| Literature DB >> 29020961 |
L Fazzo1, F Minichilli2, M Santoro2, A Ceccarini3, M Della Seta3, F Bianchi2, P Comba4, M Martuzzi5.
Abstract
Waste is part of the agenda of the European Environment and Health Process and included among the topics of the Sixth Ministerial Conference on Environment and Health. Disposal and management of hazardous waste are worldwide challenges. We performed a systematic review to evaluate the evidence of the health impact of hazardous waste exposure, applying transparent and a priori defined methods. The following five steps, based on pre-defined systematic criteria, were applied. 1. Specify the research question, in terms of "Population-Exposure-Comparators-Outcomes" (PECO). POPULATION: people living near hazardous waste sites; Exposure: exposure to hazardous waste; Comparators: all comparators; Outcomes: all diseases/health disorders. 2. Carry out the literature search, in Medline and EMBASE. 3. Select studies for inclusion: original epidemiological studies, published between 1999 and 2015, on populations residentially exposed to hazardous waste. 4. Assess the quality of selected studies, taking into account study design, exposure and outcome assessment, confounding control. 5. Rate the confidence in the body of evidence for each outcome taking into account the reliability of each study, the strength of the association and concordance of results.Fifty-seven papers of epidemiological investigations on the health status of populations living near hazardous waste sites were selected for the evidence evaluation. The association between 95 health outcomes (diseases and disorders) and residential exposure to hazardous waste sites was evaluated. Health effects of residential hazardous waste exposure, previously partially unrecognized, were highlighted. Sufficient evidence was found of association between exposure to oil industry waste that releases high concentrations of hydrogen sulphide and acute symptoms. The evidence of causal relationship with hazardous waste was defined as limited for: liver, bladder, breast and testis cancers, non-Hodgkin lymphoma, asthma, congenital anomalies overall and anomalies of the neural tube, urogenital, connective and musculoskeletal systems, low birth weight and pre-term birth; evidence was defined as inadequate for the other health outcomes. The results, although not conclusive, provide indications that more effective public health policies on hazardous waste management are urgently needed. International, national and local authorities should oppose and eliminate poor, outdated and illegal practices of waste disposal, including illegal transboundary trade, and increase support regulation and its enforcement.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Congenital anomalies; Disease; Hazardous waste; Health; Review; Waste
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29020961 PMCID: PMC5637250 DOI: 10.1186/s12940-017-0311-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health ISSN: 1476-069X Impact factor: 5.984
Text-word searching in Medline and EMBASE
| Search | Text words |
|---|---|
| #1 Exposure | (INDUSTR? OR ILLEGAL OR HAZARDOUS OR TOXIC) (W) (WAST? OR LANDFILL OR DUMP?) |
| #2 Health outcomes | (RESPIRATORY OR CARDIOVASCULAR OR URINARY OR KIDNEY) OR (ADVERSE EFFECT OR HEALTH EFFECT OR HEALTH IMPACT) OR (CANCER OR TUMOR OR NEOPLASM) OR (CONGENITAL OR REPRODUCT? OR BIRTH OR NEONATAL) OR (BIRTH? OR REPROD? OR TERATO?) OR (DIABETE? OR THYROID?) OR (ACUTE EFFECT) OR (ACUTE TOXIC?) |
| #3 Biomonitoring | (BIOMONITOR? OR BIO(W) MONITOR?) |
| #4 | #1 AND #2 AND #3 |
MeSH (Medline) and EMtree (EMBASE) descriptors used in search strategy
| Search | |
|---|---|
| MeSH descriptors | |
| #1 Exposure | (HAZARDOUS WASTE + NT/CT) AND ((ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH + NT/CT) OR ENVIRONMENTAL EXPOSURE + NT/CT)) |
| #2 Health outcomes | (EPIDEMIOLOGY/CT)a OR (MORTALITY/CT)b |
| #3 | #1 AND #2 |
| EMtree descriptors | |
| #1 Exposure | *HAZARDOUS WASTE + NT/CT |
| #2 Health outcomes | EPIDEMIOLOGY + NT/CT |
| #3 | #1 AND #2 |
aEpidemiology: used with human and veterinary diseases for the distribution of disease, factors which cause disease, and the attributes of disease in defined populations; includes incidence, frequency, prevalence, endemic and epidemic outbreaks; also surveys and estimates of morbidity in geographic areas and in specified populations. Used also with geographical headings for the location of epidemiologic aspects of a disease. Excludes mortality for which “mortality” is used. (National Library of Medicine)
bMortality: Used with human and veterinary diseases for mortality statistics. For deaths resulting from various procedures statistically but for a death resulting in a specific case, use FATAL OUTCOME, not /mortality. (National Library of Medicine)
Fig. 1Flow chart showing the literature search and screening process