Literature DB >> 30322237

Towards an assessment of the health impact of industrially contaminated sites: waste landfills in Europe.

Gavin Shaddick1, Andrea Ranzi2, Matthew L Thomas3, Roman Aguirre-Perez4, Maria Dunbar Bekker-Nielsen5, Federica Parmagnani2, Marco Martuzzi6.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: this paper is based upon work from COST Action ICSHNet. To develop and apply recently proposed methods for assessing the health impact of pollution from contaminated sites and apply them to the case of landfills using available large European datasets.
METHODS: standard methods for health impact assessment and burden of disease were applied using the available evidence on the health effects of living near a landfill. Geo-referenced data on landfills from the European Pollutant and Transfer Register (E-PRTR) were combined with population density data (European Environment Agency dataset) and disease frequency data from European health for all database (HfA); uncertainty was assessed via simulation methods. Countries covered by the European Environment Agency's E-PRTR registry on contaminated sites were considered (European Union Member States plus four additional European Countries) for the period 2007-2014. Four outcomes, for which suggestive evidence is available, were included: - low birth weight; - congenital anomalies; - respiratory disease; - annoyance from odour. Firstly, they were analysed separately, in terms of excess number of cases, and then combined into disability-adjusted life years (DALYs).
RESULTS: 1,544 landfill sites were considered. 29.3 million people (6% of the total population) live within 4 km from one or more of these sites. The number of yearly attributable cases associated with low birth weight, congenital anomalies, respiratory diseases, and annoyance from odour were estimated, respectively, at 1,239, 70, 33,039, and 1,582,624. Associated DALYs were 10,192, 958, 2,688, and 47,505, respectively; 61,325 in total.
CONCLUSIONS: estimates indicate a sizable health impact, largest for annoyance from odour, given the high frequency of the outcome and in spite of its lesser severity compared to the other ones. Application of the methodology is relatively straightforward, once the main assumption of causality is made. The present work offers a first approximation of the impact on health of waste landfills in Europe and can be further applied to other contaminated sites.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 30322237     DOI: 10.19191/EP18.5-6.S1.P069.089

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Epidemiol Prev        ISSN: 1120-9763            Impact factor:   1.901


  2 in total

1.  Dhaka landfill waste practices: addressing urban pollution and health hazards.

Authors:  Salma Akter Urme; Marzuka Ahmad Radia; Rafiul Alam; Mohammed Uzzal Chowdhury; Shahriar Hasan; Shakil Ahmed; Hasna Hena Sara; Mohammed Syful Islam; Delufa Tuz Jerin; Prianka Sultana Hema; Monybur Rahman; A K M Mazharul Islam; Mohammed Tanvir Hasan; Zahidul Quayyum
Journal:  Build Cities       Date:  2021-07-28

2.  The Management of Health Hazards Related to Municipal Solid Waste on Fire in Europe: An Environmental Justice Issue?

Authors:  Walter Mazzucco; Claudio Costantino; Vincenzo Restivo; Davide Alba; Claudia Marotta; Elisa Tavormina; Achille Cernigliaro; Maurizio Macaluso; Rosanna Cusimano; Rosario Grammauta; Fabio Tramuto; Salvatore Scondotto; Francesco Vitale
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2020-09-11       Impact factor: 3.390

  2 in total

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