| Literature DB >> 26501297 |
Steven Lam1,2, Hung Nguyen-Viet3,4,5, Tran Thi Tuyet-Hanh6, Huong Nguyen-Mai7, Sherilee Harper8.
Abstract
The use of wastewater and excreta in agriculture is a common practice in Southeast Asia; however, concerns remain about the potential public health risks of this practice. We undertook a scoping review to examine the extent, range, and nature of literature, as well as synthesize the evidence for associations between wastewater and excreta management practices and public health risks in Southeast Asia. Three electronic databases (PubMed, CAB Direct, and Web of Science) were searched and a total of 27 relevant studies were included and evaluated. The available evidence suggested that possible occupational health risks of wastewater and excreta management practices include diarrhea, skin infection, parasitic infection, bacterial infection, and epilepsy. Community members can be at risk for adverse health outcomes through consuming contaminated fish, vegetables, or fruits. Results suggested that practices including handling, treatment, and use of waste may be harmful to human health, particularly farmer's health. Many studies in this review, however, had limitations including lack of gender analyses, exposure assessment, and longitudinal study designs. These findings suggest that more studies on identifying, quantitatively assessing, and mitigating health risks are needed if sustainable benefits are to be obtained from wastewater and excreta reuse in agriculture in Southeast Asia.Entities:
Keywords: Southeast Asia; agricultural intensification; excreta management; health risks; scoping review; wastewater management
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26501297 PMCID: PMC4627004 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph121012863
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Scoping review search strategy with algorithms for each database to identify peer-reviewed articles examining the human health risks of wastewater, human excreta, and animal excreta management practices in Southeast Asia.
| Databases | Main Terms | Expanded Terms |
|---|---|---|
| PubMed, | Health effects | “adverse effect” OR health OR disease OR death OR morbidity OR mortality OR pathogen OR illness OR ailment OR allerg* OR zoonos* OR infection OR diarrhea OR “well-being” OR “well being” AND |
| Waste management | “agricultural waste” OR wastewater OR “waste water” OR “integrated waste” OR “faecal sludge” OR manure OR “animal waste” OR “solid waste” OR “human waste” OR “livestock waste” OR faeces OR feces OR “animal waste” OR excreta OR excrement AND | |
| Location | Brunei OR Cambodia OR Indonesia OR Laos OR Malaysia OR Myanmar OR Philippines OR Singapore OR Thailand OR “Timor Leste” OR “Viet Nam” OR Vietnam OR “Southeast Asia” OR “South East Asia” |
Inclusion and exclusion eligibility criteria applied during screening of articles to identify articles examining the human health risks of wastewater, human excreta, and animal excreta management practices in Southeast Asia.
| Inclusion | Exclusion |
|---|---|
| -Described wastewater and excreta management practices in relation to human health, environmental health, or perceived health risks | -Described wastewater and excreta management practices without reporting poor health outcome, or described poor health outcomes with no association to wastewater or excreta management practices |
| -Study conducted in a country in Southeast Asia | -Study conducted outside of Southeast Asia |
| -Article published in the English language | -Article published not in the English language |
| -Original research in a peer-reviewed journal | -Workshop proceedings, reviews, letters to the editor, abstracts |
| -Studied poor health outcomes in human beings | -Reports on plants, animals, and |
Figure 1Flow chart of the selection of studies that examined the human health risks of wastewater, human excreta, and animal excreta management practices in Southeast Asia.
Description of relevant studies on human health risks of wastewater and excreta management practices to farmers, consumers and community members in Southeast Asia.
