Diagnostic health risk assessment of a e-waste on the general population in developing countries'scenarios
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2010
Abstract:
E-waste is the generic name for technological waste. Even though aspects related to e-waste environmental
pollution and human exposure are known, scientific assessments are missing so far on the actual risks for
health sustainability of the general population exposed to e-waste scenarios, such as illicit dumping, crude
recycling and improper treatment and disposal. In fact, further to occupational and direct local exposure, ewaste
scenarios may impact on the environment-to-food chain, thus eliciting a widespread and repeated
exposure of the general population to mixtures of toxicants, mainly toxic chemical elements, polycyclic
aromatic hydrocarbons and persistent organic pollutants. In the absence of any clear policy on e-waste flow
management, the situation in the e-waste receiver countries may become quite scary; accordingly, here we
address a diagnostic risk assessment of health issues potentially elicited by e-waste related mixtures of
toxicants.
Scientific evidence available so far (mainly from China) is discussed with special attention to the concept of
health sustainability, i.e. the poor health burden heritage perpetuated through the mother-to-child dyad.
Endocrine disruption and neurotoxicity are specifically considered as examples of main health burden issues
relevant to perpetuation through life cycle and across generations; toxicological information are considered
along with available data on environmental and food contamination and human internal exposure. The risk
from exposure to e-waste related mixtures of toxicants of vulnerable subpopulation like breast-fed infants is
given special attention. The diagnostic risk assessment demonstrates how e-waste exposure poses an actual
public health emergency, as it may entrain significant health risks also for generations to come. Exposure
scenarios as well as specific chemicals of major concern may vary in different contexts; for instance, only
limited information is available on e-waste related exposures in a major site of e-waste dumping such as West
Africa. Therefore, considerations are also given on data gaps possibly fitting a systematic risk assessment of the
e-waste health impacts in different subscenarios as well as possible protective factors for exposed
subpopulations.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Reproductive health; Mother-child health; Sustainability; Dumping; Mixtures
Elenco autori:
Dragone, Roberto
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