Abstract

The rise of small-scale and localized economic activities in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) has led to increased exposures to contaminants associated with these processes and the potential for resulting adverse health effects in exposed communities. Risk assessment is the process of building models to predict the probability of adverse outcomes based on concentration-response functions and exposure scenarios for individual contaminants, while epidemiology uses statistical methods to explore associations between potential exposures and observed health outcomes. Neither approach by itself is practical or sufficient for evaluating the magnitude of exposures and health impacts associated with land-based pollution in LMICs. Here we propose a more pragmatic framework for designing representative studies, including uniform sampling guidelines and household surveys, that draws from both methodologies to better support community health impact analyses associated with land-based pollution sources in LMICs. Our primary goal is to explicitly link environmental contamination from land-based pollution associated with specific localized economic activities to community exposures and health outcomes at the household level. The proposed framework was applied to the following three types of industries that are now widespread in many LMICs: artisanal scale gold mining (ASGM), used lead-acid battery recycling (ULAB), and small tanning facilities. For each activity, we develop a generalized conceptual site model (CSM) that describes qualitative linkages from chemical releases or discharges, environmental fate and transport mechanisms, exposure pathways and routes, populations at risk, and health outcomes. This upfront information, which is often overlooked, is essential for delineating the contaminant zone of influence in a community and identifying relevant households for study. We also recommend cost-effective methods for use in LMICs related to environmental sampling, biological monitoring, survey questionnaires, and health outcome measurements at contaminated and unexposed reference sites. Future study designs based on this framework will facilitate consistent, comparable, and standardized community exposure, risk, and health impact assessments for land-based pollution in LMICs. The results of these studies can also support economic burden analyses and risk management decision-making around site cleanup, risk mitigation, and public health education.

Highlights

  • Given the goal to explore relationships between health outcomes and associated environmental contamination and exposures from land-based pollution in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), health outcomes are organized by the CoC with which they are associated, recognizing that several of the CoCs have the potential for overlapping health outcomes and combined risks

  • The framework proposed here seeks to fill a critical gap that hampers responses to growing chemical pollution challenges across LMICs

  • It provides a standardized approach for linking environmental contamination from land-based pollution associated with specific small-scale industrial activities in LMICs to community exposures and health outcomes at the household level

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Several studies have documented contaminant exposures and a variety of health outcomes in LMICs, including relating to land-based pollution associated with localized, small-scale industries [4,5,6,7,8,9]. Epidemiologic studies and risk assessment approaches have been used in high-income countries to improve scientific understanding of the health effects of chemical pollution exposure. Hg is transformed to methylmercury (MeHg) in aquatic environments, leading to further pathways of exposure and potential health outcomes Leather tanning is another complex, resource-intensive process that generates a sigLeather tanning is another complex, resource-intensive process that generates a signifnificant number of by-products, solid waste materials, and large amounts of icant number of by-products, solid waste materials, and large amounts of wastewater.

Conceptual
Overview of Processes
Generalized
Select Participating Households and Individuals
Data Collection and Sampling Recommendations
Environmental Sampling
Soil Samples
Dust Samples
Water Samples
Agricultural Product Sampling
Household Surveys
Biomonitoring
Measuring Health Outcomes
Findings
Discussion
Conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call