| Author/Year | Country | Year/(Study) | Target Group | Practice | Study Design * | Health risk and Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Diarrhea Disease Studies | ||||||
| Pham-Duc | Vietnam | 2009 | Adult farmers | Wastewater and excreta | Cohort | The incidence rate of diarrhea was 28 episodes per 100 person-years at risk. |
| Trang | Vietnam | 2002 | Adults | Wastewater | Cohort | The incidence rate of diarrhea was 28.1 episodes per 100 person-years at risk. |
| Hien | Vietnam | 2002 | Children | Wastewater | Case-control | Wastewater contact was a risk factor for diarrhea. |
| Ferrer | Thailand | N/A | Farming households | Wastewater | Quantitative microbial risk assessment | Canal water and vegetables were heavily contaminated with |
| Parasitic Infection Studies | ||||||
| Pham-Duc | Vietnam | 2008 | Farming households | Wastewater and excreta | Cross-sectional | Contact with wastewater was a significant risk factor for helminth infection (OR = 1.5, 95% CI 1.1–2.2) and |
| Yajima 2009 | Vietnam | 2007 | Community members | Human excreta only | Cross-sectional | Consumption of vegetables fertilized with human excreta → high helminth infection rate. |
| Trang | Vietnam | 2003 | Farming households | Wastewater | Cross-sectional | No significant association was found between wastewater exposure and helminth infections. |
| Trang | Vietnam | 2002 | Adults and children | Wastewater and human excreta | Cross-sectional | Wastewater exposure did not pose a significant risk for helminth infection. Significant risk factors for helminth infections include lack of sanitation facilities (relative risk [RR] = 1.97, 95% CI 0.95–4.09) and use of fresh or inadequately composted human excreta (RR = 1.19, 95% CI 0.93–1.53). |
| Nguyen | Vietnam | 1995 | Women | Excreta | Cross-sectional | 76% of Vietnamese women were infected with helminth. The use of untreated feces as fertilizer was significantly associated with |
| Verle | Vietnam | 2003 | Community members | Human excreta only | Cross-sectional | Eggs of parasitic species were detected in 88% of stool samples. While it was mentioned that human excreta was commonly used as fertilizer, the epidemiological linkage between waste management practice and parasitic infection was not explored. |
| Olsen | Vietnam | 2004 | Adult farmers | Excreta | Cross-sectional | 81.8% prevalence of helminth infection. While it was mentioned that human excreta and wastewater were commonly used as fertilizer, the epidemiological linkage between waste management practice and parasitic infection was not explored. |
| Van der-hoek | Vietnam | 1990 | Community members | Human excreta only | Cross-sectional | 44.4% prevalence of helminth infection. The use of human excreta as fertilizer was a significant risk factor for hookworm infection, especially among adult women. |
| Pham-Duc | Vietnam | 2008 | Community members | Wastewater and excreta | Case-control | Personal hygiene factors determined infection with |
| Uga | Vietnam | N/A | Community members | Excreta | Sampling, microbial testing, surveys | Vegetables purchased at a market in Vietnam were highly contaminated with parasite eggs excreted by animals and humans. |
| Bacterial Infection Studies | ||||||
| Yajima and Kurokura 2008 | Vietnam | 2007 | Fish | Animal excreta only | Sampling, quantitative microbial risk assessment | Direct use of animal excreta was a major contributor to fecal contamination of pond water and skin of cultured fish. Estimated risks of enteric infection through farming activities and fish handling were 100–1000 times higher than the US Environmental Protection Agency acceptable risk. |
| Ha | Vietnam | 2006 | Farming households | Wastewater | Sampling and microbial testing | Risk of |
| Huong | Vietnam | 2011 | Farmers | Use of biogas effluent | Sampling and questionnaire | There was potential exposure of fruits and vegetables to |
| Skin Infection Studies | ||||||
| Trang | Vietnam | 2004 | Farmers | Wastewater | Cohort | Exposure to wastewater was a significant risk factor for skin diseases (RR = 1.89, 95% CI 1.39–2.57). |
| Trang | Vietnam | 2002 | Community members | Wastewater | Cohort | The incidence rate of skin ailments was 32.5 episodes per 100 person-years at risk. |
| Anh | Vietnam | 2005 | Farmers | Wastewater | Cross-sectional | Contact with wastewater was a significant risk factor for dermatitis (OR = 3.0, 95% 1.1–7.7). |
| Anh | Cambodia | 2004 | Community members | Wastewater | Cross-sectional | Occupational exposure to wastewater was not significantly associated with dermatitis. |
| Other Health Risk Studies | ||||||
| Tran | Laos | N/A | Patients with epilepsy | Human excreta only | Case-control | The use of human feces to fertilize domestic vegetable gardens was significantly associated with epilepsy (OR=4.9, 95% CI 1.1–22.1). |
| Marcussen | Vietnam | N/A | Fish (common carp, silver carp, tilapia) | Wastewater | Sampling | The consumption of common carp, silver carp and tilapia produced in wastewater-fed ponds of Hanoi seemed not to be a food safety problem with respect to arsenic, cadmium, and lead. |
| Perceived Health Risk Studies | ||||||
| Pham-Duc | Vietnam | 2003 | Farming households | Human excreta only | Qualitative | Farmers were at risk to pathogens in excreta through improper handling practices. |
| Jensen | Vietnam | 2004 | Farmers | Human excreta only | Qualitative | The community did not associate risks with the use of composted excreta if it was dry and lacked odour. |
| Knudsen | Vietnam | N/A | Farmers | Wastewater and human excreta | Qualitative | Farmers perceived health risks of wastewater as non-serious (skin problems) and “smelly feces” as serious (polluted air). |
| Anh | Vietnam | 2004 | Farming households | Wastewater | Cross-sectional | Exposure to wastewater was a perceived as a risk factor for skin problems. |
* The study design was determined by the original article’s reported study design.
Figure 2Health risks from wastewater, human excreta and animal excreta management practices and number of supporting studies.
Figure 3Number of publications on wastewater and excreta management practice on human health in Southeast Asia from year 2000 to 2014.