
Waste stabilisation ponds (WSP) are the preferred method for treatment of urban wastewater in low-income countries but, especially in arid regions, the pond systems can be important breeding sites for mosquitoes of medical importance. In a WSP system in Faisalabad, Pakistan, we assessed the impact of simple environmental interventions on mosquito occurrence and abundance. Reducing the amount of floating matter in the ponds, eliminating emergent vegetation and repairing cracks in the cement structure reduced the number of mosquito-positive samples in the intervention ponds to almost zero, whereas the control ponds had a significant number of positive samples. This suggests that a combination of simple low-cost interventions is a feasible environmental management strategy for vector control in WSP systems that are located in areas where medically important mosquitoes may breed in the shallow ponds. Hazard potential ranking of hazardous waste landfill sites and risk of congenital anomalies Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 2002; 59(11):768-76 DOI · PubMed · Abstract · WWW · Full Record · · Corrections · Journal Article - Original Research · IF(2008): 3.302
BACKGROUND: A 33% increase in the risk of congenital anomalies has been found among residents near hazardous waste landfill sites in a European collaborative study (EUROHAZCON). AIMS: To develop and evaluate an expert panel scoring method of the hazard potential of EUROHAZCON landfill sites, and to investigate whether sites classified as posing a greater potential hazard are those with a greater risk of congenital anomaly among nearby residents relative to more distant residents. METHODS: A total of 1270 cases of congenital anomaly and 2308 non-malformed control births were selected in 14 study areas around 20 landfill sites. An expert panel of four landfill specialists scored each site in three categories-overall, water, and air hazard-based on readily available, documented data on site characteristics. Tertiles of the average ranking scores defined low, medium, and high hazard sites. Calculation of odds ratios was based on distance of residence from the sites, comparing a 0-3 km "proximate" with a 3-7 km "distant" zone. RESULTS: Agreement between experts measured by intraclass correlation coefficients was 0.50, 0.44, and 0.20 for overall, water, and air hazard before a consensus meeting and 0.60, 0.56, and 0.53 respectively after this meeting. There was no evidence for a trend of increasing odds ratios with increasing overall hazard or air hazard. For non-chromosomal anomalies, odds ratios by water hazard category showed an increasing trend of borderline statistical significance (p = 0.06) from 0.79 in the low hazard category, 1.43 in the medium, to 1.60 in the high water hazard category. CONCLUSIONS: There is little evidence for a relation between risk of congenital anomaly in proximate relative to distant zones and hazard potential of landfill sites as classified by the expert panel, but without external validation of the hazard potential scoring method interpretation is difficult. Potential misclassification of sites may have reduced our ability to detect any true dose-response effect. HIV infection and related risk behaviors in a community of recyclable waste collectors of Santos, BrazilRozman, M.A.; Alves, I.S.; Porto, M.A.; Gomes, P.O.; Ribeiro, N.M.; Nogueira, L.A.A.; Caseiro, M.M.; da Silva, V.A.; Massad, E.; Burattini, M.N.
Revista De Saude Publica, 2008; 42(5) DOI · PubMed · Abstract · WWW · Full Record · · Corrections · Journal Article - Original Research · IF(2008): 0.963
OBJECTIVE: To estimate the seroprevalence of HIV, hepatitis B and C and syphilis and to describe risk behaviors associated to their transmission among recyclable waste collectors. METHODS: A seroepidemiological survey was carried out in the city of Santos, Southeastern Brazil, in 2005. A total of 315 individuals were enrolled in the survey, of which 253 subjects underwent serological testing HIV, hepatitis B and C and syphilis. Statistical analysis consisted of univariate and bivariate analyses (cross-tabulation and odds ratio) and multivariate analysis (by logistic regression), relating HIV infection with established risk behaviors and seropositivity. RESULTS: Overall seroprevalences were: HIV, 8.9%; hepatitis B, 34.4%; hepatitis C, 12.4%; and syphilis, 18.4%. Subjects were characterized by a predominance of males with low educational and economic levels, subjected to parenteral and sexual exposures to HIV and other sexually transmitted infections. Multivariate analysis results indicated that risk factors for both sexually and parenterally related exposure were significantly associated with HIV in this community. CONCLUSIONS: Seroprevalences found in the study were approximately 10 to 12 times higher than the national average. These communities are socially marginalized and generally not recognized by national programs as potentially endangered populations. Previous <<< 0-9 of 25 (incl 0 In Press) >>> Next 10 |
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